I would say WLVL is a Lockport and Eastern Niagara County station. Is it Buffalo? Not really. And without the FM you aren't getting many people listening except maybe those tho left WBEN after their format change, if they didn't go to WHLD. Speaking of high school sports, they used to air them. They air Scholastic Bowl still.
Give WLVL credit for airing Scholastic Bowl, although you have to wonder how many people listen to it when compared to the number of listeners high school sports (football, basketball, hockey, soccer, lacrosse) has the potential to draw. Just do the numbers based on the participants in each competition and the nature of the games.
The number of listeners in Niagara County, and Lockport specifically, that gravitated to 1340 after WBEN made programming modifications is insignificant. The over-under is 30 ... maybe. Seriously.
After the morning show which features eight to ten local newscasts delivered by Lockport legacy Hank Nevins, WLVL is a vapor. The Lockport stalwarts listen to the morning show, but even fewer listen the remainder of the day which is given to third rate syndicated conservative talk shows that pale in comparison to what's offered on WBEN, and the rational talk programming of WBFO.
Think about it ... listeners have the option of listening to WBEN, WGR, WHTT, 97 Rock, WYRK, Kiss, Star 96, WBLK, The Edge, WBFO, WNED-FM, WECK-AM (or it's three translators) ... heck, even The Wolf ... as well as Toronto's 50 kW AM 740 Zoomer Radio, countless Toronto FM stations that get into Niagara County "like a local" ... and they choose 1340? Or 1440? C'mon, man.
Only the Lockport stalwarts ... highly upper demo at that ... make the choice, and in all likelihood, their listening is strictly limited. They get the local Lockport news (house fire on Walnut Street, or drug bust on Locust Street, or two car collision at Transit and Robinson) delivered by a well known Lockport native, and move on to the Buffalo or Toronto stations ... or WHAM Rochester ... as they drive to work and go about their daily routine.
Detaching the 105.3 translator from WLVL and latching it to WEBR was one of those "too smart by a half" maneuvers because it immediately devalued and reduced the number of programming options that could have been made to improve WLVL's appeal and revenue. The translator is located in Lockport, yet it re-broadcasts a Niagara Falls station? Consider the fact that 105.3 barely gets into the Falls, but it covered Lockport like white on rice. Consider the fact that there's long been a weird provincial disconnect between Lockport and Niagara Falls. Why change the translator affiliation?
The present WLVL-WEBR programming platform is ... to be diplomatic ... "severely lacking." No malice intended in that assessment. Those stations will never be "Buffalo stations," and they shouldn't attempt to be. But this doesn't mean they should throw in the towel and sound like audio driftwood washed up on the beach. Also, it doesn't mean that, with proper, consistent, relevant programming, they can't
potentially pick up a few sets of ears in the expanding suburbs like East Amherst, Niagara Wheatfield and the established 'burbs of the Tonawandas. Still, these are
not Buffalo stations, and "picking up a few sets of ears" takes a backseat to properly providing viable programming to their local communities.
There are programming options and business tactics that would better latch these stations to their communities. WBTA Batavia, WCJW Warsaw (with its 27 translators ... only a slight exaggeration) and WDOE Dunkirk are stellar examples that should be studied. Oh, and WECK, too. And no, I'm not "that guy." Ahem.