Thats always good to hear.
Amy,
You started a fascinating thread.
Sadly, when AM began its slide, and all the LMA's kicked up -- with the owner/operator turning over the keys and walking away from the station and leaving in it in the hands of the, almost always, inept LMA'er (they love radio; or yakkin', but have no broadcast acumen) -- you end up with situations like this. Of course, LPFM, that's a whole other discussion, but those "operators" can be as technically and law challenged as most AM operators (of the small stations the big guys don't want).
Anyway, I won't mention the operator, but it was female owned-operated company. She bought up several Florida AMs, low-watt Class Bs and Cs for a specialized foreign language format -- not Caribbean or Latin -- certainly under served. Fair enough.
Then the FCC fines started. Tower lights. EBS Tests. Not having a company employee onsite to babysit the LMA entity. Inspectors show up, want the public inspection files -- and no one knows what "that means" or "where that is." Then, when owner "complied" and "hired" someone to be onsite, they had no management (nor radio, from how it reads) experience, and was even more inept when the FCC showed up to reinspect. And the violations piled up, and up.
One of the stations was purchased, by the new owner paying the FCC fines -- and got it for song, far below market value.
There was another instance -- different company -- they had an LMA with a Caribbean group, and a right to buy. Bla, bla, bla, the LMA wasn't paying fees, misoperation the station, etc. The deal falls part.
There just a lot of entities getting into radio, buying stations, that shouldn't. Yes, everyone should have airwave access. And I applaud the entrepreneurial spirit. But there's laws, regulations to follow. And there's presentation of the product. And you need to check the egos and greed and be a good steward to the frequency you've been given the privilege to operate -- which takes us back to the beginning of the thread with the story you shared that started this conversation.