WCUW

WCUW
City Worcester, Massachusetts
Broadcast area Worcester area
Slogan Your Radio Alternative
Frequency 91.3 MHz
Format Educational
ERP 630 watts, Stereo
HAAT 44.0 meters
Class A
Facility ID 74162
Transmitter coordinates 42°15′46.00″N 71°47′59.00″W / 42.2627778°N 71.7997222°W / 42.2627778; -71.7997222
Callsign meaning Clark University Worcester
Owner Wcuw, Inc.
Webcast Listen Live
Website wcuw.org

WCUW (91.3 FM) is a community radio station licensed to Worcester, Massachusetts, USA. The station, which broadcasts at 91.3 FM, is owned by WCUW, Inc., a nonprofit organization. WCUW is managed by a professional staff, while all of its programs are hosted by community volunteers.[1]

Station history

WCUW began as a carrier-current AM station in one of the upper rooms of Atwood Hall on Clark University campus. The station was started by Robert Goddard in 1920. Goddard was at that time a part-time Clark University physics instructor and researcher. He later went on to launch the first rocket and become known as 'the founder of modern rocketry'. While Goddard started the station in Atwood Hall, it later moved into a new office in the basement of Sanford Hall. This AM station could only be heard on campus and operated on 10 Watts. In May 1972 the AM station ceased broadcasting. In the fall of 1972, an effort was begun to establish an FM station under the same WCUW call letters.

WCUW, as an FM station, was started in a Clark University dorm room in Sanford Hall in 1973, sanctioned by the university but under a local organization, WUW, Inc., the predecessor to WCUW, Inc. In 1976 there was a radio watt leap for stations. A sanction was put in place where radio stations either needed to increase their wattage or get kicked off the air. In 1976 the WCUW increased to 100W covering all of the Worcester area as well as several surrounding communities.

The station quickly gained a national reputation for its eclectic programming, and by 1977, WCUW had a staff of nine employees and a budget of $130,000.[2] During this time period WCUW introduced public affiars programming for Worcester's Hispanic community. WCUW broadcast approx. 20 hours of Hispanic programming each week including the United Press International news dispatches from South America. This was one of the most significant community outreach programs WCUW has ever done.[3]

In 1979, the station received a power increase and through federal funding, purchased a new transmitter, as well as studio and remote broadcasting equipment. Relations with the university began to deteriorate, and in 1980, the station left the campus for new facilities on Worcester's Main Street. In 1985 WCUW signed a rebroadcast agreement with Bay Path WBPV. The agreement allowed WCUW to broadcast at 1,000W gaining the territory of Southern Massachusetts, to parts of 495, to Warwick RI, to Nashua NH. Unfortunately, the WCUW community station programmers, known to play controversial music, were not well received and so in 1991 the rebroadcast agreement with Bay Path was not renewed and was officially disbanded. WCUW went back to its original 630W and as more stations gained wattage, the community of listeners has decreased to solely the Worcester area. The station struggled over the next few decades and was forced to lay off staff, but still managed to buy its building and maintain operations with volunteer committees.[2]

WCUW celebrated its 40 year anniversary on October 19 - 20, 2014.[4] According to executive director, Troy Tyree, WCUW currently hosts 70 programs in 12 different languages.[5]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.