KRPU explained

KRPU
City:Rocklin, California
Area:Sacramento, California
Branding:Prime Asia Radio
Frequency:1210 kHz
Airdate:April 22, 1988
Format:South Asian (Indian and Pakistani)
Power:5,000 watts day
500 watts night
Class:B
Facility Id:20930
Coordinates: (day)
(night)
Former Callsigns:KFRP (1986–1988)
KEBR (1988–2015)
Owner:Ranjit Singh Bajwa and Sarabjit Kaur Kahiya
Licensee:DABAJ, LLC [1]
Licensing Authority:FCC

KRPU 1210 AM is a South Asian station, focused on the local Indian and Pakistani communities, calling itself "Radio Punjab". Its city of license is Rocklin, California and serves the Sacramento market. Its transmitters are located in Roseville, California (nighttime) and near Rancho Murieta (daytime).[2] The station went on the air on April 22, 1988.

The station was formerly an owned-and-operated affiliate of the non-commercial Christian radio network, Family Radio, airing religious music and bible talks from radio evangelist Harold Camping. From late 1991 to May 2003, Family Radio simulcast its programming on both 1210 AM and on KEBR-FM at 89.3 MHz in North Highlands, California, but this FM station was sold to KQED and became KQEI-FM as an NPR news and talk station. Family Radio's current FM outlet in Sacramento is KEBR 88.1 FM.

An application for consent to assign KEBR's license from Family Stations, Inc. to Spice Radio, Inc. was accepted for filing by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission on April 13, 2015. The asset purchase agreement dated March 31, 2015 states that the purchase price is $600,000.[3] The transaction was consummated on September 4, 2015.

It has separate transmitter sites for day and night operation.

The station changed its call sign to the current KRPU on September 18, 2015.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Punjab Shift Puts a Sacramento-area AM in New Ownership | Radio & Television Business Report. 22 August 2019.
  2. News: AM Query Results . . June 14, 2017 . June 14, 2017.
  3. News: Asset Purchase Agreement . . March 31, 2015 . June 14, 2017.