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WCBE

Coordinates: 39°57′48″N 83°00′17″W / 39.9634°N 83.0046°W / 39.9634; -83.0046
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WCBE
Broadcast area[1]
Frequency90.5 (MHz)
Branding90.5 WCBE
Programming
FormatNPR, Public Radio
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
September 26, 1956 (As WCBE)
Call sign meaning
W-Columbus Board of Education
Technical information
ClassB
ERP12,000 watts
HAAT300 meters
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websitewww.wcbe.org

WCBE (90.5 FM) is a public radio station in Columbus, Ohio that began broadcasting in 1956.[1] The WCBE call sign represents the station's licensee, the Columbus Board of Education (Columbus City Schools).

The station was originally housed in the Columbus Normal School building, but moved to the Columbus Public Schools headquarters at 270 E. State Street in downtown Columbus, and then relocated to the historic Fort Hayes educational campus in 1992.[2][3] The station's tower is located on top of LeVeque Tower in downtown Columbus and is simulcast on 13 watt FM translator W292EA at 106.3 MHz in Newark, Ohio.[4]

LeVeque Tower, Columbus, Ohio

Early years

The station went on-air in 1956 under the direction of General Manager John Sittig.[5] Initially, the station carried only locally produced education programs designed to connect remote learners to classrooms and only with limited broadcast hours. In 1968, station management was approached by the Good Music Advisory Society to expand broadcast hours, launch classical music programming, and increase station power from 3000 to 10,000 watts.[6] WCBE was the first station in Columbus to affiliate with National Public Radio and began carrying NPR programs with their first broadcast on May 3, 1971 with All Things Considered. Of note, Michael Feinstein, archivist and vocal interpreter of the Great American Songbook, interned at WCBE while he was a high school student in Columbus Public Schools in the mid-70s.[7]

Your True Alternative

WOSU-FM broadcast an exclusive classical music service, and in 1990, to avoid duplication in the market, especially on the FM band, WCBE, now led by General Manager and longtime staffer Sharon Miller, switched musical formats to music classified as adult album alternative (AAA or Triple-A), rebranding the station as "Your True Alternative." Program Directors David Gordon and Norm Beeker managed the on-air programming during this period of unprecedented growth, revamping weekend programming, moving to a 24-hour broadcast with the BBC World Service and launching new local music and news programs.[6] Programming received several awards during this era, including the eclectic music program Radio Free Columbus, hosted by Jon Peterson, honored as the 1993 Ohio Educational Broadcasting Program of the Year (OEBie Award), and Kids Sundae, a live children's variety show co-hosted by Dan Mushalko, recipient of the 1994 OEBie Program of the Year. Kids Sundae featured live performances, and had children serve as reporters, producers, and co-hosts, one of whom was WCMH news anchor Kerry Charles.[8][9][10]

In addition, Evening Journal, a half-hour daily local news broadcast, was honored as the 1992, 1993, and 1994 Best News Program by the Public Radio News Directors (PRNDI).[6] The station also syndicated Toss the Feathers Christmas, an annual Celtic music Christmas program, hosted by Doug Dickson, between 1994 and 2004 across the globe through Public Radio International (PRI).[11][12]

Financial scandal and aftermath

The major public radio programs had also historically been broadcast on the WOSU-AM (820 AM) signal, but a series of changes in 2010 allowed Ohio State University to move the classical broadcast to WOSA (101.1 FM), their AM news service to the WOSU-FM (89.7 FM) signal, and WWLG (102.5 FM) became the new home for the former CD101 alternative rock station in a financial deal worth 4.8 million.[13] Ohio State would then sell the 820 AM station to St. Gabriel Radio in a $2 million transaction. That station now broadcasts as WSVG.[14]

This competition created financial pressures for WCBE and General Manager Dan Mushalko was let go in 2019 having been convicted of telecommunications fraud for altering invoices to hide station debt from Columbus City Schools leadership.[15][16] Ohio State University and WOSU hired former Columbus Mayor Michael B. Coleman to negotiate with a private group called WCBE Ohio to take over station operations, but did not negotiate with the district.[17] The district paid off station debt with public funds and electeed to retain the license.[18]

