It should never have happened. Real competition is what drives innovation and a superior product. The public never benefits from a monopoly.
Generally, yes. Occasionally, however, the only way to keep two stations in the same format going is to consolidate them. We can only wonder what might've been, but it's entirely possible we would've lost either WCBS or WINS long ago had their sales and back office functions not been combined. Remember, WCBS and WINS have been under the same ownership for over 25 years. That's a long run for any format, let alone one on an inferior band with high costs.
The only two all-news options in the same market being owned by the same company is absolutely a monopoly on the format.
Who is stopping someone else from hiring the WCBS talent being let go and launching an all news competitor to WINS? We know it's not going to happen, and we know why. That's the reason it's going away in the first place.
I know you love, and will always staunchly defend your beloved giant, bloated, bankrupt radio conglomerates, but this is what it leads to. A great heritage radio station has been destroyed by it. We could have seen it coming a mile away.
This sounds like a classic case of someone who was shouting that CBS wouldn't keep two all news stations in New York when it got both of them in 1996 saying, "See? I told you so!"