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Lima to get new radio station.

Soon, a brand new radio station will hit the air in the Lima market. WVLO 99.3 Cridersville will light up the radio dial with a CCR format. The station will be broadcasting from the watch tv tower just southwest of the city. educational media is the proprietor and will run the Klove radio network.
 
MAIN STUDIO WAIVEREducational Media Foundation ("EMF"), licensee of FM radio station WVLO,Cridersville, Ohio, hereby respectfully requests a waiver of Section 73.1125 of the Commission’srules (hereinafter referred to as the "main studio rule") to permit the relocation of the main studioof WVLO from its location in Cridersville, Ohio, to the main studio of EMF’s co-owned stationKLVR (NCE-FM), Middletown, California. The proposed studio location is approximately 3310kilometers (2057 miles) outside of the 3.16 mV/m contour of WVLO.EMF proposes to operate WVLO as a "satellite" station of KLVR. WVLO will be part ofa network of radio broadcast stations operated by EMF known as the "K-LOVE Radio Network."EMF is a non-profit corporation and each network station operates noncommercially andbroadcasts the noncommercial educational programming carried on the K-LOVE Radio Network.By co-locating WVLO’s main studio at KLVR’s main studio in Middletown, EMF will realizevaluable economies of scale and cost savings, which are needed to maintain the high quality ofK-LOVE’s noncommercial educational programming. As a listener-supported station, WVLOwill face severe financial constraints. The obligation to maintain separate staffing and studiolocations for both WVLO and KLVR will place a serious financial burden on EMF and divertwhat limited resources are available from K-LOVE’s programming efforts.To ensure that WVLO fulfills its local service obligations to the residents of Cridersville,Ohio, EMF will have a local public affairs representative, who may be a volunteer, available inthe community of Cridersville, Ohio. This local representative will, at least on a quarterly basis,conduct interviews and surveys of local community leaders and other residents to ascertain theinterests, concerns, and needs of the Cridersville listeners. EMF will then address the recurrentissues, problems, and needs of the residents of Cridersville in K-LOVE’s news and public affairsprogramming. EMF’s local representative will further serve as a liaison between the residents ofCridersville and EMF’s programming personnel. Finally, EMF will maintain a toll-freetelephone number, as required by Section 73.1125(d) of the rules, and maintain a publicinspection file for WVLO at the main studio of its parent station, KLVR(FM), Middletown,California, as required by Section 73.3527 of the Commission’s rules, and make reasonableaccommodation to listeners wishing to examine the file’s contents. Under Section 73.1125 of the Commission’s rules, a broadcast station must maintain itsmain studio (a) within the station's community of license; (b) at a location within the principalcommunity contour of any AM, FM, or TV broadcast station licensed to the station's communityof license; or (c) within 25 miles from the reference coordinates of the center of the station’s
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community of license, except when "good cause" exists for locating the main studio at analternate location. The Commission traditionally considers waiver requests by noncommercialeducational stations on a case-by-case basis. See Main Studio and Program Origination Rules, 3FCC Rcd 5024 (1988); see also Review of the Commission’s Rules Regarding the Main Studioand Local Public Inspection Files of Broadcast Television and Radio Stations, 13 FCC Rcd15691, 15695 n.18 (1998). In the context of noncommercial waiver requests, the Commissionhas expressly and implicitly found "good cause" to exist in numerous instances based solely upona showing that centralized operations will provide an economic benefit to noncommercialstations which have limited funding, provided that local service obligations are met. See Letterto Roy R. Russo, Esq., dated January 24, 1994; Letter to Richard J. Bodorff, dated January 2,1992; The President and Board of Trustees of the Miami University, 7 FCC Rcd 2902 (1992);The Cedarville College, 6 FCC Rcd 538 (1991); Letter to Gerald Stevens-Kittner, Esq., datedJuly 15, 1991; Sound of Life, Inc., 4 FCC Rcd 8273 (1989); Lift Him Up Outreach Ministries,Inc., 3 FCC Rcd 5571 (1988); Georgia State Board of Education, 70 F.C.C.2d 948 (1979), recon.denied, 71 F.C.C.2d 227 (1979); Nebraska Educational Television Comm’n, 4 R.R.2d 771(1965).EMF respectfully submits that the instant request presents substantially the same showingof good cause and public interest benefits as each of these waivers noted above. In each case, theCommission staff determined that the waivers were justified on the basis of the limited fundingavailable to the stations and the increased efficiencies resulting from co-location of studios. Likethese other waiver applicants, EMF will also experience financial difficulties in maintainingseparate staffing and separate facilities for its "parent" and "satellite" stations. EMF will also befully capable of fulfilling its local service obligations in the same manner as each of these otherapplicants.In view of the foregoing, EMF requests that the Commission find pursuant to Section73.1125(b)(2) of the Commission’s rules that the public interest will be served by theconsolidation of WVLO’s main studio with KLVR’s main studio, and authorize EMF to locateWVLO’s main studio outside of the city grade community and contour of the station and morethan 25 miles from the reference coordinates of the center of Cridersville, Ohio.
 
