Radio station in Herkimer, New York
43°1′58.00″N 75°0′31.00″W / 43.0327778°N 75.0086111°W / 43.0327778; -75.0086111Links |
---|
Public license information | |
---|
Webcast | Listen live |
---|
Website | www.herkimer.edu/campus-life/wvhc-radio/ |
WVHC (91.5 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a variety format. Licensed to Herkimer, New York, United States, the station is owned by Herkimer County Community College and operated by the college's Radio/TV Department.[2]
WVHC was established in 1973 under the name of WHCR as a public address system, only providing a signal to the Robert McLaughlin College Center building. In 1986, WHCR began simulcasting on the college's television station HCTV, a public-access cable TV channel airing on Group W Cable (now Charter Spectrum), the authorized cable provider for Herkimer County. The station applied for an FCC license in the early 1990s. Since the WHCR call letters were already taken by WHCR-FM in New York City, the station applied for the call letters WVHC. The application was granted in February 1993, and WVHC began operations that October.[3]
Initially, programming was presented during class hours (7am-10pm), but in 1999 WVHC began full-time 24-hour operations. The station is best known for its jazz and blues programming, the only non-commercial station broadcasting such programming in the Mohawk Valley. It also airs a mix of student-produced programs during the fall and spring semesters. Student-produced programs are usually heard in the early afternoon, with further programs broadcast on Fridays.
References
- ^ "Facility Technical Data for WVHC". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
- ^ "WVHC Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division.
- ^ "WVHC - CNYRadio.com Station Wiki". cnyradio.com. Archived from the original on April 7, 2014.
External links
- Official website
- WVHC in the FCC FM station database
- WVHC in Nielsen Audio's FM station database
By AM frequency | - 950
- 1230
- 1310
- 1350
- 1420
- 1450
- 1480
- 1550
|
---|
By FM frequency | |
---|
Digital radio by frequency & subchannel | |
---|
By call sign | |
---|
Defunct | |
---|
|
|
---|
- WAIH (State University of New York College at Potsdam)
- WALF (Alfred University)
- WARY (Westchester Community College)
- WBNY (Buffalo State College)
- WBSU (College at Brockport)
- WCDB (State University of New York at Albany)
- WCEB (Corning Community College)
- WCVF (Fredonia State University)
- WCWP (Long Island University, CW Post Campus)
- WDWN (Cayuga County Community College)
- WECW (Elmira College)
- WERW (Syracuse University)
- WETD (Alfred State College)
- WFNP (SUNY New Paltz)
- WFTU (Five Towns College)
- WFUV (Fordham University)
- WGFR (SUNY Adirondack)
- WGSU (SUNY Geneseo)
- WHCL (Hamilton College)
- WHCR (City College of New York)
- WHPC (Nassau Community College)
- WHRW (Binghamton University)
- WICB (Ithaca College)
- WITC (Cazenovia College)
- WITR (Rochester Institute of Technology)
- WJPZ (Syracuse University)
- WKCR (Columbia University)
- WKRB (Kingsborough Community College)
- WNYK (Nyack College)
- WNYO (State University of New York – Oswego)
- WNYU (New York University)
- WONY (SUNY College at Oneonta)
- WPNR (Utica College of Syracuse University)
- WQKE (Plattsburgh State University)
- WRCU (Colgate University)
- WRHO (Hartwick College)
- WRHU (Hofstra University)
- WRPI (Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute)
- WRUC (Union College)
- WRUR (University of Rochester)
- WSBU (St. Bonaventure University)
- WSIA (College of Staten Island)
- WSPN (Skidmore College)
- WSUC (State University of New York – Cortland)
- WTSC (Clarkson University)
- WUSB (State University of New York – Stony Brook)
- WVCR (Siena College)
- WVHC (Herkiner County Community College)
- WVKR (Vassar College)
- WXBC (Bard College)
- WXLJ (St. Lawrence University)
|
- See also
- adult contemporary
- classic hits
- college
- country
- news/talk
- NPR
- oldies
- religious
- rock
- sports
- top 40
- urban
- other radio stations in New York
|
| This article about a radio station in New York is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |