K.M. Richards
Program Director, The Eighties Channel™
Every crappy AM station I hear on my radio, I just ask, "Please, let me fix you!"
Given the discussion (or is it an argument by now?) you are having with Kelly, I don't believe your "fix" could both comply with the standards as regulated and sound good enough to overcome all of the interference problems which remain a huge stumbling block to being attractive to listeners.
The only "fix" that could be reasonably guaranteed to work -- and even then, not universally -- would be a combination of the following three courses of action:
- Mandate that every electric utility company, private or municipal, audit their transmission systems and either repair or replace any infrastructure that causes interference to AM. It would not be difficult for the FCC to justify this as a matter of protecting a licensed service, but the utilities would scream bloody murder.
- Force the replacement of any kind of lighting that also causes interference. In the case of branded LED bulbs, have a mandated exchange program between the manufacturer and consumer. For all the rest, subsidize the replacement conditioned on the offending bulbs being surrendered for proper e-cycling.
- Similarly, deal with the "wall warts" on the basis of replacement if the product it came with was made (or distributed, or sold) by a company still in business, otherwise subsidize generic replacements and require e-cycling.
If we do nothing concrete about this, AM is going to remain the place where small niche ethnic audiences, some religious and talk (including sports-oriented) formats, and musical genres which are so close to death that the listening public already believes they are, end up. And there are a finite number of viable options for AM stations, so there will still be attrition.
And I still believe that translators did not "save" AM, as the FCC had claimed when they approved the "tied license" ones. It just made it easier for AMs to migrate their audience to FM, and I still think that eventually the Commission will let those AMs go silent as well and license the translators as a regular class of service with the current 250-watt ERP and restrictions on subsequent moves, modifications, and sales of same. That will actually do more to reduce interference on AM, since there will be considerably fewer stations with signal overlap (including that caused by atmospheric propagation).
