Varulven said:
A certain college radio station positioned at 91.5 FM (take your pick of the 3 in this region, we all know who it is) hired a heavy duty lawfirm to insure the student misconduct didn't cost the station its license. There were definite violations when the students shut the station down night after night (not turning it off according to FCC rules & regulations); I'm pretty sure the Public File was a mess - but - voila - no reprimand. Ya have to have the bucks to hire the right attorney.
They didn't lose their license, but I believe they were still fined a few grand, which is a reprimand of sorts. They weren't shutting off the transmitter when there was no programming, leaving a dead carrier on the air. They still do that once in a while, but not all the time like they used to.
Also, I heard that their transmitter remote control was found to be non-functional from the studios (perhaps why they never shut it off back then) which has since been remedied, and their Public File, what there was of one, was a shambles at the time.
Listening to that station just last week, I heard a few violations in just one show. The DJ was seriously overmodulating his mic whenever he spoke, causing severe distortion. I was picturing VU meters pinning in the red. He also gave an ad-libbed advertisment for a certain commercial beverage by brand name (not a paid ad, but just because he felt like it) urging people to go buy it because it's "good for hot days", which is illegal on a non-commercial station, paid or not. To top it off, at legal ID time he said "W---, Boston", not the suburb in which the station is licensed.
Some other things about this particular DJ's on-air patter, while probably not illegal, I personally found obnoxious and objectionable.
It's a real shame because there are still some good people trying to do good (and legal) radio at this particular college station, and a few bozos plus a lax management still risk ruining it for them. As well, if the station management had it's act together technically and legally, they could improve their signal and audio quality substantially. The sound of their airchain is very muddy, and I heard that they blew a chance to apply to modify their extremely directional antenna pattern some years ago.