WAMC
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City of license | Albany, New York |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Primary: Albany Capital District of New York; parts of Eastern New York ; Southern Vermont, Western Massachusetts, Upper Northwest Connecticut Secondary: West-Central Connecticut, southwestern New Hampshire, northwestern New Jersey, northeast Pennsylvania, a small portion of Quebec.[1][2] |
Branding | WAMC, Northeast Public Radio |
First air date | 1958 (Original licensee Albany Medical College) |
Frequency | 90.3 MHz |
Format | Public Radio |
Class | A: WAMQ, WANC, WCAN, WCEL; B: WAMC, WRUN; B1: WAMK, WOSR; C: WAMC-AM |
Callsign meaning | Albany Medical College |
Owner | WAMC, Inc. |
Website | www.wamc.org |
WAMC is a public radio station out of Albany, NY, broadcasting on the 90.3 FM frequency. The organization's legal name is 'WAMC, Inc.', and it is also known as 'WAMC Public Radio' or 'WAMC Northeast Public Radio Network'. It runs the Northeast Public Radio network of stations. In addition, the station operates the WAMC Performing Arts Studio, a venue in Albany..
The NPR affiliate is registered with IRS as a 501c3 charitable, educational, non-commercial broadcaster. The organization's IRS Form 990 - 'Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax' can be accessed at Guidestar.org or at wamc.net (site not affiliated with WAMC or Guidestar). Total annual revenues (Fiscal 2005): $6 million.
Present corporate officers include Thomas S.W. Lewis, chairman of the board of trustees; Alan S. Chartock, president & chief executive officer.
Contents |
[edit] History
WAMC started in 1958 as a radio station for the local hospital and medical school, Albany Medical Center and Albany Medical College. Albany Medical Center is the large tertiary-care hospital serving the upper Hudson Valley, and the medical school (with which it is affiliated) is one of the country's ACGME-accredited medical schools. The affiliation with Albany Medical Center was the source of the call letters "WAMC."
The station's 24/7 non-commercial classical musical format served a large listener base and was quite popular amongst regional music aficionados. The earliest years also included broadcasts of health information and lectures from visiting professors. Early on, part of WAMC's regular programming was the broadcast of live concerts by the Boston Symphony Orchestra from Tanglewood and Boston. When the NPR network was founded in 1970, WAMC signed-on as one of NPR's original ninety 'charter' affiliates. Around 1980, financial pressures caused the hospital and medical school to seek to divest the station. In 1981, the FCC license on 90.3FM was transferred to a 501c3 tax-exempt entity, WAMC, Inc., which had been set-up by a group of five corporators (amongst them the current CEO and president, Alan S. Chartock) affiliated with the State University of New York and New York State government. In the years since the transfer, the station has dramatically cut back on most classical music programming (live BSO concerts are still broadcast) whilst simultaneously becoming an active producer of information-based, non-music-related programming, providing a variety of interview-format programs to radio stations across the country via the station's in-house subsidiary, National Productions.
Community and corporate contributions (often obtained during regular fund drives) have helped the original single station grow over the years into a network of nine stations and five translators with large primary service contours covering New York's Albany capital district, western Massachusetts, southern Vermont, and targeted smaller contours in those states and parts of New Hampshire, Connecticut, and New Jersey. See WAMC's Actual Coverage Map (site not affiliated with WAMC). WAMC-90.3-FM's main transmitter and antenna are atop Mount Greylock in Adams, Massachusetts, the highest mountain in the state, giving the flagship 90.3 signal a relatively large radius for a transmitter of its size.
[edit] Criticism and views
[edit] Accusations of bias
NPR's official news policy states that its affiliate stations should be 'fair, unbiased, accurate, honest, and respectful of the people that are covered', principles that some senior NPR officials think are not always followed with non-syndicated WAMC reporting. [1]
For example, Jonathan Kern, the NPR official who leads NPR's anti-bias workshops, expressed concern with what he views as political bias in WAMC news reporting stating that "Our code of ethics says, if you're in the news division, you do not express opinions on the air, and I think that's a good measure for any station." [2] In another case, a NPR producer visiting the WAMC listening area expressed surprise regarding the "outspoken political commentary" of WAMC news coverage. It was station CEO and in-house political commentator Alan Chartock's political commentary that most caught the attention of the NPR producer, who labeled it left-of-center "ranting" that, as a news professional dedicated to center-of-the-road balance at NPR, really "freaked [him] out". [2]
[edit] Support for Chartock's programming
Stephen Yasko, manager of WTMD (89.7 FM), an NPR member station in Towson that plays mostly adult-alternative music states that quality-control challenges NPR’s decentralized nature might create are outweighed by the advantage of unique local programming.
