Vision Australia Radio

Vision Australia Radio is a network of eight radio stations in Victoria and southern New South Wales owned by Vision Australia. The stations broadcast a range of programs, generally consisting of readings of newspapers and magazines for people unable to read print media. All the stations are operated by a volunteer staff and a small group of dedicated employees.

Vision Australia Radio
Slogan"Sound Information"
Programming
FormatRadio reading service
AffiliationsRadio Print Handicapped Network
Ownership
OwnerVision Australia
Technical information
ClassCommunity[1]
Power3,000 watts[1]
Links
WebcastMP3 Stream
Websitevaradio.org

The Vision Australia Radio Network is headquartered at Kooyong and is licensed as a Community (RPH) Broadcaster to the print handicapped community. This can include people with vision impairment, a physical illness or disability which makes it difficult for them to hold a paper (such as MS or Parkinson’s), people with dyslexia or those who understand spoken but not written English.

A recent McNair Ingenuity Research study showed that Vision Australia Radio has a statewide audience of more than 250,000 every week – with the majority of listeners aged between 25-54. An estimated 38% of listeners are professionals or self-employed with a further 36% skilled workers.

The station originally broadcast as 3RPH in 1982 from Melbourne, however the station is now formally known as Vision Australia Radio.

Vision Australia Radio is a member of the Radio Print Handicapped Network and a BBC World Service partner station.

Melbourne station - VAR 1179AM

The chief station is:

Regional stations

The other stations are affiliates and opt out of the 3RPH feed for local programmes:

  • 2APH 101.7 MHz FM Albury-Wodonga
  • 3BPH 88.7 MHz FM Bendigo
  • 3GPH 99.5 kHz FM Geelong
  • 3MPH 107.5 MHz FM Mildura
  • 3SPH 100.1 MHz FM Shepparton
  • 3RPH/T 93.5 MHz FM Warragul
  • 3RPH/T 882 KHz AM Warrnambool (Previously 94.5 FM)

The Melbourne station is also heard in Australia and New Zealand on Optus Aurora satellite radio channel 12.

gollark: At least a text file isn't a PDF.
gollark: > a/ phones are shitThey're convenient and many people have them.> b/ text files with advanced formatting will not display properly on a thin screenosmarks.tk's formatting works *fine* on my phone.
gollark: Well, you would think so, but Twitter really likes complaining.
gollark: You probably can unless a lot of people on Twitter complain.
gollark: But I mean a lot of the time phones will download a text file and not open it properly.

References

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