KRWG-TV began broadcasting in 1973 as an adjunct to KRWG radio and as a public broadcaster serving southern New Mexico. It also complements the NMSU journalism program; students produce a newscast that airs three times a week during the school year, and its other local programming also focuses on regional issues.
History
As early as 1964, the same year that
KRWG (90.7 FM) began broadcasting,[1] New Mexico State University (NMSU) considered establishing a public television station using the channel 12 allotment at
Hatch.[3] Channel 12 had been put there two years prior when the
University of New Mexico was considering establishing a statewide educational network.[4] However, NMSU soon found Hatch to be an unviable allocation for serving Las Cruces; the transmitter would have to be north of Las Cruces, to protect
KELP-TV in
El Paso, Texas; this was the opposite direction. Channel 22 in the
ultra high frequency (UHF) band was then assigned to Las Cruces.[5] NMSU applied for a station on November 2, 1970, and received a
construction permit on April 4, 1972.[6] The
United States Office of Education provided a $467,513 grant to support the construction of the new station.[7] The federal grant primarily went to the facility. By that time, NMSU was programming an hour and a half a day on the local cable system in Las Cruces, an exapnsion of the university closed-circuit TV system which had been in place since 1965.[8] In addition, equipment was donated by
KOB-TV in Albuquerque and the
ABC network.[9]
While construction on the transmitter facility was completed by December 1972, a shortage of engineers and delays in equipment installation kept the station from debuting for several months.[10] KRWG-TV began broadcasting on June 29, 1973; the first weekend on air featured a local talent marathon to dedicate the new station.[11] It was the first UHF station on the air between
Tucson, Arizona, and
Lubbock, Texas,[5] and it was the closest public television station to El Paso until
KCOS began in 1978; the cable system in El Paso continued to carry KRWG-TV but dropped
KNME-TV from
Albuquerque when KCOS debuted.[12]
Funding
In 2022, KRWG-TV generated $3.3 million in revenue. The station received $1.07 million in revenue from the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting as well as $976,000 in grants from the state and more than $824,000 in equipment restricted grants. Memberships represented $235,847 in income.[13]
Local programming
Harvey Jacobs, head of the NMSU Department of Journalism and Mass Communication, envisioned KRWG-TV as a source of New Mexico-centric news and information for Las Cruces.[8] To that end, the station began with a bilingual, student-produced local newscast, originally titled Panavista.[14] For 20 years, the station aired Qué Pasa with Dolores, a bilingual weekly and previously biweekly talk show hosted by Dolores Lenko.[15][16]
Most of KRWG-TV's local programming continues to concern southern New Mexico issues. During the fall and spring semesters, students produce News22, which airs three times a week and covers regional issues.[17][18] When the newscast was threatened by budget cuts in 1997, students and professors expressed a willingness to donate time and money to keep the program on the air.[19]
Once a week, the station airs Noticias22, a Spanish-language newscast.[17] Throughout the year, the weekly magazine Newsmakers airs in-depth features.[18]
Alumni of the NMSU journalism program that worked on News22 while students at the university include
Gadi Schwartz, correspondent for
NBC News.[17]
The PBS Kids subchannel was added in March 2017.[21]
Translators
Not long after starting, KRWG-TV began extending its reach in southern New Mexico with the addition of translators. In 1976, it filled one of the larger remaining gaps in New Mexico when it opened a translator to serve
Alamogordo.[22]Silver City was added in 1978.[23]
The Antelope Wells and Jacks Peak translators were authorized by the FCC in 2023 on a waiver in order to use money budgeted by the New Mexico state government. The transmitters provide public television service to Antelope Wells as well as datacasting capacity used by local educational and law enforcement agencies. The Jacks Peak transmitter was necessary to provide a signal to the Antelope Wells transmitter.[24]
KRWG-TV shut down its analog signal, over
UHF channel 22, on June 10, 2009 (two days before most full-power television stations in the United States
transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate on June 12).[25] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 23, using
virtual channel 22.[26]