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KLSN-LP

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
KLSN-LP
Broadcast areaEast Contra Costa County
Frequency92.9 FM
Programming
FormatDefunct (formerly classic hits)
Ownership
OwnerFriends of Oakley Community Foundation
History
First air date
January 28, 2017 (2017-01-28)
Last air date
January 21, 2019 (2019-01-21)
Technical information
Facility ID194303
ERP58 watts
HAAT40 meters (130 ft)
Transmitter coordinates
37°58′1.88″N 121°45′0.67″W / 37.9671889°N 121.7501861°W / 37.9671889; -121.7501861
Links
Websitewww.klsn.org

KLSN-LP was a low-power FM radio station in Oakley, California. that had served the East Contra Costa County area.[1] KLSN-LP went on the air officially on January 28, 2017, with a classic hits format. In addition to music, KLSN-LP broadcast local sports from area high schools.[2]

History

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KLSN-LP began broadcasting on January 28, 2017; much of the equipment had been bought used from KUSP in Santa Cruz, which had been sold and converted to a K-Love transmitter, or had been donated. However, it would run into legal problems from the outset of its operation, primarily concerning the use of its tower site. After a year of operation, on January 31, 2018, KLSN-LP went off the air. This revealed that KLSN-LP had been installed at its transmitter site, on Vista Grande Drive in Antioch, even though it had not received approval from the tower owner to use the site;[3] the general manager, Chris Ponsano, alleged he had a gentleman's verbal agreement with the mayor of Antioch for use of the facility.[4] The case prompted chief engineer Jeff Brown to sue the general manager and the licensee, Friends of Oakley Community Foundation; the lawsuit demanded monetary damages and the return of equipment that he had loaned to the station.[4] In filing for special temporary authority to remain silent, Friends of Oakley told the Federal Communications Commission that it had suffered vandalism at its studio and transmitter, losing the hard drives that contained its broadcast material and other equipment.[5]

The station claimed to broadcast again for eight days in January 2019, but it filed to go silent thereafter. After not having broadcast in 12 months, the FCC automatically canceled the license on February 5, 2020, per Section 312(g) of the Communications Act.[6]

References

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  1. ^ "About KLSN 92.9 FM". www.klsn.org. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
  2. ^ "About KLSN 92.9 FM". www.klsn.org. Retrieved 2021-03-17.
  3. ^ Davis, Aaron (2018-02-11). "Equipment failure takes Oakley's KLSN 92.9 off-air, exposes not-so-secret transmitter in Antioch". East Bay Times. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  4. ^ a b Roberts, Ruth (2018-03-07). "Former engineer sues community-based KLSN radio station for libel". The Press. Retrieved 2021-05-21.
  5. ^ "Request for Silent STA (BLSTA-20180305AAL)". fcc.gov. March 5, 2018. Retrieved 2021-05-20.
  6. ^ KLSN-LP - notification of license cancellation