High Plains Public Radio

High Plains Public Radio is a network of public radio stations serving the High Plains region of western Kansas, the Texas Panhandle, the Oklahoma Panhandle and eastern Colorado. Operated by the Kanza Society, it is headquartered in Garden City, Kansas and operates an additional studio in Amarillo, Texas.

High Plains Public Radio
CityGarden City, Kansas
BrandingHigh Plains Public Radio
SloganIn touch with the world...at home on the High Plains
Programming
FormatPublic radio; News, Classical music, Jazz
AffiliationsNational Public Radio
American Public Media
Public Radio International
WFMT
Ownership
OwnerKanza Society, Inc.
History
First air dateJune 30, 1980 (1980-06-30)
Technical information
Repeater(s)(see article)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitewww.hppr.org

History

The Kanza Society was founded in 1977. The network's flagship station, KANZ (91.1 FM) in Garden City, signed on in 1980 from a studio at a converted elementary school in nearby Pierceville. Since then, HPPR has added eleven other full-power stations in Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado and Texas, as well as low-powered translators in Kansas and Texas. Most of these areas had never been previously served by an NPR station.

HPPR's coverage area is made up mostly of rural areas and small towns; by far the largest urban center is Amarillo.

The network offers two HD Radio subchannels. HD1 is a simulcast of the analog signal's NPR/classical/jazz format. HD2 is "HPPR Connect," which provides an extended schedule of news programming. Both channels are streamed live on the Internet.

Stations

Call sign Frequency City of license ERP
W
Height
m (ft)
Class Broadcast area
KANZ 91.1 FM Garden City, Kansas 100,000 292.2 meters (959 ft) C1
KCSE 90.7 FM Lamar, Colorado 4,000 113 meters (371 ft) A
KGUY 91.3 FM Guymon, Oklahoma 800 89 meters (292 ft) A
KJJP 105.7 FM Amarillo, Texas 43,000 160 meters (520 ft) C2
KTDH 89.3 FM Dalhart, Texas 500 104 meters (341 ft) A
KTOT 89.5 FM Spearman, Texas 100,000 325 meters (1,066 ft) C0
KTXP 91.5 FM Bushland, Texas 1,000 80 meters (260 ft) A
KZAN 91.7 FM Hays, Kansas 7,500 114 meters (374 ft) C3
KZCK 88.1 FM Colby, Kansas 2,000 109 meters (358 ft) A
KZNA 90.5 FM Hill City, Kansas 100,000 201 meters (659 ft) C1
KZNK 90.1 FM Brewster, Kansas 90,000 305.4 meters (1,002 ft) C1
KZNZ 91.5 FM Elkhart, Kansas 250 81 meters (266 ft) A

Low power translators

High Plains Public Radio also has low-powered repeaters throughout western Kansas, as well as the northern panhandle of Texas.

Broadcast translators of KANZ
Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseERP
(W)
Height
(m (ft))
ClassFCC info
K208CL89.5Tribune, Kansas25060.2 m (198 ft)DFCC
K222BJ92.3Ashland, Kansas25085.7 m (281 ft)DFCC
K242AK96.3Liberal, Kansas25072.7 m (239 ft)DFCC
Broadcast translators of KTXP
Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseERP
(W)
Height
(m (ft))
ClassFCC info
K235AL94.9Amarillo, Texas62157 m (515 ft)DFCC
Broadcast translators of KZNK
Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseERP
(W)
Height
(m (ft))
ClassFCC info
K237CN95.3Atwood, Kansas25060 m (200 ft)DFCC
K242AP96.3St. Francis, Kansas92123 m (404 ft)DFCC
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gollark: The closest I can think of is:- parse lua code to an AST- replace number literals with calls with some function which makes them a table with the metatable you want- also somehow do this to all functions which might return numbers- convert back to Lua and `load` it
gollark: Okay, you sort of could.
gollark: You can't really *do* that.
gollark: Extreme Ultramegasandboxing.


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