It’s not.I noticed that KQBU-FM has had audio issues. Not sure if it is weather related or not
That night site doesn’t have long to live anyway as the station is vacating the land and going back to the current day site full time.I guess the diesel ran out at KLAT's night time site. They're off the air at this time.
KJFI-LP has been dead air for several days. Anyone hearing La Mejor on any of the other 102.5 transmitters?Now the only FM stations that still seem to be affected by the storm are KPVU and KLTN HD.
KJHJ-LP has also been dead air for several days with no RDS. I want to say it started before the storm. There's often issues on there and KCVE-LP so I don't really note anything.KJFI-LP has been dead air for several days. Anyone hearing La Mejor on any of the other 102.5 transmitters?
The East End had their service restored already. If a tree didn't snap their overhead line that feeds their property (which are the last things being fixed), then KLTN and KAMA should be back to normal.KPVU is back. And so is KLTN HD with HD1 still not locking.
Interesting. KPFT and KSBJ share the same tower. Do they not have a generator?New nasty storm today. Knocked KPFT, KAFR, and K231DA off the air. Before KPFT was off I heard them with dead air but HD2 was fine. K231CN & KZCW-LP is dead air.
KSBJ seems to be the one with the generator.Interesting. KPFT and KSBJ share the same tower. Do they not have a generator?
The station’s owner apparently has higher priorities than public safety.I watched the whole video. It's completely unacceptable for that radio station to have not sounded an EAS alert in conditions like that when the National Weather Service was clearly pushing them out.
Radio broadcasters get away with the lowest possible standards in nearly every respect these days but the FCC is still supposed to enforce EAS compliance.
EAS alerts are automatic. If there was a technical issue that caused the alert, when received, not to be broadcast, that is a different matter. Stations don't control EAS... the national, state and local government does. That is why we do test broadcasts that are a primary responsibility and about the first thing inspected when the FCC does a station visit.I watched the whole video. It's completely unacceptable for that radio station to have not sounded an EAS alert in conditions like that when the National Weather Service was clearly pushing them out.
And essentially all stations comply as it is a requirement under the rules that authorize them to operate.Radio broadcasters get away with the lowest possible standards in nearly every respect these days but the FCC is still supposed to enforce EAS compliance.
Or: the alert was not properly coded to activate at the station or the station's equipment failed to receive it. All stations must have working EAS gear that works even when nobody is in the studio.The station’s owner apparently has higher priorities than public safety.
Stations don't control EAS... the national, state and local government does.
All stations must have working EAS gear that works even when nobody is in the studio.
My point is that the process of activating cell phone alerts may not have been done at the same time or correctly or not at all for radio and TV. To condemn the station, we'd have to see that 1) all other stations did broadcast at the same time an alert, or 2) the radio and TV alert was sent out a bit later, or, 3) the station had all the necessary gear but it did not work properly on this occasion even if they had complied with the regular testing and test relay activations.They did. Watch the video. You can hear multiple emergency alerts sounding on the driver's phone but not on the radio station
You know the facts how?Apparently KSEV did not.
It depends on the coding and the station location as to whether the EAS fires off. If the codes are off or the station is outside the warning area it won't go off. Just because the phone went off means nothing.
In fact, the complaint seems to be you received the EAS alerts but not off the source you wanted.
I'd be much more concerned about the phone firing off than a radio station. Everybody has a phone. Not everybody is listening to radio at that moment and Houston has, what, 100 choices for stations. What other stations were checked?
Where did you get KSEV from? The video’s description mentions a progressive talk show on KPFT, the audio sounds very much like it’s coming from an FM station rather than the much more limited frequency response of AM, and the content being aired does not sound like anything that would run on a “conservative” formatted station, especially not the “Equity Academy Real Estate Radio Show” that KSEV advertises as being aired during the 6PM hour.AM Radio while driving through the storm. Noteworthy: At 01:43 the cell phone relayed two EAS warnings. KSEV 700 did not...