audio4tv said:
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However, you can expect fierce competition for any new license, primarily from religous outlets, and they will have a bag of application tricks to try to gobble up a majority of the permits.
That's what I expected to see when the Commission finally released the list - it didn't entirely turn out that way.
Where both religious and secular organizations applied for the same channel, a secular organization usually (indeed, almost always) won. There were two common reasons for this:
- Local organizations got a preference point. Many secular applicants were state public radio networks or universities which got this point. Most religious applicants were national organizations which didn't.
- Many MX groups had ties in preference points awarded, and went to the first tiebreaker. Whichever applicant had the fewest licenses, permits, or applications won. Many of the religious applications were filed by national organizations like AFR and EMF (K-Love) with hundreds of stations. For example, 90.3 in Spokane, Wash. went to Spokane Public Radio, which has only nine stations. They were tied on points with American Family Association - which has 227.
In general this bodes poorly for the further expansion of these national groups through the creation of completely new stations. (it looks like EMF is already working around it by buying up existing stations)