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February 4, 2002
TV to Sign Off from Mount Washington
By SCOTT FYBUSH
*A 48-year legacy of television broadcasting
from the highest point in the Northeast is coming to an end within
days, as WMTW-TV (Channel 8) shuts down its transmitter atop
Mount Washington, NEW HAMPSHIRE in favor of a new tower
west of Sebago Lake in Maine.
The move itself is
no surprise, at least if you've been reading NERW for a few years
now, but the timing is.
Some history, first (with more to come on Wednesday at Tower Site of the Week): Four years
after pioneering FM station WMNE (ex-W1XER, one of FM inventor
Edwin Armstrong's initial sites) shut down, Mount Washington
returned to the airwaves, on August 31, 1954, with the first
broadcast of WMTW-TV, licensed to Poland Spring, Maine, some
48 miles away.
From its lofty perch 6,288 feet above sea level (at the base
of the tower), WMTW-TV reached not only its intended market of
Portland; it also served a wide swath of western Maine, northern
New Hampshire, northern Vermont and southern Quebec that would
otherwise be without TV service for many years. For decades,
WMTW-TV would be the ABC outlet for places as distant as Burlington,
Vermont and Montreal.
The advent of cable and digital television began to erode
the advantages of broadcasting from such a height, though. When
WMTW was granted its digital TV construction permit on channel
46, it was clear that a DTV signal would not reach Portland from
Mount Washington with any reliability and the die was cast for
a new tower just down the road from the existing WCSH-TV (Channel
6) site northwest of Portland for WMTW-DT.
Add into the equation
the immense costs of operating a transmitter at a site that's
accessible by road for only a few months of the year and must
be staffed full-time by live-in crews through the brutal winter
months, not to mention the approaching end of the lease on the
mountaintop land used by WMTW-TV, and it also made sense to move
the NTSC operation from the mountain down to the new DTV site.
While Portland-area viewers will notice little change in their
WMTW-TV service, the move is causing some interesting side effects
in the North Country. Cable systems in places like Berlin, Gorham
and Lancaster all used WMTW-TV as their ABC affiliate, but they
won't receive service from the new Sebago Lake site.
And that, in turn, ends up being very good news for Manchester
ABC affiliate WMUR-TV (Channel 9), which has long operated two
LPTVs in the North Country. W27BL in Berlin and WMUR-LP (Channel
29) in Littleton carried WMUR newscasts, but were barred from
carrying WMUR's ABC programming because of WMTW-TV. With channel
8 gone from the area, both signals (which dropped Fox late last
year and were running only the local newscasts) will begin carrying
the full WMUR schedule to North Country broadcast and cable viewers
this week.
The move leaves one big question unanswered: what will become
of the two radio stations that use the mountaintop site? WHOM
(94.9 Mount Washington, the former WMTW-FM) and WPKQ (103.7 North
Conway) both depend on the power generated by WMTW-TV and on
WMTW's engineers to keep the transmitters running through the
long, cold winter months. The Mount Washington Observatory, too,
depends on WMTW's power to make its observations (including 200+
mile-per-hour wind gusts!)
NERW suspects WPKQ's
community change a few years ago, moving from Berlin to North
Conway, was meant to position the station for a move to the valley
south of the mountain should the top become unavailable; the
relay of Dover's WOKQ sells its advertising mainly in the North
Conway area and no longer sells on the coverage it still has
out to Portland.
WHOM's situation is more of a challenge; it identifies as
"Mount Washington-Portland" and has long operated from
studios in Portland. We suspect it would attempt to move to the
new WMTW-TV tower or a similar site near Portland if it can't
stay on the mountain; that, though, would require a community
change.
In any event, it's the end of a long, proud tradition in New
England broadcasting. NERW salutes the engineers who have kept
WMTW on the air through the worst of conditions up on "the
Rock," and in particular Marty Angstrom, who spent decades
up there as not only an engineer but a colorful on-air personality,
reporting on the weather up there with the thickest New England
accent imaginable. A new guyed steel tower may deliver a stronger
signal to Portland, but there's no way it can compare with the
romance of the Rock.
*More NEW HAMPSHIRE news: we're sorry to report the passing
of former WOKQ program director/morning host "Cousin"
Bob Walker (nee Willett). Walker was a fixture in Northern New
England radio for decades, spending time at Portland's WGAN as
well before retiring in the early eighties to begin a new life
as "Captain" Bob, piloting his tour boat around Casco
Bay. Walker was just 59 when he died Thursday (Jan. 31).
