On May 1, 2015. the licensee of WJSJ Fernandina Beach, Scott Savage (the court-appointed receiver of the former Tama stations), sent a Silent STA application to the FCC stating the reason why the station has been off the air. Basically, the application stated that the time brokerage agreement had ended abruptly and, as a result, the licensee will have to find another time brokerage partner. Moreover, the licensee said the process will take at least 6 months, which means the station will be off the air for quite a while. As for any ideas for what programming would be successful on 105.3 FM, I don't know anything that will work on that frequency other than bringing back the simulcast of 105.5 FM akin to when the stations were under common ownership or simulcast Gospel music programming on WJNJ AM 1320 Jacksonville/W279AG (103.7 FM) Atlantic Beach, FL, which are stations owned by New Covenant Ministries, a local church in the Jacksonville area. The primary reason why I believe WJSJ (105.3 FM) would be an excellent compliment to these stations is because WJSJ 60 dBu primary service contour encompasses the majority of the predominately African-American communities on Jacksonville's Northside and Urban Core since the station's transmitter is located in the Oceanway community on the Northside. Furthermore, the station has a decent, quite listenable signal on the Westside of Jacksonville, another area in Jacksonville containing a significant population of African-Americans. On the other hand, the signal of 103.7 FM is OK at best on the Northside and is poor on the Westside because of the null in the station's coverage pattern that was created to protect co-channel, 100kW WRUF. On the flip side, W279AG's signal is the strongest on the Southside and the Beaches, which is where the transmitter is located. Since W279AG 103.7 FM is a translator, the station is subject to interference from full power stations, which means when atmospheric conditions are right, 100 kW WRUF can completely obliterate the tiny 250 watt W279AG, especially on the southwestern part of the coverage pattern where the signal is the weakest. Since WJSJ has better Metro Jacksonville coverage overall than the 103.7 translator, the station would be a great asset to "Pure Radio" and provide more consistent, more reliable signal to ALL of Jacksonville, especially in the areas where the majority of the potential listening audience resides.