In answer to one point, WAMS on 1260, is not a "heritage" station. It was on 1380 from 1947/8 until the 90's. At one point the WAMS calls were used on 1600 in Dover. And the 1260 allocation, dating back to 1964, is hardly heritage.
Both 1380 and 1260 applied for the expanded band (1380 was alrady AM stereo, a plus you would think) and both denied.
I really don't think listeners are tuning to the expanded frequencies, anyway. The advertising needed to tell potential audiences to move to a section of the band they have probably never heard of, when less than 18% of listeners tune in AM anyway, would not be a good move.
> The truth is there were so many applicants to move to the
> expanded band, that the FCC narrowed down the candidates to
> the stations they thought would benefit the most. Using
> their traditionally bad discernment, here are some of the
> high and low lights:
>
> 1) They gave an expanded band allocation to WHWH 1350 in
> Princeton; with 5000 watts day and night, WHWH was the #1
> rated radio station in Trenton for almost 20 years, beating
> WBUD, WTTM and WAAT.
> 2) They gave an expanded band allocation to the former
> WBOC-AM in Salisbury MD. 5000 watts day and night at 960.
> 3) They ignored WDAS-AM, one of the worst 5000 watt AM
> allocations ever. WDAS-AM doesn't get past Cottman Avenue &
> The Boulevard because of WBCB, they're boxed in all over the
> place, their nighttime, except for 10 blocks from the
> transmitter where all their listeners USED TO live, is
> worthless.
> 4) They ignored the 1260 in Newark, another terrible
> allocation, when AM allocations were assigned with a
> "shoe-horn", when they thought AM Radio was all we were ever
> going to have. The 1260 in Newark has a co-channel in
> Trenton, a co-channel in DC, 1270 in Vineland ( about 22
> miles as the crow flies), 1250 off the back of the lobe in
> York PA.
>
> Don't get me started. I'm sorry...what was the question?
>