On a much less graceful note, we hear WHOB (106.3 Nashua)
and night jock Donnie White have parted ways after the latter
reportedly posted a far-too-revealing photo on the Web. (What
was that about "a face for radio"?)
*Crossing the line to MAINE, which
we've pretty much done already anyway, there's just one other
note to add: WRED (95.9 Saco) has been granted a power increase
and a transmitter move. J.J. Jeffrey's CHR station would move
to a site in Old Orchard Beach next door to WCYY (94.3 Biddeford),
increasing from its current 3300 watts (at 91 meters) to 4100
watts at 121 meters AAT.
And did we mention WMTW-TV is moving its transmitter? Guess
so...
*That
brings us to MASSACHUSETTS, home of the World Champion
New England Patriots, and we're just sorry we don't still live
in Boston as we write this Sunday night. Sure, we're happy for
Messrs. Kraft, Belichick, Brady, et al...but we're especially
pleased for the team's longtime radio announcers, former Pats
coach Gino Cappelletti and veteran WBZ sports director Gil Santos.
It's taken far too long for Gil and Gino to be able to announce
a championship, and for a while there, we were afraid they'd
both retire without getting the chance.
(Alas, only those within range of the WBCN signal were able
to hear Gil and Gino's call of the game; NFL rules restrict home-team
coverage to flagship stations only, so the rest of New England
had to listen to the Westwood One network coverage. WBCN has
made Gil's call of the game-winning field goal available at wbcn.com, at least, and it's
quite the fun bit of audio.)
The Pats' win will be one of the last big stories to be covered
on Fox Sports New England's late-night "Regional Sports
Report." Budget cuts at the regional network mean FSNE's
10 PM and weekend reports will be cancelled at the end of this
week, leaving only the 6:30 PM show. Among the job cuts: anchors
Eric Frede and John Holt.
Radio One isn't off the hook with the FCC over an inspection
at WBOT (97.7 Brockton) in March 2000 that found the station
lacking a public file, an operations log and a working EAS unit.
The company appealed a $21,500 Notice of Apparent Liability,
saying it had just purchased the station (formerly WCAV) five
months earlier; the FCC rejected that appeal this week, saying
the company "should be well aware of its responsibility"
as a group owner of long standing.
Radio People on the Move: Veteran Boston jock Neal Robert
joins WBOS (92.9 Brookline) in the afternoon slot last held by
Jack Lawrence. Across town at WXKS-FM (107.9 Medford), Skip Kelly
is switching coasts, leaving the late night slot at Kiss 108
to go to Los Angeles and evenings at KYSR (98.7). And former
New England programmer John Frawley (WBZ, etc.) gets promoted
from VP/Broadcast Operations at Shadow/Metro Networks to senior
VP/Broadcast Operations...congratulations!
Meanwhile, AllAccess reports Jay Bailey has left his post
as operations manager at Worcester talker WORC (1310).
The Calvary Satellite Network folks have modified their application
for a 91.7 signal in Gardner, and in a very strange way indeed.
The original application, filed back in January 2000, called
for 630 watts at 161 meters from a site near Mount Wachusett,
with a directional antenna nulled to the south and pointing north
towards Gardner. This week, though, CSN filed an amended application
- and the new site is a good 35 miles to the south, not far from
Old Sturbridge Village and a long way from Gardner. We don't
think the proposed 880 watts at 138 meters will do much to reach
Gardner from the new site, and we're wondering if there's not
a typo somewhere in the coordinates...
Finally, though we don't often report on unlicensed broadcasters
here, we need to tip our hat to "EBRadio," which served
a small East Boston neighborhood with a part 15 micro-signal
since February 1995. After moving from 101.3 to 97.9 to 89.3,
EBRadio pulled the plug on its broadcast signal last Saturday
night, as its owner relocates from the neighborhood and spectrum
space gets ever more crowded.
The good news? We're told the station will soon be back as
a Webcaster, via radiodestiny.com.
*The news from CONNECTICUT this week
seems to center on tower changes. Over in Greenwich, WGCH (1490)
is asking the FCC to expedite its application for a new fiberglass
tower at a local marina. Why the hurry? The station was already
served with an informal eviction notice from its Putnam Avenue
transmitter site; now it has a formal notice from the state Supreme
Court in hand ordering it to vacate its current site.
