Looking at the license and history cards, WEW's sign-on/sign-off times appear to indicate a true daytimer, no PSA/PSSA. Albuquerque KKOB is not listed as an extenuating factor.
One reference I've found to nonstandard sign-on/sign-off times was in a Post-Dispatch article from 2005 about the programming it offered in multiple languages. The article started out this way:
WEW-AM is a small radio station with a signal that can only be heard for only a hundred miles or so. It broadcasts until two hours after sunset from the kitchen of a brick, two-family flat on the Hill in St. Louis.
The only other references to sign-on/sign-off times that I found were in the National Radio Club's AM Logbooks. Here is where it gets murky. From 2004 to 2013, the logbooks stated that WEW had a PSRA of 500 watts with sign-off at New York City local sunset. In 2014, this changed. Power for a PSRA was not stated and sign-off was given as Albuquerque local sunset. This continued in the logbooks from 2015 to 2018, inclusive. In 2019, sign-off was once again given as
New York City local sunset. That continued into the 2020 logbook, which is the last one available at worldradiohistory.com.
Conclusion: whatever source(s) the NRC was using for information about WEW turned out not to be reliable.
I also waded through references in Broadcasting's "For the Record", where the station was always listed as a daytimer. My own recollection dates back to the 1970s; I remember nothing unusual about WEW's operating hours (unlike KFUO). Those were the Charles Stanley years, when the station had found a small but stable niche with nostalgia programming.
Looking through the FCC's list of license-modification applications mostly turns up applications for higher power with the DA. There were no modification applications listed before 2004. There was one application relating to the station's current facilities where the "Modes/Hours of Operation" entry is given as "DayTime". (
Draft Copy « Licensing and Management System « FCC) - but I'm not sure how much stock to put into that, either.
The Post article said the station charged $150 an hour for airtime (remember, this was 2005).
We'll see if all this becomes moot at the end of the month.