Editor’s note: The window for filing applications for new LPFM stations has been pushed back. It will now run from Dec. 6 to Dec. 13. Learn more here. Radio World has introduced a series of articles ...
Radio World has introduced a series of commentaries titled “Firing Up Frequencies,” intended for readers who may be interested in applying for a low-power FM station license during the FCC’s upcoming ...
On Friday, a group of radio nerds will see a dream realized and make Ferndale history when Ferndale Radio begins broadcasting live from the Rust Belt Market on 100.7 FM. Ferndale Radio, or WFCB, is a ...
Consulting firm DNAV has rolled out a new licensing program aimed at helping non-profit organizations secure Federal Communications Commission licenses for low-power FM radio stations. The new ...
The apparent listing of a deceased woman as a board member with voting rights in filings submitted to the FCC could end up killing a low-power FM radio station serving the city of Marion, Ohio. But, ...
Imagine climbing a hundred-foot radio tower in the howling headwinds of a Category 3 hurricane so that you can stay on the air and keep your neighbors informed as catastrophe bears down. Or remaining ...
Corey Fleischer at the final "Big Brain Theory" challenge. Shirley Randelman, host of Community Action Magazine. “Welcome to WPEB 88.1FM, the first station on your dial,” radio host Shirley Randelman ...
The Montgomery County Department of Public Safety permanently canceled its five Low Power FM radio stations on March 7. After the county submitted a request, the Federal Communications Commission ...
According to reports in the broadcast trade press, the Federal Communications Commission will open a window in November for new applications for low-power FM radio stations — the first window of its ...
The 1/4/11 enactment of the Local Community Radio Act opened the door for the creation of a new wave of LPFM stations, and it also instructs the FCC to report within a year on the Act’s likely effect ...
Three groups have applied to the Federal Communications Commission for a license to operate a non-commercial low-power radio station on 94.9 megahertz in Indiana, beginning a process that could take ...
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