KBIF explained

KBIF
City:Fresno, California, US
Area:Fresno area
Branding:KBIF 900 AM
Frequency:900 kHz
Languages:Hmong, Punjabi
Power:1,000 watts (daytime)
500 watts (nighttime)
Class:B
Format:World Ethnic
Facility Id:9226
Owner:Overgaard Broadcasting LLC
Webcast:Listen Live
Licensing Authority:FCC

KBIF (900 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a World Ethnic format to the Fresno, California, United States, area. The station is currently owned by Cordell Overgaard, through licensee Overgaard Broadcasting LLC.[1]

KBIF broadcasts in the Hmong language from Monday to Friday and in Punjabi on Saturday and Sunday.[2]

History

Early years

The Radio Sanger Company, formed by four prominent local farmers, was granted a construction permit by the Federal Communications Commission on March 12, 1947, to build a 1,000-watt, daytime-only radio station to serve nearby Sanger on 900 kHz. The station was constructed at Centerville.[3] KSGN signed on September 8, 1947.[4]

The station was sold for the first time in 1950 to a group led by Earl J. Fenston, a Fresno attorney; by this time, it had established satellite studios at Fresno's Sequoia Hotel.[5] KSGN became KSJV on Easter Sunday 1951, a decision undertaken to reduce confusion with other local stations with similar call signs.[6] Fenston expanded his media holdings when he bought The Hanford Sentinel and KNGS radio in Hanford in 1952.[7] The FCC granted the Hanford radio station's sale on the condition that Fenston divest himself of KSJV in Sanger, prompting him to sell it to his son.[8]

Poole years

In the end, the Fenstons decided to sell KSJV outright to another interest: John H. Poole, who owned radio station KBIG in Los Angeles and had already applied to start a television station on channel 53 in Fresno.[9] Foreign-language programs were removed from the schedule, and KBIG changed its call letters to KBIF at the start of April 1953, after having received permission two months prior.[10] The station also moved all offices from Centerville to Fresno in the Warner Theatre[11] and then to another site in town.[12]

Poole sought to move KBIF closer to Fresno and secured approval to have the community of license changed accordingly, even as Poole's Fresno TV station, KBID, lasted just five months after failing to secure a network affiliation.[13] The move was completed in December 1954, when KBIF's new transmitter at North and Fowler avenues was activated and the station relocated its studios to the Hotel Californian.[14] [15]

Poole divested a majority stake in KBIF in 1957 to David Harris and Ethan Bernstein, two employees of Fresno station KMJ;[16] Bernstein then bought out Harris two years later.[17]

Norwood Patterson ownership

Bernstein and Poole sold KBIF in 1961 to Norwood Patterson, who owned San Francisco's KSAN radio.[18] The sale reunited KBIF with a planned television station, as Patterson held a construction permit for KICU-TV, a new television station to be licensed to Visalia. Once the sale closed in February 1962, it also brought a change in programming to religious fare.[19] The new manager was Norwood's brother-in-law Richard Bott, who months later moved to Kansas City and started what became the Bott Radio Network.[20]

In later years, Norwood's son, Norwood "Jim" Patterson, Jr., became KBIF's manager.[21] However, his father committed a crime that would ultimately lead to a change in control. Beginning in 1965, Patterson withheld taxes from his employees without depositing the money into a trust, as required by law; according to the indictment, he owed the federal government $141,000 in taxes and penalties,[22] He was convicted on 16 charges the next year[23] and, after two attempted appeals, served a 10-month jail sentence beginning in 1973.[24]

Cascade and Overgaard

As a result of the jail sentence and financial woes, KBIF was placed into receivership in 1973. The transfer caused Jim Patterson to lose his job at KBIF; in 1975, he would buy KIRV and relaunch it as a Christian station, later becoming a two-term mayor of Fresno and member of the California State Assembly.[25]

Cascade Broadcasting Corporation acquired KBIF in 1975, two years after the receivership began. Cascade, based in Portland, also owned a Christian station in New Orleans and a Spanish-language station in San Jose; in 1986, KBIF began broadcasting after sunset for the first time.[26] Programs for specific ethnic groups became more prevalent on the Christian station's schedule. The first Punjabi shows began airing in 1987; in the early 1990s, programs in Hmong began on KBIF, serving a community that had grown to 56,000 people by 2001.[27] The station developed an eclectic lineup of brokered religious and ethnic talk programs.[28]

In 1997, Cascade sold KBIF to Gore-Overgaard Broadcasting.[29] The new owners continued and expanded the ethnic formats, with all weekend hours given over to Punjabi output in 2003.

