City: | Lafayette, Louisiana |
KRVS | |
Area: | Lafayette-Acadiana combined statistical area, Lake Charles metropolitan area |
Branding: | Radio Acadie |
Format: | Public radio/Cajun/Zydeco |
Subchannels: | HD2: Top-40/College Radio "KampusFM" HD3: Public radio; all news/talk |
Owner: | University of Louisiana at Lafayette |
Callsign Meaning: | Radio Voice of Southwestern, in reference to former name of owner, University of Southwestern Louisiana |
Licensing Authority: | FCC |
Facility Id: | 66595 |
Class: | C0 |
Erp: | 100,000 watts |
Haat: | 379m (1,243feet) |
Coordinates: | 30.3222°N -92.3778°W |
Webcast: | (HD2) |
Website: | (HD2) |
KRVS (88.7 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a public radio format. Licensed to Lafayette, Louisiana, United States, it is currently owned by the University of Louisiana at Lafayette and features programming from American Public Media, NPR and Public Radio International.[1]
Programming covers various types of music of Louisiana such as Cajun music, zydeco, blues, jazz, swamp pop, swamp rock and other Louisiana singer/songwriter music. KRVS also broadcasts the annual Festival International de Louisiane. The station also carries news and music programming in Louisiana French.[2]
The station began broadcasting in May 1963 and was officially licensed on August 8, 1963, to operate a power of 10 watts and a coverage area of about six city blocks.[3] The station initially operated on FM at with an AM carrier current simulcast on .[4] In 1979, the station increased its FM transmission power to 3 kilowatts and shifted to .[5] In November 1982, the station again increased its transmission power to 100 kW[6] and switched to its current frequency of .[7]
KRVS's call letters stand for Radio Voice of Southwestern (The university's name at the time the station signed on was the University of Southwestern Louisiana).[8] [9] Originally a college radio station, it joined NPR in the mid-1970s.
Today the station serves roles as regional public radio and an international online resource. KRVS broadcasts at 100,000 watts, providing service to 651,000 residents in 12 parishes across southern Louisiana, an area referred to as Acadiana. KRVS programs are also available on the Internet.
thumb|left|Earlier version of KRVS logo used from 2005 to 2012.
KRVS operated a translator at 90.5 FM K213AZ in Lake Charles that was licensed on February 6, 1989.[10] It was shut down on May 22, 2001 after American Family Radio opened a full-power station, KYLC, at nearby 90.3 FM.[11] [12] [13] FCC rules allow a full-power station to force any adjacent translators to shut down. In 2003, KRVS moved its transmitter 30 miles to the west to extend its signal to Lake Charles.[14]