Non-Renewal of License (Lease) Agreement with American Tower and Request for Approval to Sell KVHS License from the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC") for a Nominal Amount to a Governmental Agency or, in the Alternative, Surrender the FCC License to the Federal Government
Thanks for finding this document. It shows that the lease was costing just under $25k a year, with the renewal price going up to just above $34k a year.
The document also reports that the school district's broadcasting program shut down 13 years ago. It makes me wonder what kept the station going. I've heard it only when I've been in the Walnut Creek-Pleasant Hill-Concord area and it seemed entirely automated to me.
They have a very good signal out there. They easily make it to Stockton (in a car radio) and have very good reception as you ascend the foothills in Amador/Calaveras.
That's not KVHS's primary coverage area, though. Predicted coverage indicates that about 50% of its reception area is either bay or swampland.
On 680, once you cross the Benicia Bridge, going north, and pass Benicia, there's not much until Cordelia Junction, just a couple of subdivisions. Otherwise it's very empty.
I’d be curious if KQED would still have interest in purchasing the signal?
KQED isn't a governmental entity. Never has been. So it doesn't qualify under the terms the school board laid out.
A radio station license for $1? I'd be all over that if it weren't stipulated that the buyer must be another (I presume county-level) governmental agency.
Hopefully someone will find a way to keep it going. I hope they don't decide to make it Internet-only. To me that's almost like taking a historical neon sign, which should be preserved as is, and converting it to LEDs instead.
You have to ask yourself, which costs less? A tower lease, transmitter power and upkeep, music licensing, someone to deal with compliance issues...or setting up a stream (albeit still with music licensing costs)?
First, KSMC, now KVHS. That should tell you something, too.