Wow! This is going to really annoy regular listeners of WHKO-99.1 in the Sidney-Wapak area! Seems to be very short-spaced from my experience in that area....
 
WHKO has a monster signal for sure. A station there on 99.3 would no doubt cause interference to WHKO listeners. Wouldn't 101.1 MHz be a much better frequency for this new station?
 
I heard there is an issue with harmonics and other stations broadcasting in the area. Heard an enginer talk about intermod interference. issues.
 
101.1 is too close to WKXA on 100.5 (third adjacent).

99.3 was used by Bluffton University for WBWH-LP; WFRO-FM was too close to Lima for a full powered station. This channel only opened up when 99.1 Fremont moved to a new transmitter site closer to Sandusky.

WBWH-LP then had to move down to 96.1.
 
KR4BD said:
Wow! This is going to really annoy regular listeners of WHKO-99.1 in the Sidney-Wapak area! Seems to be very short-spaced from my experience in that area....

Other than 95.7, in my experience WHKO has the best Dayton FM signal in Auglaize County. I am wondering why this station is necessary. Lima already has plenty of stations, and I would hesitate to call Wapakoneta, St. Marys and Celina underserved.
 
Who knows. It's now been for 24 hours. 113 watts at 830 feet. gets out real good. Looks to cover up 99.1 in Wapak. As soon as you get to mile marker 108 though 99.1 punches back.
 
schmave said:
KR4BD said:
Wow! This is going to really annoy regular listeners of WHKO-99.1 in the Sidney-Wapak area! Seems to be very short-spaced from my experience in that area....

Other than 95.7, in my experience WHKO has the best Dayton FM signal in Auglaize County. I am wondering why this station is necessary. Lima already has plenty of stations, and I would hesitate to call Wapakoneta, St. Marys and Celina underserved.
Yeah, it's not like they will get much in the way of "local service" from what is essentially an oversized translator.
 
techie2 said:
schmave said:
KR4BD said:
Wow! This is going to really annoy regular listeners of WHKO-99.1 in the Sidney-Wapak area! Seems to be very short-spaced from my experience in that area....

Other than 95.7, in my experience WHKO has the best Dayton FM signal in Auglaize County. I am wondering why this station is necessary. Lima already has plenty of stations, and I would hesitate to call Wapakoneta, St. Marys and Celina underserved.
Yeah, it's not like they will get much in the way of "local service" from what is essentially an oversized translator.

I guess of any of the three cities I named, Wapak could use a local radio station. WKKI and WCSM serve Celina and St. Marys, and Auglaize County really doesn't have a station of its own (not counting the Lima stations that transmit from the county). Maybe this one will fit the bill ... who knows?
 
WFGF OH WAPAKONETA

Licensee: MAVERICK MEDIA OF LIMA LICENSE LLC
Service Designation: FM 'Full Service' FM station or application
Channel/Class: 221A Frequency: 92.1 MHz
 
TomT said:
WFGF OH WAPAKONETA

Licensee: MAVERICK MEDIA OF LIMA LICENSE LLC
Service Designation: FM 'Full Service' FM station or application
Channel/Class: 221A Frequency: 92.1 MHz

If this is here to prove Wapak has a local radio station ... well, that's a stretch. 92.1 serves Lima. I am old enough to remember when the station was located along 33A in Moulton, and even then in the 1980s as WAXC it served Lima more than Auglaize County. I am talking a station dedicated to Auglaize County, not merely one licensed there or whose tower is in Buckland.
 
92.1 is on a tower east of cridersville, the 99.3 is on the tower north of wapak. looks like 99.1 still comes in but there is some interference.
 
If the goal is a radio station serving Auglaize County, that's the last thing the new 99.3 will do. Educationial Media's two satellite feeds include no local content. They's gummed up the band with hundreds of useless, short-spaced stations across the country.
 
It would be up to the local owner to insert content. EMF doesn't own the station. I wasn't even aware it was going to be K-Love. WCSM does pretty good serving that entire area, but I agree, if Auglaize can have its own station, it would be a good thing.
 
First of all 99.1 WFRO is still located in Fremont not Sandusky. KLOVE does have local content as I recently heard a promo for a concert in Toledo at the Huntington Center.
 
The WFRO tower was originally in downtown Fremont. They moved the tower a couple of miles to the NE, towards Sandusky. This was just enough to open up the Lima area for 99.3
 
RF Man said:
First of all 99.1 WFRO is still located in Fremont not Sandusky. KLOVE does have local content as I recently heard a promo for a concert in Toledo at the Huntington Center.

Yep.. With the Wegener iPump satellite system KLove uses they have the ability to do a lot of local inserts (as the satellite receiver has Hard Drive that can store audio triggered by the network).
 
Inserting local IDs and promos is about the bare minimum you could consider "local content." Still, it's more than Jimmy Swaggert's repeater station does in NW Ohio on Am 730.
 
K-Love isn't about "local service." It's about saving souls (and playing catchy tunes with no swear words). If it saves just one lucky listener from an eternity of Hellfire, it's worthwhile. Right?
 
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