I noted your comments about the post-Katrina WASO-AM broadcasts. That effort was the brainchild of Marc Pittman, M.D., owner of Pittman Broadcasting Services.
Dr. Pittman’s stations in Franklinton, LA had been severely damaged by a tornado during Katrina, but were put back on the air by using a 100 watt exciter and bypassing the FM transmitter. That allowed a 500 watt generator to run both WUUU-FM and WOMN-AM.
Unfortunately, the resultant signal covered Washington Parish, but not St. Tammany Parish. Every radio station licensed to St. Tammany Parish, or that had towers in St. Tammany Parish remained off the air after Katrina.
Dr. Pittman was also a Disaster Medical Director for the American Red Cross. He and his brother, Michael Pittman, M.D. opened many of their properties to distribute food, water, ice, medical care, and to serve as staging areas for debris removal.
Frustrated by the lack of communication and the misinformation that was being disseminated by WWL-AM, Dr. Pittman convinced St. Tammany Parish President Kevin Davis to seize the dormant station, WASO 730 AM.
There was only a six (6) hour window to put the station on the air before a federal marshal arrived in the parish (the station had been seized months earlier by the Federal Trade Commission). When the transmitter site was entered, the federal authorities had gutted the transmitter and studios to stop Robert Namer from ever broadcasting again.
Dr. Pittman took parts from his tornado damaged transmitter in Franklinton to “Frankenstein” the WASO transmitter. WASO was broadcasting within four (4) hours of President Davis’ seizure, well before the arrival of the federal marshal.
The generator that powered the station came from Dr. Pittman’s own home. The emergency broadcasts ran at 1 kilowatt day and night, rather than the FCC designated 250 watt daytime and 25 watt nighttime. Dr. Pittman trained St. Tammany Parish employees in using broadcast recording equipment to record twenty to thirty minutes of emergency information. Tim Harris, with Access St. Tammany, was the main contact person.
The emergency broadcast audio was burned onto a re-writable CDR, and played in a continuous loop over a boom box that survived the tornado in Franklinton. The audio was eventually added to the St. Tammany Parish website so that those who had evacuated and family members of those who remained could keep informed.
After a few days of broadcasting, Dr. Pittman thought that Louisiana needed a ‘fight song’ to help lift the spirits of those involved in the disaster. He added the LSU fight song to the broadcasts, which was an instant hit with the public.
The entire WASO episode was reported by the TIMES-PICAYUNE on 09-03-2005:
TIMES-PICAYUNE Saturday, September 03, 2005
Tammany radio station providing information
By Charlie Chapple- St. Tammany bureau
St. Tammany Parish President Kevin Davis, wielding emergency powers, has seized a closed radio station near Covington and is using it to relay information about local recovery efforts to parish residents.
Radio station WASO, 730-AM, got on the air late Friday with the help of Covington doctor Marcus L. "Marc" Pittman III, who heads Pittman Broadcasting Services LLC, which owns radio stations in Franklinton and Lafayette.
[EDIT]
Pittman, using computer equipment from his radio stations, revived the station in a small building next to the tower. The station's broadcast signal carries throughout the parish
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