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December 23, 2002

Vinikoor Plans WNTK Move, Too

By SCOTT FYBUSH

*NEW HAMPSHIRE leading the news for a second week in a row? You bet (or, as they might say up there, "Ayuh!") - and with the same station owner involved this week, too!

Last week, we told you how Bob Vinikoor had won his New Hampshire Supreme Court battle to build four 266-foot towers in Lebanon for his new WQTH (720 Hanover).

This week, we can tell you that Vinikoor has some big plans for his other New Hampshire AM station as well. WNTK (1020 Newport) is currently a 10 kW daytimer, playing Americana music along with some talk programming - but Vinikoor applied last week to move the station down the dial to 1010 kHz, retaining the 10 kilowatt power by day and during critical hours (when WNTK currently reduces its power on 1020) and adding 37 watts of night service. Vinikoor's application notes that the move will reduce interference between WNTK and Boston's WBZ (1030).

Those with long memories may recall that WNTK is the descendant of WCNL in Newport - which began its life as a daytimer on 1010. Back then, 1010 was limited to 250 watts by day; Vinikoor can thank the disappearance of the old WHWB (1000) in Rutland, Vermont for at least part of the change on the dial that allows for higher power on 1010 these days.

And we have no idea what to make of the headline that appeared last week in the Claremont Eagle-Times.

The article, by a Meggan Clark, says Vinikoor is planning to build six towers in North Charlestown, N.H. for what she (and the screaming headline) describe as a "500,000-watt" radio station!

Assuming the ghost of W8XO isn't returning to haunt the Upper Valley airwaves (and if you get that reference, you've found the right Web site!), we think the plan in question is really an alternate proposal for the yet-unbuilt WQTH; the article claims Vinikoor "has already received Federal Communications Commission (sic) to build a 500,000-watt AM frequency tower," but we certainly can't find any CP like that in the database. (And you thought the Globe wasn't very accurate when it came to radio...)

*Just one quick note from MAINE: Dan Priestly's new WWNZ (1400 Veazie) wants to change transmitter sites. Priestly originally planned to diplex WWNZ with already-operating WNZS (1340 Veazie); now he's applying to put WWNZ's tower just across Highway 178 instead, with 810 watts by night (protecting a bunch of long-dead Quebec 1400s) and a kilowatt by day.

*One of RHODE ISLAND's best known program directors is heading into the holiday season without his job. Tom Holt took WWLI (105.1 Providence) to the top of the ratings with a very successful soft AC format (you can still read all about his many accomplishments at Lite 105's Web site - complete with a "Way to go, Tom!" note at the bottom), but that wasn't enough to spare him from a Citadel budget cut last week.

Tony Bristol, PD of sister CHR WPRO-FM (92.3 Providence), is handling programming duties for WWLI for now; no word yet on how Lite is filling Holt's old midday air shift...

*A MASSACHUSETTS radio station owner took a stand for the freedom of the press and won. Ed Perry is best known as the founder and longtime operator of WATD (95.9 Marshfield), but it turns out he's also a news reporter for the station when events warrant.

Back in September, he headed over to the nearby Hanover Mall one evening to check out a report he heard on the police scanner about an incident in the mall parking lot. When he got there, he did what any good reporter would, taking out his tape recorder and notebook and asking questions.

The Patriot Ledger reports a mall security guard asked Perry to hand over the tape from his recorder, Perry refused, and Hanover police arrested him and charged him with creating a disturbance. (His tape recorder was later returned to his car, with the interviews erased.)

It took a few months, but all the charges (resisting arrest, disorderly conduct, trespassing and interfering with a police officer) have finally been dismissed, and now Perry is considering a civil suit against the mall.

(NERW comments: Anyone who ever wondered why WATD is such a consistent winner of RTNDA and AP awards shouldn't have any question, now...)

On the TV side, WLVI (Channel 56) has a new news director, as Tribune moves Pamela Johnston up from assistant ND to replace Greg Caputo as the head of the WB affiliate's news operation.

