WPAZ

WPAZ
City Pottstown, Pennsylvania
Broadcast area Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Branding Traditional Songs of the Faith - Wordfm
Frequency 1370 kHz
First air date 1951
Format Christian, Traditional Hymns & Songs
Power 1,000 watts day
52 watts night
Class D
Facility ID 25002
Transmitter coordinates 40°16′35.00″N 75°37′44.00″W / 40.2763889°N 75.6288889°W / 40.2763889; -75.6288889
Former callsigns WPAZ (1951-2011)
WBZH (2011-2013)
Owner Four Rivers Community Broadcasting Corporation
(Four Rivers Community Broadcasting Corporation)
Webcast Listen Live
Website wordfm.org

WPAZ (1370 AM) is a radio station owned by the Four Rivers Community Broadcasting Corporation. Licensed to Pottstown, Pennsylvania, USA, it serves Reading and the northwestern portions of the greater Philadelphia area (due to WNJC, which covers the southern portions of the metro at 1360).

History

Beginnings

The station, which signed on in 1951, was originally owned by the Scott Family, and later, their subsidiary, Great Scott Broadcasting, Inc. Over time, WPAZ became the "flagship station" for Great Scott Broadcasting, as corporate operations for its expanding group were handled out of the station's Maugers Mill Road studio location. During the period that Herb and Faye Scott owned the company, WPAZ was one of its strongest properties, despite the station's status as a daytime-only station for much of its existence.

WPAZ was a typical full-service station of its time, boasting music, local news and high school sports, local talk shows, church services, and remote broadcasts. Music formats varied from adult contemporary, oldies and adult standards.

Following Herb Scott's death in 1984, the company gradually shifted its focus from AM to FM by selling its properties in Ohio and western Pennsylvania, and acquiring signals in the Delmarva area. GSB corporate functions were later moved to Delaware after son Mitchell Scott assumed control of the stations after the turn of the 21st century. Nonetheless, WPAZ remained a part of Great Scott's portfolio.

WPAZ ceased operations on December 10, 2009, due to lack of sufficient revenue as Great Scott citing a focus on its other, more-profitable stations.[1][2] Faye Scott died November 7, 2010.

Sale

In early 2010, a group of Pottstown area residents calling themselves the WPAZ Preservation Association (WPAZPA) began efforts to acquire WPAZ from Great Scott Broadcasting. The effort concluded with the group's announcing acquisition of the station in late October, 2010. Resumption of station operations under the auspices of the Community Broadcasting Group (formed by the WPAZPA) took place shortly before 2:00 PM on December 30, 2010.[3][4][5]

Having been dark for more than a year, the new operators found it difficult to find 'takers' willing to advertise on the new WPAZ. On October 28, 2011, WPAZ changed its call sign to WBZH. The station referred to itself as "The Buzz, 1370 AM". This did little to improve the station's fortunes. On Wednesday, November 14, 2012, the station went silent again due to lack of funding and control revered back to Four Rivers Community Broadcasting, which had backed the WPAZPA effort financially.

On January 25, 2013, the station changed back to the original WPAZ call sign. Mitchell Scott died of leukemia on March 17, 2013 at the age of 56.

On April 26, 2013 an application was filed with the FCC to change the License status of the station to Non-Commercial Educational (NCE) which was Approved by the FCC. On another STA application approved on 8/7/2013, a major cleanup and renovation project was completed along with the installation of a new transmitter and new processing equipment.

Today

WPAZ also has an FM on 103.5 FM (translator) (see FCC's FM Query, Pottstown, PA). On November 1, 2013 WPAZ returned to the air with a traditional Christian music format of religious hymns and songs. The 103.5 signal was added in November 2014.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.