Interlochen Public Radio Explained

Interlochen Public Radio
City:Interlochen, Michigan
Area:WIAA: Cadillac-Traverse City
WIAB: Mackinaw City-St. Ignace
Format:Public radio
Owner:Interlochen Center for the Arts

Interlochen Public Radio (IPR), established in 1963, is the National Public Radio member network for Northern Michigan. It broadcasts classical music and news on five stations in the northwestern Lower Peninsula. It is operated by the Interlochen Center for the Arts, with studios on the center's campus in Interlochen, Michigan; just outside Traverse City. It carries programming from NPR and Public Radio International.

At one point early in the 2000s, IPR led the nation in annual listener support.[1] This was all the more remarkable because it is the second-smallest NPR member in Michigan, and one of the smallest in the entire NPR system.

History

Joseph E. Maddy, founder of the National Music Camp (now the Interlochen Center for the Arts), had long wanted to bring a fine arts radio station to Northern Michigan. In 1963, WIAA signed on for the first time. Originally broadcasting eight hours per day, it grew enough within a decade to become a charter member of NPR. Interlochen Public Radio became a network in 1989 with the addition of WICV. Interlochen bought contemporary Christian station WDQV in 2005 and converted it into a third satellite for the eastern portion of the market, WIAB.

In 2000, Interlochen signed on WICA at 91.5, and by 2001 all NPR news and talk programming moved there from WIAA/WICV. However, WICA does not have nearly as large a footprint as WIAA. It must conform its signal to protect WHMW-FM in Mount Pleasant, also at 91.5. As a result, Cadillac, the second-largest city in IPR's service area, does not have a clear signal for NPR talk programming; WICA's signal in Cadillac is marginal at best. This is true even after the addition of two repeaters for WICA since the turn of the millennium.

In 2018, Interlochen sold WICV to Northern Christian Radio for $150,000, and the station adopted a contemporary Christian format as an affiliate of The Promise FM.[2] [3] [4]

Stations

Since 2000, IPR has operated a two-service network. "Classical IPR" (formerly known as "IPR Music Radio") provides classical music and hourly NPR news updates for three stations. News and talk programming from NPR and other sources is heard on three stations, branded as "IPR News Radio".

Frequency! City of license! data-sort-type="number"
ERP
W
data-sort-type="number" Height
m (ft)
ClassFCC info
88.7 FM 100,000 315m (1,033feet) C
88.5 FM 20,000 239m (784feet) C1
Frequency! City of license! data-sort-type="number"
ERP
W
data-sort-type="number" Height
m (ft)
ClassFCC info
WHBP 90.1 FM 8,500 254m (833feet) C2
91.5 FM 4,000 228m (748feet) C3
WLMN 89.7 FM 15,000 86m (282feet) C3

Sources

Notes and References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20030212131526/http://www.interlochen.org/ipr/ Archive of IPR Website
  2. Jacobson, Adam. "Interlochen Public Radio Sells A Stick", Radio & Television Business Report. January 10, 2018. Retrieved June 19, 2019.
  3. "Interlochen Sells Jordan Station", Michigan Association of Broadcasters. January 18, 2018. Retrieved June 19, 2019.
  4. "Michigan Noncommercial FM Sold", All Access Music Group. January 10, 2018. Retrieved June 19, 2019.