Type | Terrestrial state public broadcasting network |
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Country | |
First air date | May 3, 1954 |
Slogan | A place to grow through learning |
Broadcast area | Wisconsin, United States additional coverage in portions of Eastern Minnesota and Iowa, Upper Peninsula of Michigan and Northern Illinois |
Owner | Wisconsin Educational Communications Board, University of Wisconsin–Extension |
Former names | Wisconsin Educational Television (1954-1986) |
Digital channel | 6 full-power television stations, 6 translator stations |
Sister public radio services | Wisconsin Public Radio Ideas Network |
Former affiliations | NET (1954-1970) |
Official website | WPT.org |
Wisconsin Public Television is a state network of public television stations operated primarily by the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board and the University of Wisconsin–Extension. It comprises all of the PBS member stations in the state outside of Milwaukee.
The state network is available via flagship station WHA-TV in Madison and five major satellite stations throughout most of Wisconsin. As of April 5, 2009, all stations have converted to digital operations only. WPT is also available on most satellite and cable television outlets. Several of the stations, such as Green Bay's WPNE, maintain broadcast studios on University of Wisconsin campuses, which produce programming for the state network. The state network also has studio facilities at the University of Wisconsin–Stout, which produced the 1980s educational sci-fi fantasy series Storylords for the state network.
Wisconsin Public Television is the main conduit of Educational television and instructional television programming produced by the ECB, which is aired through PBS, Annenberg Media, those stations serving portions of Wisconsin without a WPT station, and other educational television distributors.
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WPT's flagship station, WHA-TV, went on the air on May 3, 1954. It was named after WHA, UW-Madison's radio station and the current flagship for the Ideas Network of Wisconsin Public Radio.
In 1971, the state legislature created the Wisconsin Educational Communications Board, activating five stations as satellites of WHA-TV during the 1970s - WPNE in Green Bay in 1972; WHWC in Menomonie and WHLA in La Crosse in 1973; WHRM in Wausau in 1975 and WLEF in Park Falls in 1977. The stations adopted the on-air name of Wisconsin Public Television in 1986. Transmission and station identification is based out of ECB's Madison facility.
From 1960 to 2007, WHA-TV/WPT aired same-day tape-delayed coverage of some home games for Wisconsin Badgers football and men's basketball, which was produced in association with UW's athletic department. However, because of exclusivity agreements with the Big Ten Network that launched in September, 2007, WPT no longer airs these broadcasts. [1] The state network offers tape-delayed broadcasts of Badgers men's and women's hockey, women's basketball and volleyball throughout the year.[1]
There are six full-power stations in the state network, in major cities throughout the state, and all are broadcast on UHF. On April 5, 2009, the state network ended analog service for all stations, and they map via PSIP to their former analog channel location.[2]
Station | City of license | Channels TV / RF |
First air date | Call letters meaning | ERP |
HAAT |
Facility ID | Transmitter Coordinates |
WHA-TV 1 | Madison | 21 (PSIP) 20 (UHF) |
May 3, 1954 | Taken from sister station WHA radio |
100 kW | 453 m | 6096 | |
WHLA-TV | La Crosse | 31 (PSIP) 30 (UHF) |
March 17, 1975 | WHA LA Crosse | 307.5 kW | 344.6 m | 18780 | |
WHRM-TV | Wausau | 20 (PSIP) 24 (UHF) |
January 20, 1976 | WHA Rib Mountain | 172 kW | 387 m | 73036 | |
WHWC-TV 2 | Menomonie (Eau Claire) |
28 (PSIP) 27 (UHF) |
June 10, 1975 | WHA West Central Wisconsin |
291 kW | 350 m | 18793 | |
WLEF-TV 3 | Park Falls | 36 (PSIP) 36 (UHF) |
December 15, 1976 | W Lee E. Franks former WECB executive director |
50 kW | 244 m | 63046 | |
WPNE-TV | Green Bay | 38 (PSIP) 42 (UHF) |
September 12, 1972 | W Public Broadcasting for NorthEastern Wisconsin |
200 kW | 375 m | 18798 |
The state network carries three digital subchannels:[3]
Channel | Name | Programming |
---|---|---|
##.1 | WPT-HD | Main WPT programming / PBS |
##.2 | WPT2 | Wisconsin Channel (WIS) Also streams online (Windows Media). |
##.3 | WPT3 | Create |
A translator network also serves portions of the state where over-the-air reception for a regular station is hindered by area topography, and to fill in holes between full-power stations. All of the listed translators are owned by the WECB, and flash-cut from analog to digital in the first two weeks of November 2008, including adding the subchannel services.[4] Each translator has its virtual channel mapped via PSIP to the channel number of the closest full-power station to the translator.[5]
Call sign | Location | Translator channel (ATSC) |
PSIP station/channel |
W18CU-D | Sister Bay | 18 | WPNE 38 |
W22CI-D | Bloomington | 22 | WHLA 31 |
W24CL-D | Grantsburg | 24 | WHWC 28 |
W45CD-D | Fence | 45 | WHWC 28 |
W47CO-D | River Falls | 47 | WHWC 28 |
W48DB-D | Coloma | 48 | WHRM 20 |
WPT's public affairs programming is carried by MPTV flagship WMVS (Channel 10) in Milwaukee, including Here and Now and In Wisconsin, while WDSE (Channel 8) Superior-Duluth and WRPT (Channel 31) Hibbing air the shows in northeast Minnesota and northwest Wisconsin. The two stations also air the state network's live teen issues program Teen Connection quarterly with WPT, along with political debates produced by the state network; in turn some Milwaukee Public Television programming (such as Outdoor Wisconsin) and MPTV-produced debates air on WPT. Some of the state network's tape-delayed sports coverage airs in Milwaukee on WMVT (Channel 36).
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