WDDE

WDDE
City Dover, Delaware
Slogan Delaware's NPR News Station
Frequency 91.1 MHz (FM)
First air date August 17, 2012
Format Public affairs/News/Talk
Language(s) English
ERP 2,100 watts
HAAT 72 meters
Class A
Facility ID 175387
Transmitter coordinates 39°00′49.6″N 75°30′29.3″W / 39.013778°N 75.508139°W / 39.013778; -75.508139
Callsign meaning Dover, DElaware
Affiliations BBC World Service
National Public Radio
Public Radio International
Owner Delaware First Media Corporation
Website www.wdde.org

WDDE (91.1 FM) is an NPR-member radio station based out of Dover, Delaware. It is owned and operated by Delaware First Media Corporation, and is the first and only full-fledged public radio station based in Delaware.

WDDE broadcasts a variety of national and international programming from NPR, BBC World Service, and Public Radio International as well as local news created by WDDE's staff. WDDE's website features multimedia coverage of Delaware, including 24/7 live streaming audio coverage, archived stories from WDDE and its online predecessor, DFM News, and timely special events coverage from political debates to concerts.

WMPH in Wilmington simulcasts WDDE's programming on weekday mornings and afternoons. The station is working to build additional repeaters in the rest of the state.

Although WDDE has a collaborative partnership with both Delaware State University and the University of Delaware, it is run independently from both institutions.[1] [2]

History

WDDE traces its roots to 2010, when several longtime Delaware journalists founded Delaware First Media and launched DFM News, an online news site focused on Delaware news. Many of them had worked at WHYY-FM-TV in Philadelphia, and had been laid off when the stations scaled back coverage of Delaware events. The move particularly rankled Delaware residents and elected officials, since WHYY-TV is licensed to Wilmington.[3] Indeed, Wilmington city officials went as far as to challenge the renewal of WHYY-TV's license in 2009.

A year later, they learned that a construction permit for a noncommercial station in Dover was on the verge of expiring. Maryland's Salisbury University, owner of WSCL, the NPR member for the Delmarva Peninsula, had won the permit in 2007, but opted not to use it. With the support of former Weekend Edition Sunday host Liane Hansen, who now lives in Bethany Beach, Delaware First Media secured the backing needed for a full-fledged NPR member station. In 2011, Delaware First Media briefly brought the station online in 2011 as a repeater of WSCL's sister station, WSDL in Ocean City, before taking it offline pending its full launch.[3]

WDDE began broadcasting on August 17, 2012 from its studio on the Delaware State University campus in Dover. While parts of Delaware had long been served by Philadelphia's two full NPR members, WHYY-FM and WRTI, Delaware was the only state in the country without a full-service NPR station within its borders.

The station's president, Micheline Boudreau, formerly headed WHYY's Dover bureau and reported for Delaware Tonight, the long-running news program that was canceled in the 2009 cutback. Another WHYY alumnus, Tom Byrne is the station's news director.[3]

References

  1. "About WDDE". Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  2. "WDDE Program Schedule". Retrieved 12 June 2013.
  3. 1 2 3 Mike Janssen (April 23, 2012). "Delaware news startup adds public radio service". Current.
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