KTCH

KTCH (104.9 FM) is a radio station licensed to Emerson, Nebraska, United States. The station is owned by Wayne Radio Works, LLC.[1]

KTCH
CityEmerson, Nebraska
Frequency104.9 MHz
BrandingBig Red Country
Programming
FormatCountry music
AffiliationsAPRN, Brownfield, Westwood One, Nebraska Radio Network
Ownership
OwnerWayne Radio Works, LLC
Sister stationsKCTY (1590 AM)
History
First air dateOctober 1975
Former call signsKTCH-FM (1975-2007)
KCTY (2007-2014)
Technical information
Facility ID35659
ClassC3
ERP25,000 watts
HAAT87 meters
Transmitter coordinates42°14′4″N 97°3′20″W
Links
Websitewaynedailynews.com

History

The station went on the air March 18, 1968 as a 500 watt non-directional daytime facility at 1590 kHz. The station build by M.L. (Mel) Gleason, a Nebraska radio station owner who had also built KAWL in York, NE in 1954. The original station studio and transmitter building 2 miles West of Wayne on 574th Avenue remains in use today. According to Broadcasting Yearbook archives, KTCH was purchased by Wyman and Wilma Schnapp March 1, 1971.

In 1974, KTCH was sold to Ted Storck. Under his ownership a Class A FM companion was added. KTCH-FM began broadcasting in October 1975 at 104.9 MHz and a power of 3,000 watts and an antenna height of 113 feet. In 1978, the KTCH stations were sold to Dean Craun who, in 1980, received permission from the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to increase the power on KTCH-AM to 2,500 watts - adding a second tower and creating a directional signal to protect another station on the same frequency in Boone, Iowa. Dean Craun sold the stations to Don Dolesh, a Budweiser beer distributor in Fremont, NE in 1987.

In 1997 the KTCH stations were purchased by Norfolk, Nebraska broadcaster Gene Koehn, owner of KNEN. The power of KTCH-FM was increased to 25,000 watts. After several years, Koehn sold KNEN and the KTCH stations to Waitt Media which was later acquired by NRG Media of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. During the NRG ownership, the KCTY call sign was transferred to KTCH-FM. NRG had used the KCTY call sign in Plattsmouth, Nebraska. In late 2007 KNEN and KTCH/KCTY were purchased by Mike Flood, owner of KUSO in Albion/Norfolk (aka: US-92). Flood had purchased the US-92 FCC construction permit from former West Point, Nebraska broadcaster David Kelly. That relationship paved the way for Kelly to purchase the Wayne, Nebraska stations in the spring of 2008 as Wayne Radio Works, LLC.

The call sign was switched to KTCH on February 3, 2014, consistent with a migration of programming from KTCH (AM) 1590 over to Big Red Country FM at 104.9 mHz. Concurrently, the KCTY call was moved to AM (1590) and in September 2014 was re-branded as "The City" - featuring a Classic Hits music format with increased emphasis on local news, sports, Ag programming and weather. KCTY programming is also broadcast on FM translator K255CK at 98.9 mHz with a power of 238 watts.[2]

Construction permit

On January 4, 2013, KCTY filed an application for an FCC construction permit to change the city of license from Wayne, Nebraska to Emerson and decrease the HAAT to from 92 to 87 meters. A license to cover was issued on June 18, 2013. This change had the effect of retaining the station's transmitter location in Wayne for the present time but opening the possibility that the station could serve the Sioux City, Iowa market at some future date.

gollark: Anyway, I *guess* just using a long list would kind of work if you have one conveniently available somewhere?
gollark: I disagree. It's easy enough for a human to classify it in a roughly consistent way, but it's nontrivial to automate that judgement.
gollark: Well, the ideal would be an automatic system which just randomly chooses anything people consider a "political ideology", based on how much it's being talked about.
gollark: * automatically → easily automatically
gollark: Which is the problem.

References

  1. "KTCH Facility Record". U.S. Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
  2. "KTCH Call Sign History". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
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