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Texas Public Radio

Texas Public Radio
Texas Public Radio
IndustryMass media
GenrePublic radio
Headquarters,
United States Edit this on Wikidata
Revenue6,350,039 United States dollar (2022) Edit this on Wikidata
Total assets12,996,965 United States dollar (2022) Edit this on Wikidata
Websitetpr.org

Texas Public Radio (TPR) is a public radio broadcaster based in San Antonio, Texas, United States, providing NPR and other public radio programming to south-central and west Texas, including San Antonio, the Texas Hill Country, and the Big Spring area. In San Antonio, TPR broadcasts two program services: classical music on KPAC (88.3 FM) and talk and information on KSTX (89.1 FM); most of the other stations air KSTX's lineup. TPR is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and listener support. Its studios are located in the Irma & Emilio Nicolas Media Center in downtown San Antonio.

KPAC began broadcasting November 7, 1982, as a non-commercial, all-classical music station under the aegis of the Classical Broadcasting Society of San Antonio. Its founder, arts patron Wilford Stapp, sought to fill the void created when classical music slowly disappeared from San Antonio commercial station KMFM. Meanwhile, attempts to bring a public radio station to San Antonio dated to the early 1970s. The construction permit for what became KSTX was issued in 1979, but construction was stymied by internal issues and difficulty receiving public support. Ultimately, the permitholders and KPAC agreed to merge, enabling KSTX to begin broadcasting NPR to San Antonio in 1988. The other stations in the TPR network were built or acquired between 1997 and 2017.

History

KPAC: Filling the classical void

Beginning in 1964, KMFM 96.1, founded by oilman Harry Pennington, had served as a commercial classical music station in the San Antonio area. After Pennington's death in 1975, his widow sold the station, which began to change to a more commercially lucrative format.[1][2] Sensing that the sale would lead to the end of classical music on KMFM, supporters of classical music began planning for a new, non-commercial station to serve as its eventual replacement. In 1977, the Classical Broadcasting Society of San Antonio was chartered.[3] It took years to identify an available frequency for non-commercial use in San Antonio—90.9 MHz, at the time allocated to Seguin—and have the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and Mexican authorities agree to move it to San Antonio.[3]

From a transmitter atop a ten-story office building on Nine Mile Hill, KPAC began broadcasting on November 7, 1982. It got on the air with donated equipment—including a transmitter from KMFM and the station's collection of classical records[3]—and had 2,000 members by August 1983.[2] Nearly from its start, it operated at a surplus, unusual for a listener-supported radio stations.[4]

KSTX: NPR comes to San Antonio

Efforts to get a public radio station for San Antonio stretched as far back as 1974. On January 21 of that year, the San Antonio Community Radio Corporation, headed by Pleas J. McNeel,[5] filed an application with the FCC for a station on 89.1 MHz.[6] A competing application was received soon after from the Southwest Texas Public Broadcasting Council, the Austin-based owner of KLRN (channel 9).[7][8] Though that group withdrew its application three months later.[9] a competing applicant again arose in October 1975: Yanaguana Radio Station, headed by Carlos Garcia.[10] Though Yanaguana announced two months later it was joining forces with the San Antonio Community Radio bid,[11] a formal settlement agreement between the parties was not filed with the FCC until August 1978, and the construction permit was granted October 23, 1979.[6]

San Antonio Community Radio Corporation then won grants from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration and began the process of seeking a studio and transmitter site. A general manager was hired in May 1980 with the intention of starting operations by the end of 1981. A broadly defined "bilingual" format was selected[12] After the call sign KAZZ was denied by the FCC at the petition of FM station KZZY,[13] the station took the call sign KURU in January 1981.[6] It secured studio space in a building owned by the San Antonio Museum Association on Jones Avenue,[14]

The museum space deal, like virtually all the effort expended at this stage into putting KURU together, never went anywhere. The cobbled-together leadership had competing priorities for programming. Transmitter site negotiations failed; the heavy antenna needed for broadcasting a Class C, 100,000-watt signal limited options, and the Tower of the Americas was already full, forcing the station to contemplate building its own tower and finding a site in rapidly growing San Antonio.[15] KURU managed to secure receiver equipment and lost it to the museum association in a payment dispute.[4] In late 1983, the board ceased fundraising operations. Former board chair Frances Hill told the San Antonio Express-News that fundraising failed to occur "because the board got involved in personalities and other things instead of doing the job it was supposed to do".[16]

