• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Entercom Hands In KDND/Sacramento License

That's not correct. A full power station can file for non-commercial status in the commercial band. The former WPFB-FM, Middletown, OH and WPAY-FM, Portsmouth, Ohio are both former commercial stations now owned by Northern Kentucky University but maintaining the same facilities they always had.

Would there have even been the possibility of the license going to a "community group", given that non-profit full power stations are restricted to the area between 87.9 and 91.9 on the dial? A low-power non-profit could go on 107.9 for the time being but would probably have to give that up once the full-power license was taken over by another company.
 
That's not correct. A full power station can file for non-commercial status in the commercial band. The former WPFB-FM, Middletown, OH and WPAY-FM, Portsmouth, Ohio are both former commercial stations now owned by Northern Kentucky University but maintaining the same facilities they always had.


A set of good examples is found in the New York City market where WNYC-FM, WBAI and WQXR are all in the commercial part of the band but are licensed as non-commerial station. All are Class B, although WQXR is lower powered than the others due to spacing issues.

WQXR at 105.9 operated for decades as a commercial station, but the others were licensed long ago as non-comercial.
 
That's not correct. A full power station can file for non-commercial status in the commercial band. The former WPFB-FM, Middletown, OH and WPAY-FM, Portsmouth, Ohio are both former commercial stations now owned by Northern Kentucky University but maintaining the same facilities they always had.


Correct. I worked for K-LOVE and Air1 for many years and this has been done on numerous occausions in this area.

KSTN is an example from recent years.
 


A set of good examples is found in the New York City market where WNYC-FM, WBAI and WQXR are all in the commercial part of the band but are licensed as non-commerial station. All are Class B, although WQXR is lower powered than the others due to spacing issues.

WQXR at 105.9 operated for decades as a commercial station, but the others were licensed long ago as non-comercial.

David,

Is it safe to assume 107.9 will come back as a Class B or can/will it be downgraded?

One of the best signals in the area, sad to see it go.
 
Something that I've been wondering - Entercom surrendered the license only. The facility is what it is. The FCC, now as the license holder, isn't going to continue to pay rent for the transmitter and antenna for a silent station. So it would make some sense for Entercom to remove the site broadcast equipment and let the future license holder build a new facility, presumably at the current tower. I guess the future owner could also move the facility to another tower with an engineering/interference study.

Conversely, would Entercom continue to pay rent and lease tower space, hoping to sell to the future license holder?
 
Moving KZHP away from 93.3 to a non-adjacent (1st, 2nd, 3rd adjacent) or a non I.F (53 or 54 channels) will require a waiver from the FCC, which would rule out 107.9
 
Stolz stirring the Entercom pot again... He won't give up. He has had a serious hard on for them a long time...

https://licensing.fcc.gov/cdbs/CDBS....jsp?appn=101751194&qnum=5000©num=1&exhcnum=2

Ol' Eddie has been turned down more by the FCC than Pete Rose by the Baseball Hall of Fame! Wonder what action he'll file down in SoCal as his former station appears to be coming back from hibernation?: http://www.radiodiscussions.com/showthread.php?700409-KWIF-Getting-Ready-To-Launch
 
First question: Are there qualified community groups who COULD operate the station? Someone who has the financing, the legal and technical knowledge to complete the FCC paperwork? That will take time to ascertain. The FCC can't just turn it over to anyone. They have to qualify. They won't get a facility. Just a license. Starting from scratch. Could it be low power? Non-profit? Minority owned? All of those questions must be answered by the FCC. And from my experience, they don't move quickly. The frequency will go dark in the meantime, and it will stay that way for a long time.

We would have gladly taken over the facility - but I think it's too late for that. Not sure what the ramifications would have been for that signal to be donated to a non-profit, but unless something has changed in the last few years, the KDND transmitter site is leased from Capital Public Radio. So I can't believe they didn't consider a donation to that organization. Big disclaimer - IANAL - but could it be possible that the liabilities associated with the contest follow the license somehow?

Dave B. (chief engineer at KVMR Nevada City)
 
IANAL - but could it be possible that the liabilities associated with the contest follow the license somehow?

