West Virginia Public Broadcasting Explained

Callsign:West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Digital:see and
Owner:West Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority
Location:Statewide West Virginia
Country:United States
Former Affiliations:NET (1969–1970)

West Virginia Public Broadcasting (WVPB) is the public television and radio state network serving the U.S. state of West Virginia. It is owned by the West Virginia Public Broadcasting Authority, an agency of the state government that holds the licenses for all Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and National Public Radio (NPR) member stations licensed in West Virginia. It is headquartered in Charleston with studios in Morgantown and Beckley.

On January 1, 2015, West Virginia PBS and West Virginia Public Radio merged their brands, branding exclusively as "West Virginia Public Broadcasting" across radio and television.[1]

Television

The first public television station in West Virginia signed on July 14, 1969 under the callsign WMUL-TV, broadcasting from Marshall University in Huntington. In 1981, WMUL-TV changed its call letters to WPBY-TV;[2] two years later, the public station at West Virginia University in Morgantown, WWVU-TV, was renamed WNPB-TV.[3] WPBY-TV and WNPB-TV received their new call letters to underline that the operations were managed by the state educational broadcasting authority, and not the university system. In 1992, the state completed a microwave link that permitted it to convert WNPB and the state's third PBS station, WSWP-TV in Grandview to become repeaters of WPBY-TV in Huntington and form a state network. On January 5, 2015, WPBY-TV changed its call letters to WVPB-TV[2] as part of an effort to unify all of West Virginia Public Broadcasting's services under a single brand; the television network had previously been branded as "West Virginia PBS", a name that was phased out starting on January 1, 2015.[4]

The state network has a total of five low-powered repeaters serving other areas out of the range of the three full-powered stations, most notably Wheeling and Parkersburg. Three directly repeat WNPB, one repeats WVPB and one repeats WSWP.

In the past the network showed some Marshall University and West Virginia University sports content, but has abandoned this practice due to Conference USA/Big 12 exclusivity agreements with commercial and cable outlets.

The current local content consists of a daily recap of the state legislative session, shows produced by the West Virginia University medical school, and student produced news from campus weekly products from Marshall University and West Virginia State University. It also broadcasts original documentaries on West Virginia history and culture, as well as live musical performances of Mountain Stage and the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame.

The combined footprint of WVPB's television network covers almost all of West Virginia, as well as portions of Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Virginia. It is carried on the basic tier of all cable systems in West Virginia.

TV stations

StationCity of license
Channels
(RF/VC)
First air dateCall letters' meaningFormer callsignsERPHAATFacility IDTransmitter coordinatesPublic license information
Huntington
9 (VHF)
33
West Virginia Public Broadcasting


23 kW358.10NaN07165738.4948°N -82.2007°W
Grandview
8 (VHF)
9
Southern West Virginia Public Television8.8 kW (STA)
29.9 kW (CP)
280.10NaN0 (STA)
292.60NaN0 (CP)
7168037.8962°N -80.989°W
Morgantown
34 (UHF)
24
(Northern) West Virginia Public Broadcasting
660 kW448.10NaN07167639.6958°N -79.7622°W

Notes:

Translators

City of licenseCallsignTranslatingChannelERPHAATFacility IDTransmitter coordinatesOwner
WSWP-TV 9 28 10.1 kW 1850NaN0 181586 38.7286°N -80.6634°WWest Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority
WNPB-TV 24 16[5] 15 kW 24.40NaN0 167356 39.3823°N -79.079°W
27 0.3 kW 2710NaN0 167357 39.4601°N -78.0622°W
22 0.095 kW 9950NaN0 127707 38.9826°N -78.9083°W Valley TV Cooperative, Inc.
WVPB-TV 33 34 15 kW 1290NaN0 167359 39.2467°N -81.4169°W West Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority
WNPB-TV 24 21 2600NaN0 167358 39.3097°N -78.7168°W
17 1390NaN0 167354 40.0615°N -80.752°W

On June 1, 2016, West Virginia Public Broadcasting announced a plan to shut down five of its translators — W07DN-D, W08EE-D, W09CT-D, W30CO-D, and W41AO — due to state budget cuts and changes in viewing habits.[6] All five translators were originally planned to be taken silent for a year in order to determine a long-term plan. Operations on W08EE-D (Martinsburg) and W30CO-D (Wheeling) resumed on August 10, 2016, while the licenses for W07DN-D (Wardensville), W09CT-D (Mathias), and W41AO (Hampshire) were surrendered to the FCC for cancellation on May 26, 2017.