In March 1984, San Antonio Community Radio experienced turnover on its board as San Francisco–based Western Community Bilingual Inc. (WCB) obtained control, filling 11 of the board's 21 seats.[16] That September, the push to bring NPR to San Antonio was relaunched, with a new call sign, KSTX (for San Antonio, Texas[17]), and a new board chair: Mary Alice Cisneros, wife of San Antonio mayor Henry Cisneros.[18] As in the KURU era, the proposed KSTX would be a bilingual station.[17] This effort, too, stalled out amid a mix of technical and economic struggles. A San Antonio TV station objected to the proposed technical facility, a deal for tower space was scuttled by the sale of the station that owned the tower, and a deal the station had for space in a new San Antonio skyscraper fell apart when the building's owner went bankrupt. Funds that had been raised were diverted to paying for lawyers and engineers, all as a new round of grants and the construction permit were set to expire, and San Antonio remained the largest city in the nation without NPR.[4]

Texas Public Radio: Two stations for San Antonio

The complications that had emerged in putting KSTX on the air attracted the attention of leadership at KPAC. Henry Muñoz III, the incoming president of the KPAC governing board, had heard of the problems snarling the second station effort and made a merger proposal to KSTX's board. KPAC applied for and won a grant from the CPB, which they unexpectedly received. Heading off concerns about keeping KPAC a classical station, the organizations merged and, with FCC approval, were able to own two non-commercial stations in the same area. To manage the combined operation, KPAC and KSTX hired Joe Gwathmey, a Brownwood native who had spent 16 years working at NPR in Washington, D.C., but prior to that worked at KUT in Austin.[4][19] KSTX met a construction deadline and began broadcasting a test signal on July 29, 1988: it simulcast KPAC from midnight to 5 a.m. and then aired Morning Edition before going off the air again.[20] KSTX began full program service on October 3, 1988.[21] From the start, it was primarily a news and information station with weekend music programming.[22]

In 1991, Texas Public Radio obtained a construction permit for a new facility for KPAC, broadcasting with 100,000 watts instead of 3,000 at 88.3 MHz.[23] The new facility was activated on March 16, 1992.[24] The 90.9 facility was sold for $75,000 to the Bible Broadcasting Network[25] and became BBN station KYFS on April 8, 1992.[26]

Expansion beyond San Antonio

Some areas of the Hill Country could not get a clear signal from KSTX or any NPR news and information station. In 1997, Hill Country Friends of Texas Public Radio was formed to support the expansion of TPR to the area.[27] KTXI began broadcasting on October 8, 1998, airing a mix of NPR news from KSTX and classical music from KPAC. Its signal covers Fredericksburg, Kerrville, and other portions of the central Hill Country.[28] TPR made two other expansion attempts that failed to pan out. In 2009, a group in the Rio Grande Valley that would have partnered with TPR was unable to obtain a station to start broadcasting there.[29] Two years later, TPR's bid to buy KOCV-FM in Odessa from Odessa College was bypassed in favor of an offer from Marfa Public Radio.[30]

KTPR was launched on January 20, 2013, and in October 2013, KVHL began broadcasting to the Highland Lakes area of Texas. KTPD began broadcasting to Del Rio on May 5, 2016, and TPR began airing its programming on KCTI (1450 AM) in Gonzales on September 28, 2016. KTPR was upgraded in 2020 to increase coverage in the Permian Basin.[31]

Alameda Theater relocation

Joyce Slocum, a former NPR administrator, became the third leader in the history of Texas Public Radio in January 2014.[32]

In 2016, TPR became part of the restoration project for San Antonio's historic Alameda Theater, a one-time Mexican-American movie house and entertainment venue, by agreeing to build a new headquarters behind it.[33][34] The station had been headquartered in a building on Datapoint Drive.[33] The facilities were named for Emilio Nicolas, founder of KWEX-TV and what became Univision, and his wife Irma after Emilio's son Guillermo made a gift to TPR.[35] TPR made the move to the new site in February 2020.[36]

After a decade leading Texas Public Radio, Slocum died in March 2024 of complications from colon cancer.[37] Less than a month after the naming of her replacement, Ashley Alvarado, TPR employees announced their intention to unionize with SAG-AFTRA.[38]

Funding

In fiscal year 2022, TPR had total revenue of $6.011 million. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting provided a $467,000 Community Service Grant to the station. The organization had 10,224 members, who donated $2.067 million, and received $1.04 million in gifts and bequests from 261 major individual donors.[39]

Programming

News/talk

KSTX and other stations carrying the news-talk-information format run several national programs on weekdays, including Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Fresh Air, Here and Now, and Marketplace. TPR also co-produces and airs the regional program Texas Standard, originating in Austin alongside KUT in Austin, KERA in Dallas, and Houston Public Media.[40] TPR produces its own daily one-hour interview and call-in show, The Source, hosted by David Martin Davies. The BBC World Service runs overnight. On weekends, the station airs a range of specialty talk shows.[41]