“Public radio stations reflect the values and texture of the communities they serve,” says Yasko, who has also worked in the NPR member services department. “If NPR or any national organization had too much control or input into every station's local personality, then you would lose the very thing that makes us what we are. So if Alan Chartock is what Albany and upstate New York created and what works for them, that's a beautiful thing, no matter what some outsiders might say.” [2]
[edit] Network expansion
Though the original expansion of the WAMC network starting in the mid 1980s was done to serve areas that had previously lacked NPR service, many of the station's expansions since then have been into areas that either had service from a WAMC signal or where an established NPR network was already on the air. Two examples of this were WAMC's firesale purchase of WAMQ (then WBBS), a signal whose coverage area is near enveloped by other WAMC signals, in 1992 and WAMC purposely outbidding SUNY Plattsburgh for the then-WCFE-FM in 1995 to serve an area with two established NPR stations.
A similar case came in early 2003 when WAMC purchase the then-WHTR (the original WABY) from Galaxy Communications when some protest was risen to the sale given that a potential voice for underserved minority audiences in the Albany market was being taken off the market because of corporate politics.
In lieu of the criticism of WAMC's expansion, the station actually welcomed the expansion of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst-operated WFCR into Berkshire County, Massachusetts via FM translators in 2005.
[edit] Original programing
WAMC produces many programs of its own. These include:
- Capitol Connection
- Hudson River Sampler
- In Our Backyard
- The Legislative Gazette
- Midday Magazine
- Northeast Report
- The Roundtable
- Tim Coakley Jazz
- Vox Pop
- WAMC Bluegrass Time
- How to Save Your Life
[edit] Former programs
- The Environment Show
- Me and Mario
- Rachael's Place
- Weekly Rundown
- Zucchini Brothers show
[edit] National Productions
WAMC also produces programs that are distributed under the name National Productions. These include:
- 51%
- The Best of Our Knowledge
- The Book Show
- The Health Show
- The Media Project
- Word for the Wise
[edit] Podcasts
WAMC also podcasts their original programs. They offer a version of pubcatcher to manage their podcasts.
[edit] Technical data
[edit] Coverage maps
Two maps -- two differing interpretations:
- WAMC's published coverage map showing counties that are covered in whole or in part
- FCC-based coverage map - using WAMC's map above overlaid with FCC 60 dBu - industry standard - service contour maps for comparison. (Site not affiliated with WAMC.)
Please note FCC's disclaimer: "Often stations may be received at locations well beyond the displayed service contour, depending on the location of other stations on the same or adjacent channels."
[edit] Stations, wattage, service contour maps
Call Sign | Frequency | Location | Effective Radiated Power (ERP) | Service Contour Maps[3] |
WAMC | 90.3 FM | Albany, NY | 10.0 kW ERP (10,000 watts) | Map |
WAMK | 90.9 FM | Kingston, NY | 0.94 kW ERP (940 watts) | Map |
WOSR | 91.7 FM | Middletown, NY | 1.80 kW ERP (1,800 watts) | Map |
WCEL | 91.9 FM | Plattsburgh, NY | 0.38 kW ERP (380 watts) | Map |
WCAN | 93.3 FM | Canajoharie, NY | 6.0 kW ERP (6,000 watts) | Map |
WANC | 103.9 FM | Ticonderoga, NY | 1.55 kW ERP (1,550 watts) | Map |
WAMQ | 105.1 FM | Great Barrington, MA | 0.73 kW ERP (730 watts) | Map |
WRUN | 1150 AM | Utica, NY | 5.0 kW ERP Day (5,000 watts)
1.0 kW ERP Night (1,000 watts) |
Map |
WAMC | 1400 AM | Albany, NY | 1.0 kW ERP Day (1,000 watts)
1.0 kW ERP Night (1,000 watts) |
Map |
[edit] Translators
Call sign | Frequency | Location | Effective Radiated Power (ERP) | Service Contour Maps[5] |
W205AJ | 88.9 FM | Oneonta, NY | 0.003 kW ERP (3 watts) | Map |
W220CE | 91.9 FM | Southington, CT | 0.001 kW ERP (1 watt) | Map |
W226AC | 93.1 FM | Rensselaer-Troy, NY | 0.05 kW ERP (50 watts) | Map |
W246BJ | 97.1 FM | Hudson, NY | 0.05 kW ERP (50 watts) | Map |
W299AG | 107.7 FM | Newburgh, NY | 0.01 kW ERP (10 watts) | Map |
[edit] References
- ^ NPR News Code of Ethics and Practices..
