NorthPine: Upper Midwest Broadcasting

Update: Extension for 1 of 4 Would-Be Twin Cities Metro FM Signals

Several small FM translator signals that would have served various corners of the Twin Cities metro area aren’t being built, but one station included in this initial report has received an extension.

The stations had been granted during the FCC’s AM Revitalization effort. The new signals would have only reached a fraction of the Twin Cities area due to existing stations using the same frequencies in other parts of the metro.

The most recent cancellation was for W256DT/99.1, which would have relayed Nevada Radio-owned Conservative Talk station KQSP/1530 (Shakopee). It would have broadcast with 250 Watts from the WLOL/1330 transmitter site along the Minnesota River in Savage, covering parts of the southwest metro with a strong signal to Bloomington and Burnsville.

Though W256DT had been granted a six-month extension until Dec. 12, Nevada Radio’s attorney informed the FCC in an August letter that the company was surrendering the permit. No reason was given.

99.1 is also used by low-power stations in the northwest and east metro, as well as a Mankato-market station (KEEZ) with fringe coverage of the southwest metro.

Other FM construction permits that expired unbuilt earlier this year included:

An earlier version of this article also noted that the construction permit for K285CQ/104.9, which was granted to Asian American Broadcasting’s KFXN/690 from its transmitter site in New Hope, was due to have expired in January. However, it turns out the FCC has granted a one-year extension until January 2022, though no documentation of this extension is available in the FCC database other than Jan. 12, 2022, now being listed as the expiration date.

If built, K285CQ’s 250-Watt signal would be strong in the northwest metro but would have competed with the fringe signal of WZEZ/104.9 (Balsam Lake, WI) in other parts of the metro.

Check out the updated Twin Cities FM Translator and LPFM Stations page for a full grid of translators and low-power FM stations in the metro.

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