The Brandywine school district's termination of Clint Dantinne was a pretty good indication the curtain was falling on WMPH.
That leaves the low-wattage radio station at McKean High School (88.1) as the only remaining high school station in the state of Delaware.
Ironically, the nation's most powerful high school station ALSO happens to be located on the Delmarva peninsula, Kent County High School's WKHS 90.5, from Worton, Maryland, near Chestertown (It simulcasts WXPN programming nights, weekends, and summer time.)
However, lest we forget, WMPH was silent for at least a year or two without losing its license. (Unless this time, the district goes out of its way to return the license!)
If WMPH remains silent, you can bet that West Chester University's WCUR 91.7 will seek FCC permission to go from directional to non-directional status (assuming budget-cuts haven't limited its options, too!). WCUR was one of the few low-power, non-commercial, directional F.M.'s in the country, "protecting" WMPH. For many years, West Chester U. struggled to get a station on-the-air, and the lack of open channels was one of the reasons.
Even during comparatively good financial times, Delaware school districts never seemed to have very much interest in high school radio, in stark contrast to public-school systems in some big metropolitan areas of the country.
Then, when Temple University's WRTI; the University of Pennsylvania's WXPN; and religious broadcasters went after translators even beyond the boundaries of Pennsylvania, that served to block high schools from going on-the-air even if they wanted to.
Smaller colleges too: It's amazing how colleges from Delaware State University to Delaware Tech's various campuses to Washington College in Chestertown never went on-the-air!
All this has been a loss for any young person in Delmarva who dreamed of a career in broadcasting.
In some cases, radio lost to television, but again, high school television in the Delaware area is comparatively primitive, largely limited to broadcasting the announcements at the start of the day "in school".
When cable TV companies worked out operating agreements, no attempt was made to give school districts 24/7 dedicated cable channels (although a City of Wilmington spokesman said recently the city explored that option, and found no takers among the school districts!). So here too, Delaware students - public and private - are denied the opportunities offered elsewhere.