The issue was the qualifications of the licensee. So I don't see how. Turning the license into the FCC leaves it to their disposal.

But I wasn't suggesting a donation. A donation also usually comes with a tax deduction. I suspect Entercom doesn't want to be seen as benefiting in any way.

My question was aimed at the Media Action Group, who declared a "victory for the public interest."
 
Victory? What victory? I hardly qualify displacing an entire air staff, programing and promotions department a victory for anyone but a moonbat organization in El Dorado Hills! A radio station is taken out of competition as a choice for listeners, an employer is downsized sending a number of those from that station who had nothing to do with a careless contest causing loss of life to the unemployment office. This lessens the number of ad dollars in the market. Now we have those few on the unemployment rolls and the few employees left deluding the hours offered to the other employees in the building thus reducing more hours. Can someone explain to me with a straight face where a victory is achieved? The guilty persons are long gone employed elsewhere. Entercom did not, does not, never will condone this kind of promotion. This obnoxious "media watch" organization is nothing more than a shell to make money at the expense of a grieving family and responsibile broadcast group and a few Star 106.5 employees. Takes a real ego to make a bold statement such as "victory". Spare us. They are the only ones who gained here, no one else!
 
Last edited:
Stolz still at it

https://licensing.fcc.gov/cdbs/CDBS...?appn=101751616&qnum=5000&copynum=1&exhcnum=2



In its first move toward divesting stations since the merger of CBS Radio and Entercom was announced, Entercom has submitted a public filing voluntarily turning in its license to operate Top 40 KDND (107.9 The End)/Sacramento, in order, the company said, "to facilitate the timely FCC approvals for the planned combination with CBS Radio."

Entercom said in its announcement of the CBS Radio deal that it would need to divest about 15 of its 244 stations to meet FCC ownership requirements. In Sacramento, the combined company would have had nine FMs and 2 AMs -- and so KDND has become the first to be relinquished.

See complete coverage of the Entercom/CBS transaction at www.radioink.com.
 
One guy, one house in Sacramento vs. one major broadcast group with deeper pockets than this guy will see in 10 lifetimes, 244 radio stations. Entercom files a C & D, case dismissed. What am I missing here?
 
http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/a...com-cbs-combo-will-divest-14-stations-in-7-ma

An Update over the CBS Radio/ Entercom Deal

ENTERCOM and CBS CORP. have filed with the FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION a series of applications on Form 314 and Form 315 to seek the FCC’s approval of the previously announced transactions to combine CBS RADIO with ENTERCOM in a merger which will occur after a split-off of CBS’s radio business to CBS stockholders through an exchange offer. The FCC Applications noted, among other things, that:

LESLIE MOONVES, the Chairman of the Board/Pres./CEO of CBS, and JOSEPH R. IANNIELLO, COO of CBS, are proposed to be directors of ENTERCOM following the Merger. The filing notes, "As directors of ENTERCOM and officers of CBS, Messrs. MOONVES and IANNIELLO will have attributable interests in the television stations owned by CBS and the radio stations owned by ENTERCOM following the Merger. The FCC Applications include a request for a temporary waiver (not to exceed six months) of the FCC’s rules restricting radio-television cross-ownership for Messrs. MOONVES and IANNIELLO in not more than four markets for the limited period in which such individuals are expected to serve on the board of directors of ENTERCOM (prior to the Merger, Messrs. MOONVES and IANNIELLO will each agree to resign from the board of directors of ENTERCOM effective as of the earlier of (a) six months after closing of the Merger and (b) the day prior to the first annual meeting of ENTERCOM following closing of the Merger).

The Merger is expected to result in ENTERCOM’s owning radio stations in seven markets in excess of the limits set forth in the FCC’s local radio ownership rule. In order to comply with the FCC’s local radio ownership rule, ENTERCOM has proposed to divest, in connection with the closing of the Merger, 14 radio stations which are located in the following markets:
BOSTON
LOS ANGELES
SACRAMENTO
SAN DIEGO
SAN FRANCISCO
SEATTLE
WILKES BARRE-SCRANTON
- See more at: http://www.allaccess.com/net-news/a...vest-14-stations-in-7-ma#sthash.UdzaRsjD.dpuf
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom