WBOI

WBOI is an FM radio station located in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The station operates on the FM radio frequency of 89.1 MHz. It is a National Public Radio member station, owned and operated by Northeast Indiana Public Radio, a non-profit organization. The station has studios and a 604-foot transmitter tower in Fort Wayne's Centennial Park. Effective radiated power is 34,000 watts, covering northeast Indiana, northwest Ohio and extreme southern Michigan.

WBOI
CityFort Wayne, Indiana
Broadcast areaFort Wayne, Indiana
Frequency89.1 MHz (HD Radio)
Branding89.1 WBOI
SloganNPR News and Diverse Information
Programming
FormatPublic
Ownership
OwnerNortheast Indiana Public Radio
Sister stationsWBNI
History
First air dateFebruary 2002
Technical information
Facility ID53745
ClassB
ERP34,000 watts
HAAT184 meters (604 ft)
Links
WebcastListen
WebsiteWBOI 89.1 Website

History and programming

NIPR broadcast center

WBOI began operating in February 2002. It has assumed some of the programming formerly carried by sister station WBNI, including jazz, folk music, gospel, and news and information programming from National Public Radio.

Some of WBOI's programs, especially the evening jazz programs, are produced by local, volunteer program hosts. The station carries Morning Edition, All Things Considered and other nationally broadcast public radio programs. There is a small, local news staff which covers local, state, and regional news.

WBOI is home to the nationally syndicated folk music show Folktales. WBOI is also the home of free-form music programs: Saturday Fade (every Saturday from 9 to midnight) and The Burnt Toast Show (every Sunday from 8 to midnight).

The station operates 24 hours a day, utilizing some computer automation during the late night hours. Programs can be heard on the World Wide Web at www.nipr.fm.

In July 2016, Peter Dominowski announced that Northeast Indiana Public Radio had purchased a two-story building on Jefferson Boulevard in downtown Fort Wayne to serve as the future headquarters for WBNI and WBOI. Fundraising will continue to cover the costs of major renovations. Dominowski said it would probably be two to three years before the building could be occupied.[1]

HD Programming

On October 13, 2005, WBOI became the first FM station in northeast Indiana to broadcast using the HD Radio format and the first public radio station in Indiana to offer multicasting on a digital signal.[2] With an HD Radio tuned to 89.1 FM, three program services are available:[3][4]

  • WBOI-HD1 --- NPR News and Jazz Music (simulcast of WBOI's analog signal)
  • WBOI-HD2 --- Classical Music (simulcast of sister station WBNI)
  • WBOI-HD3 --- The Audio Reading Service from the Allen County Public Library

Management and Finances

The station is supported entirely by contributions from corporations, businesses, foundations and listeners. There are pledge drives each year in spring and fall.

WBOI's broadcast studio during a pledge drive

WBOI's operations/programming director is Katy Anderson.[5] In 2008, Joan Baumgartner Brown was selected as president and general manager of Northeast Indiana Public Radio (NIPR). The veteran local nonprofit leader oversaw operations at WBOI and WBNI. Brown replaced Bruce Haines beginning August 4, 2008.[6] Haines became the president and general manager of WFWA, Fort Wayne's PBS television station.[7]

On January 20, 2009, in a letter to NIPR members, Brown announced that the board had decided to sell WBNI's three analog signals as soon as possible. Financial concerns, caused by the "weak economy" and insufficient contributions from underwriters and members failed to cover the substantial costs of acquiring and upgrading the transmitter towers in Orland and Roanoke. WBNI's programming, however, has continued at 94.1 on the Roanoke tower (which was withdrawn from sale), on WBOI-HD2 and over the Internet at www.nipr.fm.[8]

In November 2010, Brown resigned as president and general manager, prompting a search for a new NIPR executive.[9] On December 10, 2010, NIPR announced that Will Murphy, who had been general manager of WFHB in Bloomington, Indiana, would become NIPR's president and general manager in January 2011.[10] Murphy resigned in December 2012; a search for a new general manager was begun and David Hunter, the membership manager became the interim general manager.[11]

On January 29, 2013, NIPR's board announced the selection of Peter Dominowski as president and general manager of NIPR. He has four decades of experience in broadcasting, mostly in public radio.[12]

gollark: Google does prioritize stuff in ways other than just "how appropriate a result is", but generally for technical-ish reasons.
gollark: So they do *some* web crawling, at least.
gollark: Ah yes, I grepped my logs and there *are* requests from a `DuckDuckGo-Favicons-Bot/1.0`.
gollark: I think I *have* seen DDG crawlers in my webserver logs, though I'd have to check.
gollark: > DuckDuckGo's results are a compilation of "over 400" sources,[9] including Yahoo! Search BOSS, Wolfram Alpha, Bing, Yandex, its own web crawler (the DuckDuckBot) and others.[4][9][10][11] It also uses data from crowdsourced sites, including Wikipedia, to populate knowledge panel boxes to the right of the results- wikipedia

References

External sources

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