SonoSational18 said:
gr8oldies said:
Didnt the feds license a couple of Ks east of the Miss recently as well?
You mean like KYW, KDKA, and KQV?
Seriously, the FCC has recently relaxed what was a standing policy where the Mississippi was the general line of demarcation (in the early 20's it was the Rockies, so that's why there are some old W stations in Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, etc.). Since the Mississippi divides Minneapolis and St Paul, most Minneapolis stations begin with W... while most St. Paul stations begin with K.
As for the Fargo area station running full daytime power at night, they don't need WTAM's permission, they just have to inform them (along with the FCC).
The FCC has
not relaxed the K/W/Mississippi River callsign policy. At least not intentionally. They
have made a few mistakes recently.
They did
propose to eliminate the policy (allow K calls everywhere and W calls everywhere) but the industry shot it down.
The first recent mistake was KTGG(AM) near Jackson, Michigan. Rumor has it a clerk thought "MI" was "Missouri". There was also a TV station near Shreveport, Louisiana that was assigned WPXJ. (later changed to KPXJ; of course Louisiana lies across both sides of the Mississippi but this station was clearly west of the river) Other recent ones I know of:
- KBUD(FM) Sardis, Mississippi (roughly 80 miles east of the river)
- KOUI (FM) Louisville, Mississippi (roughly 150 miles east of the river, though I have a vague recollection it was initially licensed in Louisiana and moved across the river)
- WJTJ (FM) Cameron, Missouri (northwest Missouri, not too far from Kansas City)
(this list is probably not complete)
Stations in the Minneapolis, St. Louis, and Memphis markets occasionally change cities-of-license across the river and are not required to change callsigns when they do so. For example, there's now a WHHL(FM) in Hazelwood, Missouri, but the station was for decades licensed to Jerseyville, Illinois.
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Regarding Minneapolis/St. Paul, 63% of the stations licensed to Minneapolis have K calls - though that is a lower proportion than in St. Paul, where 80% of stations have K calls. Ironically, most of Minneapolis lies
west of the Mississippi River, including the heart of downtown. Nearly all of St. Paul lies
east of the river. (actually,
north of the river, which makes a sharp bend at the border between the two cities)
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WZFG didn't require advance permission from anyone to engage in that emergency nighttime operation. At least, not beyond the permission implicit in FCC regulation 73.1250 which allows such emergency operation. The station is required to file a report with the FCC
after the fact explaining what they did and why. I see nothing in 73.1250 requiring any notification whatsoever to WTAM. (though it may well have been done as a courtesy, or at the informal request of Commission staff.)
There is a somewhat confusing additional regulation along these lines referenced in 73.1250. The way I read it, an AM station in an emergency can, without further permission, either use its normally licensed nighttime facilities, or its normally licensed daytime facilities. If it wishes to operate in any other way, it must seek advance permission (through an informal application) from the FCC. Presumably WZFG's 25kw nighttime operation towards the end of this emergency would have required such prior permission. (I would imagine the application was filed by, and approved by, e-mail)