WVTT

WVTT
City of license Portville, New York
Broadcast area Olean, New York
Branding Voice of the Twin Tiers
Frequency 96.7 MHz (also on HD Radio)
Translator(s) 93.9 W230BO (Olean, relays HD2)
99.1 W256BQ (Olean, relays HD4)
First air date 1985 (as WFRM)
Format Talk (WBYB simulcast)
HD2: Fox Sports Radio
HD3: WXMT simulcast
HD4: Country "Bob FM"
ERP 460 watts
HAAT 155 meters
Class A
Facility ID 21197
Former callsigns WFRM (1985-mid 2000s)
Owner Colonial Radio Group
Sister stations WBYB, WXMT
Website WVTT Online
bigboblive.com (HD4)

WVTT is an FM radio station licensed to Portville, New York. The station, broadcasting at 96.7 MHz, is owned by Colonial Radio Group and broadcasts a talk radio format.

Prior to October 2011, WVTT was licensed to Kane, Pennsylvania at 103.9 MHz. WVTT swapped with WBYB, which was previously located at 96.7 in Portville, in October 2011.

Contents

History

McKean County's First FM

WUMT began at a time when Kane was experiencing a sharp decline in its local economy. Originally assigned the call letters WRXZ in December 1981, this station would not be built until more than two and a half years later. First coming on the air on September 17, 1984, WRXZ would be competing for advertising revenue with a well-established AM competitor, WKZA, that had been on the air since 1954, and had been controlled for many years by a New York-based company (the Bilbat Broadcast Bunch dba locally as Raise Kane Radio, Inc.) that had other stations in its portfolio in addition to its own.

The call letters were changed to WIFI about six months after going on the air, and it didn't take long for WIFI to make an impact on its competitor, though not enough to effectively put it out of business until years later. WIFI was the very first FM station to come on the air in McKean County, with WBRR in Bradford coming on the air three years later. WHKS in Port Allegany and WQRM in Smethport would not come on the air until 6 and 7 years later, respectively. Though only 3,000 watts at the time of its debut, Kane was located at the top of a mountain, which allowed WIFI a huge coverage area from a relatively short antenna, thus enabling it to serve all of McKean County and parts of New York's Twin Tiers area, as well as a portion of Elk and Warren Counties.

The fall of WKZA and rise of WLMI

Despite the emergence of FM as the leading broadcast technology and the fact that WIFI offered listeners local radio service after WKZA's then-FCC-mandated shutdown at sunset, WKZA remained the dominant local radio service, and by 1987, WIFI's finances were depleted. Industrialist Dennis Heindl of Ridgway, PA, purchased the station, took it off the air for renovations, re-equipped it, and gave it the call WLMI, for Laurel Media, Inc. (His manufacturing company was Laurel Manufacturing Inc.) Heindl returned the station to the air in April 1988. In 1989, Heindl sold WLMI and a construction permit for an unbuilt station in Reynoldsville, PA (assigned the calls WDDH then, now known today as WDSN), to William Hearst, president of Clarion County Broadcasting. As WLMI began to entrench itself as a formidable competitor in town, many of WKZA's staff defected to WLMI, leaving Raise Kane Radio to put WKZA up for sale, finding that its profits were rapidly shrinking. Though a competitor buyout was speculated, WLMI did not show an interest in acquiring an AM station, and WKZA was sold for $75,000 to Bill Shannon Broadcasting in 1990.

The following year meant transactions for both WKZA and WLMI. Bill Shannon Broadcasting sold WKZA to Walter R. Pierre for $63,500 in December 1991, with the FCC approving the transaction a month later. On December 3, 1992, Hearst sold WLMI for $245,000 to Beech Tree Broadcasting Co, whose president was veteran news broadcaster Chuck Crouse, who had anchored news reports for many years on WEEI in Boston. (Clarion County Broadcasting today owns WWCH-AM and WCCR-FM in Clarion, and acquired WKQW AM-FM in Oil City in 2005).

With Crouse's background in news, it wasn't uncommon to hear a local newscast each hour of every day on WLMI during this time, following an hourly report from ABC News. Crouse anchored news reports from 6 am until 2 pm with Scott McGuire handling reports from 3 pm until the following morning, Monday through Friday. High school students from Kane and the surrounding area were hired to provide information to listeners on weekends, helping to keep WLMI's doors open seven days a week. Crouse's first hire in 1993 was Michael Hinman, then a student at nearby Johnsonburg Area High School who would late become the founder of Airlock Alpha and the creator of the SyFy brand name.