In July 2024, Overgaard Broadcasting sold KBIF to Punjabi American Media for $130,000. Hatjot Khalsa and Balwinder Kaur Khalsa acquired the station’s tower site for $500,000.[30]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: KBIF Facility Record . United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division .
  2. News: Central Valley Radio Station Stands In As A Cultural 'Town Hall' For Local Hmong And Punjabi-Speaking Communities. Capital Public Radio. August 1, 2019. Julia. Mitric. July 9, 2021.
  3. News: Sanger Radio Station Begun. July 8, 2021. May 15, 1947. 3. Reedley Exponent.
  4. News: Sanger Radio Now on the Air. Reedley Exponent. 5. October 2, 1947. July 8, 2021.
  5. News: Fenston Buys Radio KSGN. July 8, 2021. November 16, 1950. 12-A. The Fresno Bee.
  6. News: KSGN to Be KSJV Sunday. March 22, 1951. July 8, 2021. Reedley Exponent. 8.
  7. News: Hanford Paper, Radio Station Are Sold To Fresnan. July 8, 2021. 1. June 30, 1952. The Fresno Bee.
  8. News: Father, Son Split Ownership In Radio Stations. July 8, 2021. September 26, 1952. 2-B. The Fresno Bee.
  9. News: New Sentinel Owner Sells Sanger Station. July 8, 2021. November 19, 1952. 1. The Hanford Sentinel.
  10. News: Sanger Station Changes Letters. July 8, 2021. 8. Visalia Times-Delta. April 2, 1953.
  11. News: Radio Station Moves Offices From Centerville. 26-D. The Fresno Bee. April 5, 1953. July 8, 2021.
  12. News: Five Firms Lease New Premises. July 8, 2021. 36-D. March 14, 1954. The Fresno Bee.
  13. News: KBID Suspends TV Broadcasts, Radio Continues. July 8, 2021. July 15, 1953. 1-A. The Fresno Bee.
  14. News: Radio KBIF Will Move Studios. July 8, 2021. November 17, 1954. 14-B. The Fresno Bee.
  15. News: KBIF Station Moves To Fresno. July 8, 2021. December 30, 1954. The Fresno Bee. 6-B.
  16. News: Pair Pays $40,800 For Interest In KBIF. July 8, 2021. 2-A. March 3, 1957. The Fresno Bee.
  17. News: Ethan Bernstein Buys Control Of Radio KBIF. July 8, 2021. April 28, 1959. 2-A. The Fresno Bee.
  18. News: Radio KBIF Sale To Bay Man Is Announced. July 9, 2021. October 6, 1961. The Fresno Bee. 1-C.
  19. News: KBIF Is Sold; Will Switch Program Format. 32-F. The Fresno Bee. February 11, 1962. July 9, 2021.
  20. Partney Dascher . Patricia . April 2007 . Dick and Sherley Bott – The Humble Beginnings of Bott Radio Network . Soul . en-US . July 9, 2021.
  21. News: Radio Station Owner Faces US Tax Charges. July 9, 2021. December 12, 1969. The Fresno Bee. 1-C.
  22. News: Radio Station Owner Awaits Tax Sentencing. July 9, 2021. The Fresno Bee. 2-D. October 20, 1970.
  23. News: Patterson Is Found Guilty In Tax Case. July 9, 2021. The Fresno Bee. UPI. B10. August 28, 1971.
  24. News: KBIF Owner Will Begin Tax Term. July 9, 2021. April 3, 1973. D4. The Fresno Bee.
  25. News: A1, A12, A13, A14. The Fresno Bee. January 5, 1997. July 9, 2021. Jim Patterson: I Am the Mayor: Leader of city's new era faces challenges, doubts. Doug. Hoagland. Anne. Dudley Ellis.
  26. News: Valley airwaves alive as listeners tune into Jesus. A10, A11. May 3, 1986. The Fresno Bee. Doug. Hoagland. July 8, 2021.
  27. News: A niche and a need. July 9, 2021. Nzong. Xiong. The Fresno Bee. E1, E2. March 13, 2001.
  28. News: Lots of talk. E1, E4. July 9, 2021. February 20, 2001. Rick. Bentley. The Fresno Bee.
  29. News: Proposed Station Transfers. July 9, 2021. M Street Journal. 6. October 8, 1997.
  30. Web site: STATION SALES WEEK OF 7/12 . Radio Insight . 16 July 2024 . July 12, 2024.