KFJM

KFJM (90.7 FM) is a public radio station in Grand Forks, North Dakota airing an adult album alternative format with news in the mornings, jazz in the late evenings and blues and folk on the weekends. It carries programs from NPR and Public Radio International.

KFJM
CityGrand Forks, North Dakota
Broadcast areaGrand Forks, North Dakota
Frequency90.7 MHz
BrandingPrairie Public Radio
SloganRoots, Rock and Jazz: Your Radio Station Has Grown Up
Programming
FormatCollege/Public; Adult album alternative
AffiliationsPrairie Public Radio, NPR
Ownership
OwnerPrairie Public Radio
Sister stationsKUND-FM
History
First air date1995
Former call signsKFJY (1995-1997)
Technical information
Facility ID69406
ClassA
ERP4,000 watts
HAAT34 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitenews.prairiepublic.org/programs/music-mike-olson

History

KFJM signed on in 1995 as KFJY on 90.7 MHz. It was the University of North Dakota's third radio station, joining the original KFJM, an AM station dating back to 1923, and KFJM-FM on 89.3 MHz, which had been established in 1976. KFJY simulcast KFJM (AM) with an adult album alternative (AAA) format and jazz overnight. During April 1997, both stations went off the air as the floodwaters went through the transmitter site.

On August 15, 1997 all three University of North Dakota stations changed call signs. KFJY inherited the historic KFJM call letters, while the original KFJM (AM) became KUND and KFJM-FM on 89.3 MHz became KUND-FM.[1]

On July 31, 2002, KUND (AM) and KFJM went off the air due to shortages from public funding, although KUND-FM continued to be operated by Prairie Public Radio.[2] The stations signed back on on August 6, 2002 with its AAA format featuring the long running "Into the Music with Mike Olson" along with NPR's The World Cafe with David Dye, American Routes, and Morning Edition from NPR.

KUND (AM) was sold to Real Presence Radio, a Roman Catholic organization, in 2004, which changed that station's call letters to KWTL. The sale financed a transmitter move for KFJM from the University of North Dakota campus to a tower located in the Grand Forks industrial park, which was completed on August 22, 2006.

In 2006, KDSU 91.9 FM in Fargo began simulcasting some of KFJM's programming, including "Into the Music with Mike Olson" and The World Cafe with David Dye during the midday. KPPR 89.5 FM of Williston was added to the network in 2011 as Prairie Public moved the news and classical programming to new station KPPW 88.7.

In September 2018 KFJM, along with KUND-FM, was sold by the University of North Dakota to Prairie Public Radio.[3]

gollark: Better ones presumably cost proportionately more, but I don't think it's a huge fraction of tablet cost.
gollark: Those really bad Allwinner chips in underpowered tablets are apparently $10 or so each, including power management IC.
gollark: I think last time I had to do *that* I rigged up an awful, awful solution with a WiFi hotspot on my phone, `python3 -m http.server` in Termux, and someone manually putting in the IP address.
gollark: Computers are *really cheap*.
gollark: I'm not sure this is actually very useful, though.

References

  1. "New or Modified Call Signs", "Mass Media Bureau Call Sign Actions" (Report No. 312, August 15, 1997).
  2. "Radio Will Cease Operations On July 31" by Charles Kupchella, University Newsletter, Vol 39 No. 30, June 14, 2002.
  3. "Station Sales Week Of 9/14: UND Exits Radio" by Lance Venta, September 14, 2018 (radioinsight.com)

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.