Up in the New Haven
area, WQUN (1220 Hamden) is getting ready to replace its two
towers at the top of Denslow Hill Road. We saw the pieces of
the new tower when we stopped by in December; now we can tell
you they'll be put into place, one at a time, in April or May.
WQUN will operate non-directionally with 160 watts as each of
its existing towers is taken down.
On the TV side, Connecticut Public Television's WEDN (Channel
53) in Norwich will be powering down a bit as it moves to a new
tower at its site in Bozrah, just a bit northwest of the current
tower. WEDN will drop from 794 kW visual (at 207 meters) to 630
kW visual (at 204 meters) when the new stick, which will also
accomodate WEDN-DT (Channel 45) goes up.
*A quick VERMONT note: George Paul
checked in from WXAL (93.7 Addison) to report that Teresa is
moving from middays to the morning show at the Middlebury-area
"Alice" modern AC outlet. Weekender Serena will replace
Teresa as she joins Paul on wakeup duty.
*The
big news in NEW YORK came from Buffalo - and we don't
mean the windy, windy weather last Friday (though we'll get to
that, too, in a moment!)
The winds of change continued to blow hard at the Entercom
cluster in the Queen City earlier in the week, as Clip Smith
was informed (upon arriving to work on Tuesday) that his 6-10
PM talk show on WBEN (930) had been cancelled and his services
were no longer required.
Smith, a former sports anchor at WKBW-TV, came to WBEN in
early 2000 as part of the format changes that turned his former
home of WGR into an all-sports station. Smith's time slot is
being filled by an hour of news at 6, followed by the Laura Schlessinger
show formerly heard from 9 AM until noon.
Moving into that
slot is Tom Bauerle, who finally leaves the WGR sports format
in which he'd been an uncomfortable fit since being paired with
Chris "Bulldog" Parker in 2000. There's already plenty
of speculation in Buffalo media circles that Bauerle's being
groomed for morning drive at WBEN - and that the Laura move is
just a prelude to her disappearance from the Buffalo airwaves.
Meanwhile, Buffalo now has no local talker after 6 at night,
and WGR is looking for a new co-host for Parker in mornings.
(
A footnote: Bill Lacy, the WBEN morning man who was the victim
of an earlier round of budget cuts at Entercom/Buffalo, was back
on the air last week, filling in across town at Citadel oldies
WHTT 104.1 for the vacationing Danny Neaverth.)
Now, about that weather: in addition to claiming the chimney
cap and at least one chimney brick, not to mention the front
screen door, here at NERW Central, the near-hurricane-force winds
wreaked havoc on the broadcast scene.
In Rochester, WLGZ
(990) was without power and off the air from Friday morning until
Saturday afternoon, with WXXI (1370) also losing power for a
few hours on Friday. WRSB (1310 Canandaigua) was silent for much
of Friday, while its sister stations WASB (1590) and WMJQ (105.5)
in Brockport were silent until late Saturday or early Sunday.
Out in Orleans County, WBJA (102.1) appears to be off even
as we write this early Monday morning.
On the TV side, WXXI-TV (Channel 21) suffered damage to its
transmission line and spent the weekend operating at barely five
percent of its usual megawatt of power.
One more Rochester
note: WBBF (950 Rochester/93.3 Fairport) said farewell to PD/afternoon
guy Bobby Hatfield (aka Joe Reilly) on Thursday. He's off to
Bloomsburg, PA to spend full time at his new acquisition, WHLM
(930); best of luck to him - and it was nice to hear from his
former WBBF morning partner, Ellis B. Feaster, who checked in
to the farewell show from his new gig doing mornings at WWKA
(92.3) down in sunny Orlando! (See above to know why we're so
jealous of Ellis' 86-degree weather...)
Up in the North Country, Mike Roach checked in to tell us
WYSI (96.7 Canton) and WRCD (101.5 Canton) were both off the
air at the height of the windy weather on Friday.
Still off as well, but for different reasons, is WWJS (90.1
Watertown); Mike reports that Joann Scott, the wife of Liberty
Christian Center pastor Steven Bryant, is telling Watertown's
WWNY (Channel 7) that she supports her husband in his dispute
with Scott's parents, who had been operating WWJS until they
were locked out of Bryant's building. Will WWJS ever return?
Things aren't looking terribly bright for the religious station
at this point...
From Syracuse comes word that WOLF (1490) wants its construction
permit for a change to non-directional operation reinstated.