Digital television

Subchannels

All digital signals are multiplexed:

Channel! scope = "col" rowspan="2"
Res.AspectShort nameProgramming
scope = row 33.1 9.1 24.1WVPB-D1 WSWP-D1 WNPB-D1 PBS
scope = row 33.2 9.2 24.2 WVPB-D2 WSWP-D2 WNPB-D2 West Virginia Channel (6 p.m.–midnight)
World (midnight–6 p.m.)
scope = row 33.3 9.3 24.3WVPB-D3 WSWP-D3 WNPB-D3 PBS Kids[7]

Analog-to-digital conversion

West Virginia Public Broadcasting's TV stations shut down their analog signals on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital channel allocations post-transition are as follows:[8]

Radio

WVPB's state radio network includes eleven full-powered stations and seven low-powered translators, all on the FM band. The state network carries programs from NPR, PRI and other distributors, as well as classical and folk music. WVPB produces original weekly programs, including EclecTopia, A Change of Tune, Inside Appalachia and Sidetracks, plus the nationally distributed Mountain Stage. The network was known as "West Virginia Public Radio" until WVPB's 2015 transition to a single brand.[4]

FM stations

Call signdata-sort-type="number" FrequencyCity of licensedata-sort-type="number" Facility IDClassdata-sort-type="number" ERP
(W)
data-sort-type="number" Height
(m (ft))
Transmitter coordinates
WVBY 91.7 FM B 10,400 280m (920feet)
WVBL 88.5 FMB 50,000 31.50NaN0
WVPW 88.9 FM B 14,000 259m (850feet)
WVPB 88.5 FM B 44,000 134.20NaN0
WVWV 89.9 FM B 8,100 3550NaN0
WVEP 88.9 FM B 3,600 4730NaN0
WVKM 106.7 FM C3 4,300 2290NaN0
WVPM 90.9 FM B 5,000 4390NaN0
WVPG 90.3 FM B1 9,000 980NaN0
WVDS 89.5 FM B 10,000 321.90NaN0
89.7 FM A 950 -30NaN0
WVWS 89.3 FM A 850 2650NaN0
WVNP 89.9 FM B 25,000 1520NaN0

Notes:

Translators

In addition to five low-powered, separate-frequency translators, two low-powered boosters also extend coverage. Boosters are licensed on the same frequency as the parent station but at a different location. They are given the same callsign as the parent station with a number added to differentiate the transmitter site.

Call signdata-sort-type="number" Frequency
(MHz)
City of licensedata-sort-type="number" Facility IDClassdata-sort-type="number" ERP
(W)
data-sort-type="number" Height
(m (ft))
Rebroadcasts
WVEP-FM1 88.9 D 210 63m (207feet) WVEP (via booster)
W297AA 107.3 D 95 146.4m (480.3feet) WVPW
W203AE 88.5 D 10 364m (1,194feet) WVPW
W220BK 91.9 D 10 214m (702feet) WVBY
W218AT 91.5 D 17 387m (1,270feet) WVBY
WVNP-FM1 89.9 D 41 176m (577feet) WVNP (via booster)
W217CH 91.7 D 10 256m (840feet) WVPB

Website and online services

West Virginia Public Broadcasting maintains a website with West Virginia news and free access to original video and audio productions. It also provides its videos through its YouTube page.

WVPB also operates a free website with educational videos and games for teachers, parents and students called West Virginia LearningMedia, part of PBS LearningMedia.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: The Montgomery Herald. Montgomery, West Virginia. Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.. West Virginia Public Broadcasting merges brands. January 7, 2015. January 7, 2015.
  2. Web site: Call Sign History (WVPB-TV). CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. January 7, 2015.
  3. Web site: Call Sign History (WNPB-TV). CDBS Public Access. Federal Communications Commission. January 7, 2015.
  4. News: West Virginia Public Broadcasting merges brands. January 7, 2015. Montgomery Herald. January 7, 2015.
  5. Web site: Request to Extend a LPTV Translator Engineering STA Application .
  6. Web site: Educational Broadcasting Authority Approves Translator Plan. Finn. Scott. June 1, 2016. West Virginia Public Broadcasting. February 26, 2020.
  7. Web site: Kabler. Phil. December 7, 2016. WV public broadcasting to add PBS Kids. Charleston Gazette-Mail. December 15, 2016.
  8. Web site: DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds . 2012-03-24.
  9. http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101232988&formid=387&fac_num=71657 CDBS Print
  10. http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101256758&formid=387&fac_num=71680 CDBS Print
  11. http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/forms/prod/cdbsmenu.hts?context=25&appn=101256763&formid=387&fac_num=71676 CDBS Print