WBLQ (AM)

WBLQ (1230 AM) is a radio station licensed to serve Westerly, Rhode Island. The station is owned by Diponti Communications.

WBLQ
CityWesterly, Rhode Island
Broadcast areaSouthern Rhode Island, Southeastern Connecticut
Branding"Stereo 1230 WBLQ"
Slogan"Local News, Local People"
Frequency1230 khz in C-QUAM A.M. Stereo
Translator. = 103.1 FM (W276DF)
First air dateJuly 1, 1949
FormatFull Service
Power1,000 watts (unlimited)
ClassC
Facility ID71722
Transmitter coordinates41°21′57″N 71°50′11″W
Former call signsWERI[1] (1949-1999)
WXNI (1999-2009)
OwnerChristopher DiPaola
(DiPonti Communications)
Sister stationsWSUB-LP
WebsiteWBLQ Online

History

1940s

1949

The station, then called WERI, began broadcasting on 1230kc. on July 1, 1949 using Day/Night power of 250 watts, non-directional. The station still uses its original 185-foot, Blaw-Knox,[2] self-supporting tower, on Margin Street, beside the Pawcatuck River.[3]

1960s

The FCC increases the daytime power of all Class IV[4] AM stations to 1,000 watts. WERI still has to reduce power to 250 watts at night, as did all other stations on the same frequency.

1966

WERI adds F.M. service with WERI-FM/103.7 (Channel 279) (now WVEI-FM). The FM antenna is initially mounted to the side of the AM tower on Margin Street in downtown Westerly. The FM station broadcasts for only a few days from this location before it is shut down due to harmonic interference to TV channel 12.

1968

WERI-FM moves its transmitter to a new location on Route 3 in Ashaway, and begins regular broadcasting.

1970s

The FCC increases the nighttime power of all Class IV stations from 250 to 1,000 watts, including WERI.

1980s

WERI-FM moves its transmitter closer to Providence, changes callsign to "WWRX", and effectively becomes a Providence station.

1990s

WERI-FM (WWRX) is sold to an independent owner from the AM station (WERI).

1999

In a separate transaction, WERI was sold to Boston University, and the callsign was changed to WXNI on January 4.[1] As WXNI It aired a format of news and talk from National Public Radio.[5] It was a repeater of WRNI in Providence, and the two stations combined to provide a locally-focused NPR member for Rhode Island–the forerunner of what evolved into Rhode Island Public Radio (now The Public's Radio).

2000s

2007

In December, BU reached an agreement to sell WXNI to Diponti Communications for a reported $350,000.[6] The move came after a local group took control of WRNI and acquired WAKX (later WRNI-FM and now WNPE) in Narragansett Pier to serve as its southern satellite.

2009

Diponti Communications moved the local news and variety programming of WBLQ-LP (96.7 FM, Ashaway, Rhode Island) to WXNI's more powerful AM signal.[6] WXNI begins broadcasting in C-QUAM A.M. Stereo. WXNI changes call letters to WBLQ November 29.


2019

WBLQ begins broadcasting on translator frequency 103.1 FM in November

References

  1. "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
  2. Blaw-Knox tower
  3. Pawcatuck River
  4. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-04-30. Retrieved 2013-02-20.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. "Winter 2008 Station Information Profile". Arbitron.
  6. Fybush, Scott (2007-12-24). "WAMC Backs Down in Noncomm Fight". NorthEast Radio Watch.
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