Mark said:Actually the Kankakee allocation made sense at the time. The south suburbs of Chicago was where all the growth was predicted. Park Forest South, now University Park was planned for 150,000 people, a four year college and two hospitals.
Today it has only around 6,600 people.
But the south suburbs tanked. And these allocations should've been adjusted.
WTTW and WYCC had excellent reasons to keep WYIN off of Sears. WYIN would've paid far less for shows than either station but have gotten similar coverage. It was a matter of being fair.
I think WYIN provides a local slant to TV that is sorely missing. I would hate to see it go, but the population it serves, just isn't affluent enough to make it bigger. I wish other stations would put on at least some genuine local contact to their cities of license. Aurora, Gary, Joliet are big enough cities to warrent some sort of, at least, weekly local program.
I would hate to think PBS stations will just turn into one big rely "network" of programs operated at a switch in NYC or some other big city.
When the allocations were setup, maybe that was the predicted areas to serve. With the exception of the old WCAE 50 (original non-commercial channel) & the current WYIN 56/DT-17 (originally alocated as commercial, but 50 & 56 were swapped in 1985, making 50 commercial & 56 non-commercial), the 2 commercial allocations for NW Indiana never served NW Indiana, despite the stations being licensed to Gary & Hammond WPWR-TV 50 being licensed to Gary & WJYS 62 being licensed to Hammond).
WTTW & WYCC did not have a valid enough reson to keep WYIN off the Sears Tower. The only way WYIN could have been denied the right to put their transmitter in Chicago is if the station interfered with either of their stations. WYIN already pays less for their PBS programming because of their COL being Gary Indiana. Moving to the Sears Tower wouldn't have changed that, except for having similar coverage. If that happened, I don't believe they would have marketed as much to Chicago as they would have continued to serve NW Indiana. Their reason for wanting to transmit from the Sears Tower was to improve coverage over NW Indiana, as most people in my area only have 1 antenna, and have it pointed at Chicago, & not Cedar Lake. WYIN shows most of the same programming as WTTW, but usually shows it after WTTW already showed it (usually a week, but maybe 2 weeks if WYCC also hold rights to the same show as well). If WYIN were a real threat, they would have been a threat to WTTW more than WYCC as WYCC is more of a college educational channel during the day with some general PBS shows during the evening & overnight hours, while WTTW & WYIN are general PBS stations. WYIN would have had to come up with better programming than what they have in order to really be a threat to WTTW & WYCC. WTTW & WYCC air all their local shows in HD, while WYIN still show their local programming in SD, but any PBS shows that are in HD are aired in HD (WTTW & WYCC are 1080i & WYIN is 720p). As it stands, WYIN is no threat to WTTW & WYCC, whether they transmit from their current site in Cedar Lake, or if they would have been on the Sears Tower. Money was the reason WYIN withdrew their request, and for now continue to have their transmitter in Cedar Lake. For now, WTTW & WYCC can breathe a sigh of relief that WYIN isn't transmitting from Chicago. Otherwise, the FCC would have let WYIN move their transmitter to Chicago, just because their channel allocation (DT-17) is spaced enough to allow it to locate in Chicago. WYIN's old analog allocation, 56 initially couldn't locate in Chicago because of channel 60 was already in Chicago, but also because a year after 56 signed on for the first time (1987), channel 55 from Kenosha signed on for the first time from a tower in Pleasant Prairie Wisconsin in 1988 (tower still there, but now used for WWDV 96.9 Zion, IL). When channel 55 Kenosha moved their transmitter to Franksville WI, and the FCC worked out short-spacing of TV channels, 56 was eventually allowed to locate to Chicago. That never happened either because of cost, which was the same reason their digital channel didn't locate there. The digital CP was withdrawn, while WYIN let the analog CP expire.
Bisides, how many people from Chicagoland would actually donate to a NW Indiana station? Except for cable, they might not be as well known in most of Chicagoland outside of the messageboards. For those that do know of the station might not see a reason to watch the station. Overall, it's not much different from WTTW as the PBS programming overall overlaps. WYIN shows Lawrence Welk & Hee-Haw from time to time on Saturday nights, which WTTW & WYCC don't show at all, along with NW Indiana high school sports & some college sports that CBS, ABC, NBC, & Fox show (mainly college sports within the state of Indiana).