WWLE

WWLE
City Cornwall, New York
Broadcast area Newburgh-Middletown area
Slogan El Poder
Frequency 1170 kHz
First air date November 22, 1969
Format Hispanic Regional
Power 800 watts day
Class D
Facility ID 72622
Transmitter coordinates 41°26′24.00″N 74°4′25.00″W / 41.4400000°N 74.0736111°W / 41.4400000; -74.0736111
Former callsigns WNBW (1990-1990)
WARW (1990-1996)
Affiliations CNN Radio
Owner 1170 Broadcast Radio, Inc.
Website wwleam.com

WWLE (1170 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a Hispanic Regional format. Licensed to Cornwall, New York, USA, the station serves the Newburgh-Middletown area.

History

WWLE has existed in two incarnations. The original WWLE came to air on November 22, 1969, as the dream of the late ABC radio newscaster William L. Edmonds; the call letters are his initials. Edmonds' widow Adeline served as WWLE's president, while their son Bill ran the news department. The station aired a big band/standards format with country programs on the weekends, broadcasting from the village of Cornwall-on-Hudson. After several years, the station faced financial troubles and was eventually bought out by investors including Angelo Martinelli, the mayor of Yonkers, New York. By 1981, the station had changed its call letters to WCRR and eventually went dark for several years.

The old WWLE returned as WNBW on February 19, 1990, changing later in the year to WARW, then finally bringing back the old WWLE call letters in 1996.[1] By the late 1990s, the station had moved out of the village of Cornwall to a facility on New York State Route 299 near New Paltz, New York, airing an automated Big Band format. Later, the station was bought by 1170 Broadcast Radio, Inc. and flipped to News Talk Information format, featuring programming from CNN Radio.[2] In 2010, WWLE filed a petition to move to 1150 AM and increase its power (not possible on 1170 because of interference by WWVA in Wheeling, West Virginia); no action has been taken by the FCC.

In 2014, WWLE changed again, this time to a Hispanic Regional format under the name El Poder ("The Power")[3]

References


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