Were KHIT's studios located in Bremerton? Also, I thought Gannett owned 106.9 at one point?
Back in the late '80s, KHIT was still related to KBRO, but worked hard to appear "Seattle-esque", with Seattle-based studios and talent. Up until late '87 however, the FCC still had a content origination rule, which required that greater than 50% of a station's weekly programming be originated from a station's city of license. That resulted in a very nice main studio, a decent production room and a new (or updated) automation system at KBRO's Sheridan Ave. location in East Bremerton.
KHIT's jocks did a very good job of keeping their location understated. If you didn't know that they had to spend time in Bremerton by rule, you'd probably have no reason to assume they weren't always in Seattle. All that stopped when the stations were split and separately sold. KHIT, and it's successive calls, rode off into the sunset, becoming indistinguishable from any other Seattle FM, except for it's TOH ID, which remains to this day.
Without the FM to carry it along, KBRO suffered the fate of many small, local stations, becoming more difficult to support in the shadow of the higher-powered signals and larger budgets of its big-city neighbors. Over a few years, it suffered a series of bankruptcies, studio moves and format experiments. It was once the Seattle-area outlet of a fledgling gay/lesbian network out of California, and more recently, was affiliated with the ESPN Deportes network. KBRO currently carries programming from a White Center church.
I think you're right about Gannett owning 106.9 for a time... though I'd have to look up the records to recall when that was. In any case, it was not while the stations were co-owned.