LATE UPDATE: The purchase of WSRO (1470 Marlborough) by Multicultural Broadcasting has brought a call change with it; 1470 is now "WAZN," with the WSRO calls moving down the dial to Alex Langer's 650 in Ashland, ex-WJLT. And who'll be the first Boston broadcaster to notice that the "WCOZ" calls that once graced 94.5 are once again available, having been dropped from AM 1300 in St. Albans, West Virginia?

And a correction to the December 3 NERW: WBUR (90.9 Boston) is not going non-directional; it's altering its directional pattern.

*Stephanie Hindley is leaving her post as PD of Burlington, VERMONT's "Buzz" (WBTZ 99.9 Plattsburgh NY) to head across the border to Canada.

*We'll start our NEW YORK report at the western end of the state, where the veteran voice of Lockport is hanging up his headphones and heading south.

J.R. Reid III began his broadcast career in Buffalo at the old WXRA (1080) when he was still a teenager; he moved to Lockport in 1964 to work at what was then WUSJ (1340) before shifting his attention to law enforcement.

But after a career as a Niagara County sheriff's deputy, the call of the airwaves again beckoned (he had been doing a weekend oldies show even while wearing the badge), and a few years ago, Reid returned to 1340 - now WLVL - to do morning drive and sales. Reid was also serving as vice president of the Buffalo Broadcast Pioneers. Now he's headed into retirement (his last show was Dec. 13), and heading down to Cape Coral, Florida...but you can expect to still see him around Lockport, where one of his kids is buying his house!

(Another bit of WLVL news: it's losing the overnight Joey Reynolds show early next year, as the show moves to the big signal of WWKB 1520 in Buffalo. The move puts Reynolds back on the very station that made him famous - it was WKBW then, of course - and there are rumors afoot that other old 'KB personalities could be headed back to 1520 as well if the station flips to an oldies format in 2003. Stay tuned!)

Here in Rochester, construction wrapped up over the weekend on the new American Tower tower on Pinnacle Hill, and there's already a UHF antenna in place at the top of the stick. NERW suspects WUHF-DT (Channel 28) will soon be applying for Special Temporary Authority and signing on from the new tower...

Meanwhile, Family Life Radio has dropped its plans to build a translator on 105.1 in Greece; the network already has a Greece-licensed signal (W220DE 91.9) on the west side of Rochester, and the 105.1 would have interfered with the east side translator (W286AE Fairport) of Greece community station WGMC (90.1) to boot.

In Syracuse, Clear Channel flipped WXBB (105.1 DeRuyter) from a country simulcast with WBBS (104.7 Fulton) to Christmas music last week; we'll keep you posted on what happens next with "Sleigh 105-1."

In Albany, Clear Channel made it official by announcing that Scott Allen Miller is the permanent afternoon host at WGY (810 Schenectady), leaving J.R. Gach without a job. Gach left WGY's airwaves last August under mysterious circumstances, revealing later that he was suffering from severe mental illness.

Gach tells the Albany Times Union's Mark McGuire that he was fired by e-mail last weekend, "with cause," meaning he won't get any severance pay. Gach says he wants to get back on the air, preferably in the Albany area, but he acknowledges that there are few options open to him right now.

Moving down to New York City, Judy Ellis has a new job lined up for March 2003, when she leaves her longtime VP/GM position at the Emmis cluster (WQHT 97.1, WRKS 98.7 and WQCD 101.9). The Big Apple radio veteran will join Citadel as its chief operating officer; her old job at Emmis, meanwhile, will be filled by veteran programmer Barry Mayo.

Scott Elberg has a new job: the former VP/GM of Clear Channel's WHTZ/WKTU is joining Hispanic Broadcasting as its VP of sales for WADO (1280) and WCAA (105.9 Newark NJ).

WPIX (Channel 11) has been granted an auxiliary facility at the Armstrong Tower in Alpine, N.J. (coincidentally, this week's Tower Site of the Week); the WB affiliate will be able to use Alpine with 24 kW at 244 meters, on an antenna to be shared with WABC-TV (Channel 7) and WNET (Channel 13).

