In the wake of that great bturner opening post, I have just a few memories to add here vis a vis that FIRST LPFM window.
For a group up this way and from elsewhere -- a clique that included many current and ex-radio jocks, engineers, medics, tower climbers, AARPers, and a few amused bystanders with no other apparent lives -- we made a go at an LPFM.
Did pretty well for a while. The owner of the shack that held up the tower (or maybe vice-versa) got added to the directors' board. The group not only got '100' on the FCC filing exam but was the only crew in the entire county to've applied. The CP arrived in three days.
The biggest expense was the Nicom transmitter (I forget the spelling ; the brand was whatever Paul Simon's camera wasn't). We broadcast from the original tower for a while, and had some fun, some underwriters, and sufficient beer and pizza money. Then we decided to bring the station 'back home', as it were. And some Class B outfit southeast of us, second-adjacent, b*tched about us moving the tower site 3300 feet inside their 42-mile contour zone. All along that move had been planned, what with the FCC's very own stipulation that moving the tower site within a certain minimal distance after the application was considered a 'minor' filing.
'Major incursion!!', we were told by the class B station. We were all set to pounce on a subsequent ruling that stated if there was minimal listenership conflict in that new, disputed, neutral convex arc, it was a dead issue. There could not have been, we figured -- since every topographical map and hobo junction we could uncover had NO ONE in that new area. It was just steep, uninhabitable woods.
Well, as I said : 'all set' to file -- when some station to our East moved their stick and opened up a new frequency. Boom. Instant filing. Boom -- new frequency granted to us.
Our LPFM was fortunate in several ways. Not the least of advantages was the station being cossetted by computer programs and equipment contributed by engineers and voices who'd had, among then, three internet stations up and running a year before that first FCC window.
Moreover, with us being the only group in the entire county to've applied, there was no 'point' business -- that process of elimination playoff between mutual applicants. That breathing room allowed us to broadcast the minimum mandated hours specified in the original rules. And THAT maneuverability also gave clearance for another venture. That was having TWO stations on the same channel -- one in the day for the adults (avg age 47.4 years) and, after a few hours of silence, signing back on with another station for youth ..... voice and DJ training and their music.
That latter agenda never came off. But for a while our daytime 'computer in some closet' coasted, with several hundred voicers from all over fed into Cool Edit and Ots Juke and distributed to effect actual, scheduled air shifts.
We had fun.
But BTurner is dead-on bullseye. The mortality rate for successful applicants is gruesome.