The Radio Disney outlet has long been a directional station (a
rarity on this graveyard channel), protecting now-defunct CFRC
in Kingston, Ontario; it held a CP to go non-directional from
a 5/8-wave skirt on the new tall tower at its Kirkpatrick Street
site, but had been unable to complete construction before the
CP expired.
Now WOLF wants to try again; it needs to stop using that second
tower to allow WSIV (1540 East Syracuse) and a new DeWitt-licensed
CP for 720 kHz to be able to sign on from separate non-directional
towers at the same site. (The 720 was to have been a frequency
change for WSIV; now it's been recharacterized as a new station
to allow the existing 1540 to remain on the air, albeit from
a new location on the WOLF property.)
Speaking of Syracuse - and Rochester, Watertown, Utica and
Binghamton, too - Clear Channel now says it expects to close
on its purchase of Ackerley by the end of March. We're still
hearing very strong rumors that Clear Channel intends to sell
the Ackerley TV group in upstate New York...we'll stay tuned
to this one very closely.
And speaking of Clear Channel, it's granted a license to cover
for booster WPHR-1 (106.9) in Syracuse. Thanks to FM Atlas publisher
Bruce Elving for clearing up some confusion about this booster;
though it was originally granted as an "Auburn" license,
there was apparently a mix-up at the FCC over two separate cities
named on the application (Auburn is the city of license of the
primary WPHR signal), and the booster is quite definitely a Syracuse-licensed
signal.
The weather was pretty lousy in Binghamton, too - but listeners
there heard some different voices reporting it. Accu-Weather
and WNBF (1290) parted ways last week (the Citadel news-talker
switched to the Weather Channel), and that meant Dr. Joe Sobel
and the rest of the State College crew are now being heard on
WLTB (101.7 Johnson City) instead.
Over in Albany,
WGNA (1460) remained in simulcast mode with country WGNA-FM (107.7)
at press time, despite reports that the signal would make the
switch to Radio Disney on Friday (February 1). We do hear, however,
that Bill Edwardsen's Saturday morning standards show, which
was the only break from the simulcast for the AM, is already
a thing of the past.
In the Hudson Valley (and across the line in Connecticut,
too), Cumulus was cleared by the FCC to purchase the Aurora group
this week, removing the red flag for market-concentration review
that had slowed the sale just a bit. No word yet on when Cumulus
will close on the $230 million deal.
Don't count WKNJ (550 Harriman) out just yet; even though
the FCC deleted the station's construction permit and call letters
a few weeks ago, permittee Steven Wendell has asked for a review
of the decision. We neglected to note, when this story last came
around, that Wendell is also an applicant for 540 in Jaffrey,
New Hampshire; an alert NERW reader wonders if that application
was meant to hamper the expansion plans of WLUX (540 Islip) on
Long Island, the station that was fighting Wendell's 550 plans
across the Hudson River...
And we'll finish up with some good news indeed from New York
City, where legendary jock Dan Ingram is on the mend after some
pretty serious back surgery last week. Ingram, a veteran of both
WABC (770) and WCBS-FM (101.1), was suffering from a condition
known as stenosis, and we're told the surgery he underwent was
quite risky. The good news is that he's expected to make a full
recovery, though there's no word yet on when he'll be back on
the air on his WCBS-FM weekend shift. Allan Sniffen's New York
Radio Message Board has created a special
board just for good wishes for one of the industry's true
legends, and we'll add our own best wishes right here, Kemosabe!
*Best wishes, too, to a NEW JERSEY
radio pioneer. Bob McAllen, who turned Trenton's WKXW (101.5)
from a minor suburban station into a major statewide talk voice,
said goodbye to the station he owned Saturday morning in a special
farewell show on "New Jersey 101.5." McAllen's Press
Broadcasting is selling the station to Charlie Banta's Millennium
group, and he's not staying with WKXW - but we hear it was quite
the classy goodbye!
*The PD chairs were spinning in PENNSYLVANIA
this week: in Philadelphia, WMGK (102.9) and PD Dan Michaels
parted way, and it doesn't sound voluntary. No replacement has
been named. Over in Lancaster, it also didn't sound as though
PD Mike Browne is leaving WLAN-FM (96.9) of his own accord, but
there is a replacement: Michael McCoy is inbound from the PD
chair at Binghamton's WMRV (105.7) to take over at WLAN-FM. And
in Pittsburgh, Michael Hayes is leaving Clear Channel "Kiss"
WKST-FM (96.1) entirely of his own volition; he's going to Portland,
Oregon to program Clear Channel's KKRZ (100.3) out there and
will continue to consult WKST while assistant PD Trout takes
on the interim PD role.
