KMWS

KMWS (89.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to Mount Vernon, Washington. The station is owned by Washington State University, and airs Northwest Public Radio's news and talk programming, consisting of syndicated programming from NPR, APM and PRI, as well as locally produced offerings.

KMWS
CityMount Vernon, Washington
Frequency89.7 MHz
Programming
FormatPublic radio; News/Talk
AffiliationsNational Public Radio
American Public Media
Public Radio International
Ownership
OwnerWashington State University
History
First air dateMay 4, 1973 (as KSVR at 90.1)
November 2002 (as KMWS)
Former frequencies90.1 MHz (1973–2007)
Call sign meaningMurrow Washington State
Technical information
Facility ID60531
ClassA
ERP1,500 watts
HAAT36 meters (118 ft)
Translator(s)K216GE (91.1 FM) Forks
Links
WebcastStream
Websitewww.nwpr.org

History

The current 89.7 license began life as KSVR, the radio station of Skagit Valley College, on May 4, 1973.[1]

In August 1996, Bellingham's public radio station, KZAZ, had applied to build a new FM station in Mount Vernon at 91.7 FM to expand its coverage area.[2] This application would prove particularly useful for Washington State University after Northern Sound merged with Northwest Public Radio in 1997. KSVR at 90.1 was causing co-channel interference to KNWP, the Northwest Public Radio transmitter at Port Angeles. In May 2000, Northern Sound offered to transfer the 91.7 construction permit to Skagit Valley College to move KSVR there and solve the interference problem.[3] The original KSVR license was then transferred to Washington State and relaunched as KMWS in November 2002, at which time the KSVR intellectual unit moved to 91.7.[4] In 2007, KMWS moved to 89.7 MHz at higher power and began broadcasting in HD Radio.[5]

The M in the KMWS call letters honors WSU alumnus and Skagit County native Edward R. Murrow.[4]

gollark: Really, what we need is magic low-energy-use personal teleporters.
gollark: Except you're also now lugging around the weight of the batteries and motors.
gollark: Pedals are uncool.
gollark: So if you have a set of electric cars with small batteries - enough to travel within a city and near it - available for rent, and you don't suffer too much overhead from having to rent them out, that could conceivably be a good method of transport.
gollark: Electric cars are expensive *partly* because they need batteries for hundred-mile journeys, even though most actually won't be this long. And cars are kind of inefficient because most of the time they're left idling.

References

  1. "KSVR(FM)" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 2002-03. 2002. p. D-483. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
  2. "For the Record" (PDF). Broadcasting & Cable. September 23, 1996. p. 73. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
  3. "N/A KTHY-FM CP" (PDF). Radio Business Report. May 15, 2000. p. 15. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
  4. "WSU's NPR Adds New Station, KMWS". Washington State University. November 25, 2002. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
  5. "NWPR Boosts Signal". Washington State University. October 11, 2007. Retrieved March 7, 2020.

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