The FCC’s top radio staffer got it wrong when he...
The FCC’s top radio staffer got it wrong when he told the National Religious Broadcasters conference last month that low-power FM seekers want stations with 250 watts power, not 10w and aren’t satisfied with 100w, an LPFM group said. The…
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“depiction” by Audio Division Chief Peter Doyle of the Media Bureau about “the views of LPFM advocates is absolutely, unequivocally untrue,” the Amherst Alliance said in a Wednesday filing in docket 99-25 (http://xrl.us/bmxg9k). It has sought “licensing of 10 watt LPFM stations, in urban areas, since 1999,” and Prometheus Radio Project and Common Frequency have backed that, the alliance said. A bureau spokeswoman declined to comment. FCC members are expected to vote this week or next on two LPFM-related items (CD March 8 p12).