- ^ a b c Locally Grown by Gadi Dechter, 7/13/2005..
- ^ FCC Audio Division Home Page.
- ^ Radio-Locator.com.
- ^ FCC Audio Division Home Page.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- WAMC Homepage
- The WAMC Performing Arts Studio-- A WAMC-owned venue in downtown Albany adjacent to their studios.
- WAMC Student Town Meetings
- WAMC Northeast PIRATE Network -- A Web site containing articles and exposés generally critical of WAMC and its management.
In-Town:: 590 | 810 | 980 | 1160 | 1240 | 1300 | 1330 | 1400 | 1460 | 1540
Outside the Metro: 560 | 930 | 1230 | 1340 | 1440 | 1490 | 1570
In-Town:
88.3 | 89.1 | 89.7 | 90.3 | 90.7/94.9 | 90.9 | 91.5 | 92.3 | 93.7 | 94.5 | 95.5 | 96.3 | 96.7 | 98.3 | 99.5
100.9 | 102.3 | 103.1 | 103.9 | 104.5 | 104.9 | 105.71 | 106.5 | 107.7
1 Signing on late fall 2006
Outside the Metro
Saratoga Springs/Glens Falls and Vermont: 91.9 | 94.7 | 95.9 | 97.5 | 98.5 | 100.3 | 101.3
101.7 | 102.7 | 107.1
Mohawk Valley: 97.3 | 97.7 | 101.9 | 103.5
Columbia/Greene Counties: 93.5 | 97.9 | 98.5
See also: Template:Albany AM, Template:Albany TV, Template:Saratoga radio
Radio stations in the Saratoga Springs / Glens Falls market (Arbitron #unranked) |
AM Stations
590 | 810 | 980 | 1160 | 1230 | 1250 | 1300 | 1330 | 1340 | 1400 | 1410 | 1450 | 1460 | 1540 |
In-Market FM Stations
89.7 | 90.3 | 90.9 | 91.1 | 91.9 | 92.3 | 92.7 | 94.1 | 94.7 | 95.5 | 95.9 | 96.7 | 97.5 | 98.5 |
Out-of-Market FM Stations serving/available in Saratoga
88.3 | 89.1 | 91.5 | 93.7 | 98.3 | 99.5 | 100.9 | 103.1 | 103.9 | 104.9 |
570 | 950 | 1150 | 1310 | 1420 | 1450 | 1480 | 1550
In-Market AM Stations: 920 | 950 | 1020 | 1260 | 1390 | 1450 | 1490
NYC/Albany AM Stations: 660 | 770 | 810 | 880 | 1050 | 1130 | 1560
FM Stations: 88.3 | 88.7 WFNP | 88.7 WRHV | 89.7 | 90.9 | 91.3 | 91.7 | 92.1 | 92.9 | 93.3 | 94.3 | 96.1 | 96.9 | 97.7
98.1 | 100.1/106.3 | 100.7 | 101.5 | 103.3 | 104.7 | 105.5 | 107.3
In-Market AM Stations: 1110 | 1170 | 1220 | 1260 | 1340 | 1370 | 1490
NYC AM Stations: 660 | 710 | 770 | 880 | 1010 | 1050 | 1130 | 1560
FM Stations: 88.9/89.3 | 91.7 | 92.7 | 95.9 | 96.7 | 97.3 | 98.3 | 99.3 | 100.7 | 101.5 | 103.1 | 103.7 | 104.7 | 107.3