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WRSA_(AM) Latitude and Longitude:

44°49′52.16″N 73°5′23.49″W / 44.8311556°N 73.0898583°W / 44.8311556; -73.0898583
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WRSA
Simulcasts WIXM Grand Isle
Broadcast area Burlington- Plattsburgh area
Frequency1420 kHz
BrandingThe New Mix 102.3
Programming
Format Hot adult contemporary
Ownership
Owner
  • Northeast Broadcasting Company
  • (Radio Broadcasting Services, Incorporated)
WIFY, WIXM, WWMP
History
First air date
1941 (as WWSR)
Former call signs
  • WWSR (1941–2002)
  • WTWK (2002)
Call sign meaning
"Radio St. Albans"
Technical information [1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID34812
ClassD
Power
  • 1,000 watts day
  • 107 watts night
Transmitter coordinates
44°49′52.16″N 73°5′23.49″W / 44.8311556°N 73.0898583°W / 44.8311556; -73.0898583
Links
Public license information
Website mix1023burlington.com

WRSA (1420 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to the City of St. Albans, Vermont. It is owned by Steven Silberberg's Northeast Broadcasting Company, through licensee Radio Broadcasting Services, Incorporated. It airs a hot adult contemporary format, simulcasting sister station WIXM (102.3 FM). There is an unrelated WRSA-FM (96.9) in Huntsville, Alabama.

WRSA's transmitter is off Lower Newton Road (Route 38) in the Town of St. Albans. It broadcasts at 1,000 watts by day, but to protect other stations on AM 1420, it reduces power at night to 107 watts. A non-directional antenna is used at all times.

History

WRSA is Vermont's fourth oldest radio station, and the first north of Burlington. [2] On June 19, 1941, the station first signed on as WWSR at 1390 kHz. [3] With the enactment of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA), the station moved to AM 1420 the following year. WWSR was owned by the Vermont Radio Corporation and broadcast at 1,000 watts. It was a daytimer, required to be off the air at night.

In April 1970, it added an FM station, 102.3 WWSR-FM. At first it simulcast the AM station but it later began airing an automated adult contemporary format known as "Hit Parade". Today it is WIXM, a hot adult contemporary station also owned by Radio Broadcasting Services, Inc.

In the 1990s, WWSR was authorized by the FCC to broadcast at night, but only at 110 watts. [4] The station was assigned the WRSA call sign by the Federal Communications Commission on April 23, 2002. [5]

WRSA switched affiliations from ESPN Radio to Fox Sports Radio on January 1, 2011. The ESPN affiliation moved to WCPV (101.3 FM). [6] On January 1, 2012, WRSA began to simulcast the oldies format of co-owned WIFY "Cruisin' 93.7" in Addison, Vermont.

WRSA flipped to a comedy radio format on Labor Day weekend 2014, along with co-owned WCAT (1390 AM) in Burlington, Vermont. WRSA and WCAT returned to oldies and classic hits in July 2015. [7]

On October 30, 2015, WRSA went silent, along with WCAT. According to FCC records, the station had also been silenced in 2013. [8]

Effective May 20, 2019, WRSA was acquired from Radio Broadcasting Services, Incorporated by the Radio Sound Company, including a construction permit for an FM translator in St. Albans, W262DH 100.3 MHz. [9]

WRSA returned to the air in spring 2019, simulcast with WCAT, carrying a business news format mostly supplied by Bloomberg Radio. On June 1, 2019, the station began local operation and ended the affiliation with Bloomberg. The format is a variety of music, and local programming. The new owners have pledged to air local information. [10]

Effective May 1, 2020, the station's license and the translator construction permit were transferred back to Radio Broadcasting Services, Incorporated for $1 and assumption of debt outstanding from the 2019 sale. The FCC cancelled the construction permit for W262DH effective October 1, 2021. WCAT's license was surrendered and cancelled on November 1, 2022.

References

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WRSA". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1943 page 148
  3. ^ "History Cards for WRSA". licensing.fcc.gov.
  4. ^ Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 2000 page D-463
  5. ^ "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.
  6. ^ Donoghue, Mike (December 21, 2010). "Fox Sports joins Champlain Valley radio market". Burlington Free Press. Retrieved December 22, 2010.
  7. ^ "Oldies back on 1390 Burlington 1420 St. Albans". RadioInsight.
  8. ^ "FCCdata.org - powered by REC". fccdata.org. Retrieved March 25, 2019.
  9. ^ "Station Sales Week of 3-15". RadioInsight.
  10. ^ "Coming at you live | St. Albans Messenger". www.samessenger.com. Retrieved June 19, 2019.

External links