KUHA

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KUHA
File:NGENradio logo.jpg
City of license Houston, Texas
Broadcast area Houston–The Woodlands–Sugar Land
Branding Houston Public Media Classical
Slogan Listener-funded radio from the University of Houston
Frequency 91.7 MHz
Translator(s) 91.3 MHz
First air date July 30, 1971 (license, as KTRU)
May 16, 2011 (as Classical 91.7)
June 2016 (as NGEN Radio)
Format Classical music
Language(s) English
ERP 50,000 watts
HAAT 150 meters (490 ft)
Class C2
Facility ID 72685
Transmitter coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Callsign meaning K University of Houston Arts
Former callsigns KTRU (1971–2011)
KUHA (2011–2016)
Owner University of Houston System
(Sale Pending to the KSBJ Educational Foundation)
Sister stations KUHF, KUHT-TV
Website houstonpublicmedia.org
The Melcher Center for Public Broadcasting serves as headquarters for KUHA

KUHA (branded as Houston Public Media Classical) is a non commercial radio station serving the Houston–The Woodlands–Sugar Land metropolitan area. It broadcasts on a frequency of 91.7 Megahertz on the FM dial. The station is owned by and licensed to the University of Houston System, and is operated by Houston Public Media. KUHA shares broadcast facilities with KUHF and KUHT at the Melcher Center for Public Broadcasting, located on the campus of the University of Houston.

History

The station first signed on in 1971 as KTRU, operated by Rice University. Studios were located in Sid Richardson College on the Rice campus. Initially broadcasting at 10 watts, the students engineered an increase to 340 watts in April 1974 and 650 watts in October 1980. The broadcast day also increased from the initial evening-only hours to 10 to 12 hours a day on weekdays and most of the weekend. In 1981, the station expanded its broadcast hours to 24 hours per day. In 1987, a major expansion of the student center was completed and the station's studios were relocated to the 2nd floor of the Ley Student Center.[1]

In 1991, the station's transmitter was moved to the north of Houston, increased in power to 50,000 watts and presented with an operating endowment by Mike Stude, the owner of Houston-area radio station KRTS (now KROI) and an heir of the founders of Brown & Root. This move enabled KRTS to increase from 3,000 watts to 50,000 watts without interfering with the station's signal.

On August 17, 2010, the University of Houston System announced its intent to purchase KTRU's tower, frequency and license from Rice. KUHF's 88.7 FM frequency would be converted to an all-news format (KUHF News) and the 91.7 frequency would contain classical music and fine arts programming (91.7 FM Classical), with the proposed call letters KUHA[2] (originally announced as KUHC, but those call letters were already in use).[3] The FCC approved the purchase and transfer of license to the University of Houston System on April 15, 2011,[4] and KUHA began broadcasting May 16, 2011. The student-run KTRU programming was transferred to the HD2 subchannel of local Pacifica Radio member station KPFT, and continues to this day under the name Rice Radio.

On November 7, 2013, KUHA fired almost all of its on-air talent,[5] and replaced nearly all of its locally produced programming with Public Radio International's Classical 24, a nationally syndicated program produced in Minnesota.

On August 20, 2015, the University of Houston System announced its intention to sell KUHA due to a lack of funding for the station, after which the classical music format will be jettisoned to KUHF's HD2 subchannel and online streaming only. The sale was approved by the UH System Board of Regents. On February 24, 2016, it was announced that the station was being sold for $10 million to the KSBJ Educational Foundation who will flip it to its NGEN Radio format upon taking control. With the impending sale, KUHA dropped all references to the 91.7 frequency in May and rebranded itself as Houston Public Media Classical, running advertisements for the digital streams of the format to redirect listeners.

On May 20, 2016, the license reassignment for KUHA was granted by the Federal Communications Commission. NGEN programming is set to launch on KUHA in early June. As the University of Houston did not grant KSBJ rights to the KUHA calls in the sale, the call letters will be changed upon the consummation of the sale.

Programming

In November 2013, KUHA fired almost all of its on-air talent,[6] and replaced nearly all of its locally produced programming with Public Radio International's Classical 24, for example its Music Through the Night overnight programming. It also broadcasts other nationally distributed programs commonly heard on classical music stations, such as From the Top, Performance Today and Pipedreams (which features organ music).

KUHA is the flagship radio home of the Houston Symphony; its broadcasts are heard on Wednesday evenings when in season.

Translator

Included in the purchase of KTRU was a broadcast translator that improved reception in the area near the campus of Rice University. The translator has been relocated off-campus after the sale and moved to an adjacent frequency. This translator has been included in the sale to KSBJ.

Call sign Frequency
(MHz)
City of license ERP
W
Class FCC info
K217GB 91.3 Houston, Texas 99 D FCC

References

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External links