Forever Broadcasting is adding to its collection of small-town
radio with two purchases in the Huntingdon area, deep in the
coal valleys west of Harrisburg. The company is paying $875,000
for Ronald Rabena's two Bardcom stations, country WHUN (1150
Huntingdon) and classic hits WXMJ (99.5 Mount Union), and it's
completing the set by paying Millennium Broadcasting (not Charlie
Banta's New Jersey group!) $625,000 for oldies WWZB (106.3 Huntingdon),
which was running satellite programming when we spent a pleasant
hour listening to it one night last summer in a Huntingdon diner.
Over in State College, WNCL (107.9 Port Matilda) has new calls
to go with the dance-CHR format that replaced the oldies there
a few weeks back. Mark it down as WJHT now...
Meanwhile, back at Clear Channel's Fleet Street Pittsburgh
cluster headquarters, Michael Hayes wasn't the only one leaving.
We hear WDVE (102.5) morning sports guy Ed Crow, WWSW (94.5)
morning news anchor Rose Ryan Douglas and WXDX (105.9) night
jock Debbie Wilde all lost their jobs this week as part of continued
cost-cutting there.
And across the state line in OHIO, Clear Channel lost an appeal
in its long-running fight with the FCC over the transfer of control
a few years back at WRBP (101.9 Hubbard), which Clear Channel
was leasing from Stop 26 Riverbend. The FCC says Clear Channel
went over the line and took control of the station despite Stop
26's efforts to end the LMA deal; now the Commission says Clear
Channel's appeal should have gone to the Enforcement Bureau instead
of to the full commission. We'll hear about this one again, no
doubt...stay tuned.
*We'll close things out in CANADA,
where digital radio is coming to the nation's capital. Most of
the big broadcasters in Ottawa/Hull, including the CBC (CBO/CBOF/CBOQ/CBOX),
CHUM Group (CFRA/CKKL/CFGO/CJMJ), Rogers (CKBY/CIWW/CHEZ), Standard
(CKQB) and Astral (CJRC/CKTF) have applied to be part of the
city's transitional digital radio undertaking, which will operate
from three transmitters around the region.
They'll be located
at the Camp Fortune master antenna site on the Quebec side of
the river, the CBC headquarters building on Lanark Avenue and
the Time-MCI-Las Brisas building downtown.
Over in Montreal, the morning team of Andre Maisoneuve and
Nat Lauzon at CJFM (95.9) has been broken up, with both jocks
taking new shifts at "Mix 96." Lauzon moves to the
midday shift, with Maisoneuve following her in afternoons. Cat
Spencer and Ken Connors assume morning duties there.
North of Toronto, religious CJLF (100.3 Barrie) wants to add
a 75-watt relay on 90.1 in Owen Sound. Way north of Toronto,
religious CJTK (95.5 Sudbury) has been granted limited commercial
status, broadcasting up to four minutes of commercials each hour.
And over in Chatham, CFCO (630)
wants to boost the power of its little FM relay. CFCO-1-FM (92.9)
fills in some gaps in the AM signal in the downtown areas, and
CFCO tells the CRTC it can do a better job of it with 250 watts
instead of the present 50.
The station celebrates its 75th anniversary on the AM dial
this year, by the way!
*And finally this week, a slightly belated "Happy Birthday
to Us": last week's NERW marked our fifth anniversary of
weekly publication as NorthEast Radio Watch. It was in January
1997 that we relocated from our old home base of Waltham, Massachusetts
to Rochester and changed our name from "New England Radio
Watch" (which had been published irregularly since 1994)
to the weekly "NorthEast Radio Watch," and we've been
here ever since, keeping track of this big, snowy region we call
home. If you missed any of the more than 200 issues we've put
out since then, pay a call on the Boston
Radio Archives, where you'll find them all archived for you.
Check out the region's radio dials there, too; we've just updated
them and always appreciated your updates and corrections.
And thanks, too, to the many of you who continue to send in
your subscription donations. Remember, you can now use MasterCard
or Visa to pay - just visit the Support
page to do your part to ensure another five years and more
of NERW.
*That'll do it for another week; we'll see you here again
next Monday!
NorthEast Radio Watch is made possible by the generous
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is copyright
2002 by Scott Fybush. |