KPAC airs classical music, primarily from American Public Media's Classical 24 service, as well as a local afternoon show, Classical Connection, and specialty programs.[42] KPAC has used Classical 24 since 2013, when it dismissed its five local weekday and weekend hosts to save money and bolster the more popular KSTX.[43]

Transmitters

Transmitters for TPR News
Call sign Frequency City of license FID Power
(W)
ERP
(W)
HAAT Class First air date Transmitter coordinates FCC info
KCTI 1450 AM Gonzales, TX 24564 1,000 C December 17, 1947 29°30′36″N 97°24′50.40″W / 29.51000°N 97.4140000°W / 29.51000; -97.4140000 (KCTI) Public file
LMS
KSTX 89.1 FM San Antonio, TX 65334 72,000 240 m (790 ft) C1 October 3, 1988 (1988-10-03) 29°31′25.8″N 98°43′26.1″W / 29.523833°N 98.723917°W / 29.523833; -98.723917 (KSTX) Public file
LMS
KTPD 89.3 FM Del Rio, TX 173346 25,000 83 m (272 ft) C3 May 5, 2016 (2016-05-05) 29°24′21.8″N 100°39′42.3″W / 29.406056°N 100.661750°W / 29.406056; -100.661750 (KTPD) Public file
LMS
KTPR 89.9 FM Stanton, TX 172898 100,000 200 m (660 ft) C1 December 3, 2012 (2012-12-03) 32°10′58.8″N 101°27′55.8″W / 32.183000°N 101.465500°W / 32.183000; -101.465500 (KTPR) Public file
LMS
KVHL 91.7 FM Llano, TX 173366 1,500 153 m (502 ft) A October 2013 (2013-10) 30°40′36.6″N 98°34′0.1″W / 30.676833°N 98.566694°W / 30.676833; -98.566694 (KVHL) Public file
LMS
Transmitter for TPR Music
Call sign Frequency City of license FID ERP
(W)
HAAT Class First air date Transmitter coordinates FCC info
KPAC 88.3 FM San Antonio, TX 65335 69,000 138 m (453 ft) C1 October 7, 1998 (1998-10-07) 29°31′25.8″N 98°43′26.1″W / 29.523833°N 98.723917°W / 29.523833; -98.723917 (KPAC) Public file
LMS
Transmitter for TPR News and Music
Call sign Frequency City of license FID ERP
(W)
HAAT Class First air date Transmitter coordinates FCC info
KTXI 90.1 FM Ingram, TX 77699 50,000 240 m (790 ft) C2 November 7, 1982 (1982-11-07) 30°6′14.8″N 99°4′37.1″W / 30.104111°N 99.076972°W / 30.104111; -99.076972 (KTXI) Public file
LMS
Map
  • Grade A signal contours for Texas Public Radio.
    •   Main TPR service (KCTI and K223CZ, KSTX, KTPD, KTPR, KVHL)
    •   TPR Music (KPAC)
    •   TPR News and Music (KTXI)

References

  1. ^ Greenberg, Mike (April 19, 1981). "A classical tale of radio in S.A." San Antonio Express-News. p. 1-M.
  2. ^ a b Rosenblum, Gail (August 14, 1983). "B.J. McClain: KPAC-FM manager adds touch of class to work". San Antonio Light. p. 8W.
  3. ^ a b c Presswood, Dani (January 12, 1983). "Art on the Air". San Antonio Light. pp. Magazine 12, 13, 14.
  4. ^ a b c d Silverman, Dwight (October 2, 1988). "San Antonio finally to tune in public radio". Houston Chronicle. p. 3E.
  5. ^ "Radio Support Event Planned". San Antonio Light. July 10, 1974. p. 19-A.
  6. ^ a b c "History Cards for KSTX". Federal Communications Commission.
  7. ^ "Educational FM Permit Requested". San Antonio Express. March 5, 1974. p. 16.
  8. ^ "For the Record". Broadcasting. March 18, 1974. p. 103. ProQuest 1014662363.
  9. ^ "For the Record". Broadcasting. June 10, 1974. p. 72. ProQuest 1014683729.
  10. ^ "For the Record". Broadcasting. October 13, 1975. p. 60. ProQuest 1014683729.
  11. ^ Trejo, Frank (December 12, 1975). "S.A. Will Have 'Public' Radio". San Antonio Light. p. 2-B.
  12. ^ Greenberg, Mike (August 17, 1980). "Putting what you want in your ear: At long last, public radio is coming, but the fine tuning needs a check". San Antonio Express-News. pp. 1B, 2B.
  13. ^ Stewart, Bob (October 2, 1980). "'New' Not the Key". San Antonio Light. p. 14-A.
  14. ^ Pappas, Leona (March 16, 1981). "S.A.'s public radio station finds home". San Antonio Express. p. 7-D.
  15. ^ Minutaglio, Bill (April 19, 1981). "Will radio go public?". San Antonio Express-News. pp. 1-M, 8-M.
  16. ^ a b Richelieu, David Anthony (March 25, 1984). "New wavelength for city's public radio". San Antonio Express-News. p. 4-N.
  17. ^ a b Schramm, Alissa (September 15, 1984). "Financial support, community backing are vital if S.A. will get National Public Radio". San Antonio Light. p. F6.
  18. ^ "First public radio station near". San Antonio Express. September 12, 1984. p. 7-H.
  19. ^ Garza, Oscar (March 1, 1988). "KPAC-FM names general manager". San Antonio Light. p. F6.
  20. ^ Valle, Isabel (July 30, 1988). "National Public Radio steps closer to reality". San Antonio Express-News. p. 2-G.
  21. ^ Greenberg, Mike (October 9, 1988). "The word is KSTXtasy". San Antonio Express-News. p. 1-H.
  22. ^ Garza, Oscar (October 2, 1988). "Local radio enters new era on Monday". San Antonio Light. p. K1.
  23. ^ Greenberg, Mike (November 26, 1991). "Classical station KPAC to expand into a powerhouse". San Antonio Express-News. p. 11A.
  24. ^ Greenberg, Mike (March 16, 1992). "Powerhouse pianists marks KPAC's rise to 100,000 watts". San Antonio Express-News. p. 14A.
  25. ^ "Transactions". Radio & Records. August 16, 1991. p. 8. ProQuest 1017241038.
  26. ^ Alexander, Wiley (June 7, 1992). "New gospel station, KYFS-FM, optimistic". San Antonio Express-News. p. TVnow 30.
  27. ^ "Public radio set to debut in Hill Country". Austin American-Statesman. Austin, Texas. June 20, 1998. p. B7. Retrieved December 30, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  28. ^ Jakle, Jeanne (October 9, 1998). "Hill Country gets new public radio station". San Antonio Express-News. p. 7G.
  29. ^ Clark, Steve (November 2, 2009). "Group loses bid for local station". The Monitor. McAllen, Texas. The Brownsville Herald. pp. 1B, 8B. Retrieved December 30, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  30. ^ Folsom, Geoff (February 23, 2011). "Marfa Public Radio wins KOCV bid: Smaller operator beats out broadcasters from San Antonio and". The Odessa American. Odessa, Texas. p. 6B. Retrieved December 30, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  31. ^ "About Us". Texas Public Radio.
  32. ^ Sefton, Dru (November 21, 2013). "Texas Public Radio selects NPR's Slocum to lead station". Current.
  33. ^ a b Biediger, Shari (January 6, 2019). "Univision Founder's Son Makes Major Gift for TPR's Alameda Headquarters". San Antonio Report. Retrieved December 30, 2024.
  34. ^ Kirkpatrick, Brian; Martinez, Norma (March 31, 2021). "Alameda Theater Renovations Delayed As Pandemic Chokes Fundraising Campaign". Texas Public Radio. Retrieved December 30, 2024.
  35. ^ Marini, Richard A. (October 12, 2019). "Emilio Nicolas is dead at 88; gave Spanish-language media a voice in San Antonio and the nation". San Antonio Express-News.
  36. ^ Biediger, Shari (March 30, 2021). "Alameda intermission: Conservancy pauses restoration project". San Antonio Report.
  37. ^ Falk, Tyler (March 4, 2024). "Joyce Slocum, CEO of Texas Public Radio, dies at 66". Current.
  38. ^ Falk, Tyler (November 12, 2024). "Texas Public Radio employees seek to unionize amid leadership transition". Current.
  39. ^ "Annual Financial Report (FY 2022)" (PDF). Texas Public Radio. 2022.
  40. ^ Falk, Tyler (January 27, 2015). "KUT preps ambitious newsmag 'Texas Standard'". Current.
  41. ^ "Weekly Schedule, KSTX 89.1 FM - San Antonio". Texas Public Radio.
  42. ^ "Weekly Schedule, KPAC 88.3 FM - San Antonio". Texas Public Radio.
  43. ^ Jakle, Jeanne (August 8, 2013). "Classical KPAC cuts S.A. announcers". San Antonio Express-News. Retrieved December 30, 2024.