Erie, Pennsylvania/London, Ontario | |
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Branding | TV 54 |
Channels | Digital: 50 (UHF) |
Subchannels | 54.1 PBS 54.3 Create 54.3 PBS World |
Affiliations | PBS |
Owner | Public Broadcasting of Northwest Pennsylvania, Inc. |
First air date | August 13, 1967 |
Call letters' meaning | We Question and LearN |
Sister station(s) | WQLN-FM |
Former channel number(s) | Analog: 54 (1967-2008) |
Former affiliations | NET (1967-1970) |
Transmitter power | 200 kW |
Height | 270.7 m |
Facility ID | 53716 |
Website | www.wqln.org/ |
WQLN is the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) member Public television station in Erie, Pennsylvania. It is owned by Public Broadcasting of Northwest Pennsylvania and broadcasts on digital channel 50 (which remaps to former analog channel 54 via PSIP. Its transmitter and studio facilities are located south of the city of Erie, just slightly northeast of WJET-TV/WFXP's shared studios off Peach Street.
In addition to its local viewership in Northwestern Pennsylvania and portions of nearby Ohio and New York State, WQLN is also seen in the London, Ontario area on Rogers Cable channel 8, and on other cable systems in the area. To reflect audiences on both sides of Lake Erie, WQLN promotionally identifies as "Erie/London" on-air.
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Groundwork for an Educational television station in northwest Pennsylvania was laid in 1953 with the founding of Educational Television of Erie. Its initial effort to sign on a station was unsuccessful, but the group eventually reserved channel 54 for noncommercial use. The group, which was renamed Educational Television of Northwest Pennsylvania in 1964, pressed on until finally winning a construction permit on December 6, 1966. The group initially chose the call letters WLRN (for "learning"), but those letters were already being used by a radio station in Miami, Florida. They then went with their next choice, WQLN ("We question and learn"). On August 13, 1967; WQLN finally went on the air. WQLN-FM signed on in 1973.
WQLN has long struggled financially, and as a result, at various times in the life of the station, programs including Mister Rogers, Nova, and Macneil/Lehrer Newshour were not seen on WQLN.
The station's transmitter was knocked off-air early September 15, 2008 after its antenna and transmission line were damaged by Hurricane Ike. There was also additional damage (possibly from a prior lightning strike) to the 680-foot transmission line.[1] The station later returned using a temporary digital antenna, making WQLN the first Erie station to become fully digital.[2][3] With the impending end of analog broadcasting, the station opted not to rebuild its analog facility and broadcast exclusively in digital.
Rogers Cable carries WQLN as the PBS station on some of its systems in Southwestern Ontario, which includes the major city of London, Ontario. As a result of its cable carriage, a major portion of WQLN's financial contributions have come from viewers in Canada.[4]
However in July 2009, Rogers announced that it would be replacing both WQLN and Watertown, New York's WPBS-DT (carried in Ottawa) on its cable systems with Detroit's WTVS due to concerns over signal quality, as a result of the stations not having fiber optic signals available to Rogers. The plan by Rogers was faced with criticism from WQLN's general manager Dwight Miller, who stated that WQLN would not be able to stay on the air without the support of its Canadian viewers, who have provided the station with the bulk of its fundraising revenue.[4] The threat of losing its Canadian cable viewership came as an additional unwelcome blow for WQLN which, like other PBS members in Pennsylvania, lost all state funding as of 2009. WQLN would face a loss of about $800,000 of state funding.[5]
On July 30, 2009, Rogers announced that WQLN will be retained on its southwestern Ontario systems, as a result of WQLN providing a connection to Rogers' London headend.[6]
The station's signal is multiplexed
Channel | Video | Aspect | Programming |
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54.1 | 1080i | 16:9 | Main WQLN programming / PBS |
54.2 | 480i | 4:3 | Create |
54.3 | PBS World |
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