Weather was also a staple on the station with around 50 reports a day each hour and half-hour. Crouse hosted a daily two-hour morning show each weekday called "The Chuckwagon" which featured music, commentary, interviews and occasional announcements about lost dogs. Sports Director and Sales Manager at the time, Barry Morgan, hosted a sports commentary at 9:10 am each weekday that ran for about 10 minutes. On Saturdays, local programming included a three-hour extended edition of Crouse's show known as "Saturday Morning Open-House" from 9 am until noon. Hinman hosted a weekly high school sports roundup called "Sunday Fifth Quarter" that lasted until he graduated from high school in 1994. Around 1999, WLMI developed a website [1] that still provides news and information today while under new ownership. This very successful attempt at localism (while using a satellite-delivered programming service for music and DJ's) would eventually seal WKZA's fate.

WKZA became WQLE in an effort by Pierre to reverse its sagging fortunes. The station, which by this time was reduced to an all-barter affiliate of Chuck Harder's "For the People" populist national talk network (which shared its revenues with affiliate stations), finally failed for good, going dark on December 21, 1992. Its departure left WLMI as the only local radio station offering service to Kane. No FCC paperwork was filed to legally silence the station, and was given up as simply abandoned.

Today, the WKZA calls belong to a CHR station at 106.9 mHz, serving Warren and Jamestown, NY.

In July 2006, Crouse sold WLMI to Colonial Radio Group and CEO Jeff Andrulonis, its current owner for $366,000.

Since its formative years as WIFI, WLMI had maintained its longtime call letters and a format that combines full-service news & information with country music. Under Colonial Radio Group's ownership, the station switched from ABC Satellite Music service (Today's Best Country) to a mostly locally programmed Contemporary Country music format. The station also offers ABC News & local news, Paul Harvey, The Lia Show, sports play-by-play, and a locally-produced polka show on Sundays.

In July 2007, the station received approval from the FCC for a move of its tower for an increase of coverage area in McKean & Elk Counties. The tower move was completed on October 29, 2007.

Beginning November 2007, WLMI operated KaneRadio.net, an Internet-only all-news radio station. The station ran an assortment of national news from ABC News Radio, Fox News Radio, local news, business reports, and sports on a tape loop. On nights and weekends, KaneRadio.net ran a relay of ESPN Radio. A full launch is expected in December 2007, with programming from BBC World Service and late-night and entertainment features from Westwood One later added to the schedule.[2]. As of November 2008, kaneradio.net is no longer in operation and the domain expired.

WLMI began broadcasting in HD Radio in 2008. At launch, WLMI's HD channels were broadcasting WLMI's main feed and two ABC Radio 24-hour networks, The Christmas Channel and Timeless. It later broadcast WLMI's main feed and an alternate feed of WXMT, WLMI's sister station in Smethport.

WLMI's ownership bought WQRM (106.3/99.3, now WXMT) in Smethport/Bradford from the Allegheny Mountain Radio Network and a 94.3 translator from the Family Life Network in 2008. WLMI is using these acquisitions to build a network covering much of McKean County. A separate 95.3 transmitter in Smethport is currently relaying WLMI but, according to the company, is expected to change to a satellite talk radio format, affiliated with Talk Radio Network. The launch date for the new "FM Talk Radio 95.3" has not been announced. WLMI also owns the former WFRM-FM (96.7, now WBYB), currently licensed to Portville, New York with a separately programmed country format. For a time in 2009, WLMI simulcasted WBYB, with the morning show coming from WLMI and the midday and afternoon shows programmed from WBYB.

Ironically, one of WLMI's biggest competitors was St. Marys-based WDDH, which is owned by WLMI's former owner, Laurel Media. WDDH also runs a country format. Other competitors include Olean-based WPIG and Warren-based WKNB.

The end of country, the debut of "The Summit"

In 2010, WLMI separated from WBYB (with whom it had been sharing programming), returned to its satellite country format from Citadel (though the morning show remained) and changed its call sign to the current WUMT. On June 14, 2010 WUMT changed their format to a classic rock/classic hits/adult album alternative hybrid format, branded as "The Summit," formatted similarly to sister station WXMT ("The Mountain"). The move marked the end of country music on the station for the first time in nearly thirty years.

Talk radio era

On February 15, 2011 WUMT changed their call letters to WVTT in preparation for a change to talk radio. Colonial had previously announced plans to launch a talk radio station on W237CS but never followed through with the permit. Local morning and evening shows are planned, with the Glenn Beck Program and Dennis Miller carried during the midday and Fox Sports Radio on overnights.

The station also announced plans to be carried on an FM translator on 99.1 MHz. Currently this translator is licensed to Rock City with very low power on 99.3 MHz. An application was filed in late 2010 move the signal to Olean and move to 99.1fm with 99 watts to blanket the Olean market. They eventually abandoned those plans.

Frequency swap, move to Portville and change to talk radio

On October 19, 2011, WVTT swapped frequencies with WBYB in Portville, New York so that WVTT would be carried on 96.7 from Portville and WBYB would broadcast from 103.9 in Kane.

External links