In October 2022, acknowledging the financial pressures on the station, General Manager Greg Moebius announced programming changes, including elimination of programs duplicated by WOSU-FM, dropping programs such as Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Fresh Air, and Marketplace. The station would instead focus on a near exclusive AAA music format and increasing involvement by Columbus City Schools students, modeling the format on WAPS (FM) in Akron, Ohio.[19][20]

Current programs

1994 WCBE Promotional CD

Global Village, a daily music program, has been on-air since 1990, with only three hosts in that history, having been started by Bill Munger, hosted for many years by Maxx Faulkner, and now hosted by Maggie Brennan, who began as a college intern at the station.[21] WCBE broadcasts national music programs including The World Cafe, Afropop Worldwide, and Echoes as well as several locally produced specialty music programs.[22] The station carries the BBC World Service overnight and, since 1980, WCBE has carried Ohio news from the Statehouse News Bureau, now led by Bureau Chief and former WCBE News Director Karen Kasler.[23]

With the move to the Fort Hayes studios in 1992, the station began a series of live in-studio concerts, Live from Studio A, and recordings have been featured on promotional tapes and CDs.[24] It's Movie Time is a regular feature on WCBE, hosted by John DeSando, and has won awards from the Los Angeles Press Club (2010, best radio feature), the Hermes Award (2010, Gold Award), and the Marcom Awards (2010, Gold Award).[25]

References

  1. ^ History Cards for WCBE, fcc.gov. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
  2. ^ "A History of Columbus Schools: 1812-1912". TEACHING COLUMBUS.
  3. ^ "History and Haunts of Fort Hayes | Columbus City Adventures". Columbus City Adventures.
  4. ^ "W292EA-FM 106.3 MHz - Newark, OH". radio-locator.com. Retrieved August 13, 2023.
  5. ^ Adams, Mike (October 12, 2016). Columbus Radio. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781467124409 – via Google Books.
  6. ^ a b c Productions, Grey Lodge (July 16, 2012). "This is WCBE FINAL" – via Vimeo.
  7. ^ Adams, Mike (October 12, 2016). Columbus Radio. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781467124409 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Gordon, Ken. "WCMH-TV anchor and Linden native Kerry Charles determined to tell stories, be a role model". The Columbus Dispatch.
  9. ^ "Log in or sign up to view". www.facebook.com.
  10. ^ "Clipped from the Newark Advocate". The Newark Advocate. September 30, 1993. p. 3.
  11. ^ "Doug Dickson, host of WCBE's Toss the Feathers, dead at 54". September 19, 2007.
  12. ^ "Radio host promoted Celtic tunes".
  13. ^ "WOSU stations in deal with WWCD | The Columbus Dispatch". Archived from the original on December 23, 2010.
  14. ^ "Sale of AM820 is Bittersweet | WOSU Public Media". Retrieved August 13, 2023.
  15. ^ Futty, John. "Former manager of WCBE radio gets probation for altering invoices". The Columbus Dispatch.
  16. ^ "WCBE FM Columbus Determination Letter" (PDF). cpb.org. August 31, 2020. Retrieved August 13, 2023.
  17. ^ "Ex-mayor Michael Coleman involved in proposal to have WOSU take over WCBE, documents show".
  18. ^ "Will Columbus City Schools sell NPR station WCBE? It's still unclear, 2 1/2 years after financial scandal".
  19. ^ "Columbus City Schools launches new WCBE format with fewer NPR shows and more local music". The Columbus Dispatch.
  20. ^ "A Note from the General Manager". WCBE 90.5 FM.
  21. ^ "Community support spins both ways for NPR station".
  22. ^ "WCBE 90.5 FM | Central Ohio's NPR Station - Innovative, Provocative, Real". www.wcbe.org.
  23. ^ "About".
  24. ^ "Coming Live To Studio A". www.wcbe.org.
  25. ^ "It's Movie Time".

39°57′48″N 83°00′17″W / 39.9634°N 83.0046°W / 39.9634; -83.0046