Attention DXers: three major AM signals in the Big Apple will go silent for a few hours next weekend, giving New York listeners a chance to hear Toronto, Detroit and beyond. WBBR (1130) and WEVD (1050) will both go silent from 1-4 AM on Saturday (12/28) and Sunday (12/29), which means plenty of DXers will be staying up late Friday and Saturday nights. WWDJ (970 Hackensack) will also be silent for at least a portion of that time.

Out on Long Island, WGSM (740 Huntington) has been granted a power reduction from 25 kW to 20 kW; the power change comes with a big pattern change that will redirect WGSM's signal to head mostly west, toward the big Asian population in Queens.

"Best Media" was granted a license to cover for new translator W208AU (89.5 Massapequa) this week; the new signal should be relaying the Indian programming from WCNJ (89.3 Hazlet NJ) for owner Banad Viswanath. Best filed for dozens of translators back in 1999, many of them with impossibly-sloppy engineering (though not quite as bad as the applications the FCC dismissed this week for LPTVs on channel 37, which is reserved for radio astronomy and not available for broadcast); the Massapequa translator was originally proposed to relay WSHU in Stamford, Connecticut.

And WDRE (98.5 Westhampton) is now operating from its new site on the WRCN (103.9) tower, near the eastern end of the Long Island Expressway.

*The FCC is opening the comment period for a move that will change the face of radio in southern NEW JERSEY.

WSNJ (107.7 Bridgeton) has made no secret, ever since being sold last year, of its desire to move closer to Philadelphia. The station first proposed changing its allocation from a full 50 kilowatt B in Bridgeton to a 6000 watt class A on 107.9 in Elmer. That proposal was dismissed by the FCC last week, in favor of a second proposal submitted a few weeks later by WSNJ's new owners.

As we reported last spring (NERW, 6/17/2002), WSNJ now wants to relocate to 107.9 and drop down to an A - in Pennsauken, just across the Delaware River from Philadelphia.

Public comments on the proposal will be accepted by the FCC until February 10, with reply comments due February 25; we'll keep you posted on the outcome.

Meanwhile, the new 90.5 religious station in Medford Lakes has call letters: mark down WVBV(FM) for the station, which will be licensed to the Hope Christian Church of Marlton.

*Into PENNSYLVANIA we go, just in time for Larry Kane's final broadcasts on KYW-TV (Channel 3) tonight at 6 and 11. (We'd love to hear from any Philly-area readers who'll be rolling tape...)

Just across the street from Channel 3, Roger LaMay handed in his resignation last week as general manager of Fox's WTXF (Channel 29). LaMay came to Channel 29 in 1985 (when it was still WTAF) to be the first news director at the independent station; he became GM in 1996.

Out in the Roxborough antenna farm, WOGL (98.1) has been granted a tower move; it's being forced off the WCAU-TV (Channel 10) tower to accommodate DTV. The Infinity oldies station will move to a newer tower (also home to WPPX-DT and WYBE) with 9.6 kW at 338 meters, a slight power drop and height increase from its current facility.

Up in the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre market, there's yet another call change at Citadel: this time the 95.7 facility in Olyphant flips from WEOZ (the calls that matched its old "Z-Talk" format) to WBHD, reflecting its new use as a simulcast of CHR WBHT (97.1 Mountain Top). The WBHD calls have been used before in the market, on the 94.3 Carbondale that's now WCWI; it too was a WBHT relay in a previous life. Meanwhile, Entercom country giant WGGY (101.3 Scranton) has been granted a Hazleton booster; WGGY-2 will run 35 watts on 101.3.

And while it's not yet on the air, WZZQ (88.3 Chambersburg) has already changed calls: it's now WZXQ.

*And we'll wrap up this holiday week in CANADA, where a long-dark community station is returning to the airwaves.

CISD (107.7 Iroquois) signed on in 1999 from atop the Iroquois water tower, along the St. Lawrence Seaway south of Ottawa and east of Cornwall. We heard it in the summer of 2000, running automated with classic rock.

Licensed to the Seaway District High School in South Dundas, CISD lasted just two years in its first incarnation, signing off in 2001 to reorganize its operation.

Now it's back, as a community-run station; we're told it's testing right now and will be back on the air full-time at the beginning of January.

Over in Toronto, Craig's new "Toronto One" (Channel 52, with a low-power relay on 45 in Hamilton) has been granted an extension of time; it now has until next October 31 to sign on.

The CBC was granted three new Radio Two relays: 97.1 Owen Sound (17.5 kW), 90.7 Orillia (4.8 kW) and 104.7 Huntsville (70 kW) will all relay CBL-FM (94.1 Toronto).

In Ottawa, Rob Mise has been named operations manager for NewCap's new dance station on 89.9, to be called "The Planet"; Mise's resume includes stints in Calgary and Vancouver.

Out in Nova Scotia, CJLS (1340 Yarmouth) was granted its proposed move to FM; CJLS will go to 18 kW on 95.5, keeping its existing FM relays in Barrington and New Tusket on Nova Scotia's western shore. And over in Sydney, CKER (950) DJ Brian King was sentenced to six years in prison; he held up three Cape Breton Island gas stations with a gun.

*And on that cheerful (?) note, we wish you a very happy holiday! We'll be back here December 30 with the first part of our 2002 Year in Review; stay tuned!

*Have you ordered your Tower Site Calendar 2003 yet? (Yes, the very calendar that we had the honor of presenting to Paul Harvey himself during his Rochester visit - and the delightful surprise of hearing him praise on the air!)

Hear what Paul Harvey had to say about his visit to Rochester...and the 2003 Tower Site Calendar! (MP3, 3 min.)

It's no Oreck vacuum, or even Bose Wave radio, but if you liked last year's calendar, you'll love this one: higher-quality images (including Providence's WHJJ; Mount Mansfield, Vermont; Buffalo's WBEN; KOMA in Oklahoma City; the legendary WSM, Nashville; Harvey's flagship WGN, Chicago and many more), more dates in radio history, a convenient hole for hanging - and we'll even make sure all the dates fall on the right days!

This year's calendar is currently shipping! Look for it in your mailbox; orders are being shipped in the order received, and all orders received by December 22 have now been shipped. Calendars are in stock, and orders placed now will ship within 24 hours!

And this year, you can order with your Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express by using the handy link below!

Better yet, here's an incentive to make your 2003 NERW subscription pledge a little early: support NERW/fybush.com at the $60 level or higher, and you'll get this lovely calendar for free! How can you go wrong? (Click here to visit our Support page, where you can make your NERW contribution with a major credit card...)

 Click here to order your 2003 Tower Site Calendar by credit card!

You can also order by mail; just send a check for $16 per calendar (NYS residents add 8% sales tax), shipping included, to Scott Fybush, 92 Bonnie Brae Ave., Rochester NY 14618.

International orders: Calendars are US$18 to Canada, US$20 to the rest of the world, postage included. Send checks/international money orders (in US dollars) to the address above, or e-mail for credit-card ordering information.

*And we're also happy to announce that our good friends at M Street have released the 11th edition of the M Street Radio Directory. With the disappearance of the old Vane Jones log and the declining accuracy of the Broadcasting Yearbook, the M Street directory is widely regarded as the most accurate, most comprehensive source of information on the US and Canadian radio scene - and we're thrilled to be able to offer it to you at a substantial discount!

The directory includes power, frequency, ownership, key personnel, formats, ratings and much more information for every radio station in the U.S. and Canada, and now runs almost 900 pages in an 8.5" x 11" softcover book. List price is $79 (plus $7 shipping/handling), but if you order through fybush.com/NorthEast Radio Watch, you can get this invaluable resource on your shelf for $69 (plus $7 s/h) - a $10 savings! And your purchase benefits the continued publication of NERW and Tower Site of the Week, so everybody wins!

You can order in either of two ways: to order by major credit card, call 1-800-248-4242, ask for Irene, and tell her you want the "NorthEast Radio Watch" discount. Or, send check or money order for $76 ($69 + $7 s/h) to Scott Fybush, 92 Bonnie Brae Ave., Rochester NY 14618. Either way, you'll put the most trusted, accurate information about the radio industry in print today on your bookshelf.

NorthEast Radio Watch is made possible by the generous contributions of our regular readers. If you enjoy NERW, please click here to learn how you can help make continued publication possible. NERW is copyright 2002 by Scott Fybush.