City of license | Eagle Point, Oregon |
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Broadcast area | Ashland, Oregon |
Slogan | Ashland's Community Radio |
Frequency | 89.5 MHz |
First air date | June 2005 (internet); November 2007 (airwaves) |
Format | Variety |
Language | English |
ERP | 190 watts |
HAAT | 602 meters (1975 feet) |
Class | A |
Callsign meaning | First "K"=W. of the Mississippi R.; KSKQ was formerly a Los Angeles radio station that signed off on July 31, 1992 |
Affiliations | Pacifica Radio |
Owner | Multicultural Association of Southern Oregon (also licensee) |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | www.kskq.org |
KSKQ was a low power (100 watt) community FM radio station licensed by the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to Eagle Point, Oregon, United States,[1] until it was upgraded to a full-power station in June 2011. Its studio is located in Ashland. The original transmitter was just southeast of the city, but has now been dismantled.[2] KSKQ has been streaming locally produced and nationally syndicated programming over the Internet since 2005.[3] In 2007, it also began broadcasting over the airwaves at 94.9 FM.[3][4]
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In December 2004, KSKQ received its LPFM license, limited to 100 watts of transmitting power, and requiring 16 of every 24 hours of KSKQ programming to be locally produced.[1] Producers, who are trained in the technical aspects and protocols of radio broadcasting, are members of the station. The station represents non-partisan, community radio, and encourages participation from any group or individual. KSKQ is also an affiliate of Pacifica Radio.
In January 2010, the Mail Tribune of Medford, Oregon[5] reported that KSKQ planned to increase its broadcasting signal to full power, which would allow coverage over the bulk of Jackson County, in addition to local home radio. The plan at the time was to have a full-power transmitter operational on Table Mountain by November, 2010. KSKQ 94.9 FM, which is operated by the Multicultural Association of Southern Oregon in Ashland, was scheduled to transform into KORV 89.5 FM, broadcasting from the new transmitter.[6] In April 2010, the KSKQ Advisory Committee decided to keep the KSKQ call letters for the full power station.[7]
On Friday, June 24, 2011 KSKQ ceased broadcasting on its low-power frequency 94.9 FM.[2] It is now broadcasting on the new frequency, 89.5 FM from a new transmitter on Table Mountain, east of Ashland. The station also plans to boost the signal to 300 watts.
On November 14, 2011, a power outage was experienced by the transmitter on Table Mountain.[8] This caused an interruption of broadcasting over the airwaves for two days, although the internet stream continued as before. New snowfall had made the road nearly impassable for the delivery truck to refill the propane tank connected to the generator, which was the only source of power to the transmitter. This incident reinforced the need for an alternate source of power. An official request had already been submitted months before to U.S. Cellular, for permission to connect to a transformer owned by that wireless telecommunications firm on the same site.
On the day following the outage, two truck drivers from Ferrellgas of Central Point were finally able to deliver the propane to KSKQ's 200-gallon tank on the mountain. A dialogue was initiated with U.S. Cellular to resolve the impasse over the sharing of power, and the problems with propane refueling only underscored the urgency of these talks.[9] KSKQ's license with the Federal Communications Commission requires that it remain on air, barring unforeseen circumstances. If power had not been restored so quickly, the station would have had to apply for a 30-day reprieve to allow for restoration of power.[8]