| |
|---|---|
| Branding | Alabama Public Radio |
| Programming | |
| Format | Public radio |
| Affiliations | APM,NPR,PRX |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | University of Alabama |
| Technical information | |
| Repeaters |
|
| Links | |
| Website | apr.org |
Alabama Public Radio (APR) is a network ofpublic radio stations based inTuscaloosa, Alabama, United States, that serves roughly the western half of the state ofAlabama withclassical music,folk music, and nostalgic music programs, as well as news and feature programs from theNational Public Radio (NPR),Public Radio International (PRI), andAmerican Public Media (APM) networks. The network is operated by theUniversity of Alabama, with studios in Tuscaloosa.
Since the station is licensed to a university with a broadcasting curriculum, students in the UACollege of Communication and Information Sciences get opportunities for practical training in announcing and other varied production duties. Nonetheless, APR maintains a small professional staff, as well as several volunteer announcers from the larger community. The Alabama Public Radio newsroom has recently won over 182 awards for journalism excellence, one-third of which are at the national and international levels. This includes RTDNA's national Edward R. Murrow award for Overall Excellence. The APR news team also works extensively with journalism students at the University of Alabama. Newsroom student interns typically put in 750 hours of work, which results in 142 minutes of Alabama-centric news, heard by many Alabama residents. This provides students with valuable real-life experience and material for their resumes to seek employment, mainly in commercial media.
The University of Alabama established WUAL-FM in January 1982 as the state's fifth public radio station. It emphasized service to the immediate western Alabama area in its first several years, since most of the region had no other access to NPR programming. However, UA soon realized the potential for expansion into other parts of the state without NPR service. SinceBirmingham,Huntsville, southeastern Alabama, andMobile already had existing stations, WUAL and UA officials focused on developing relay transmitters to send WUAL's signal into northwestern and south-central Alabama. Thus, WQPR, originally a joint project with theUniversity of North Alabama inFlorence, appeared in the late 1980s. It was followed in the early 1990s by WAPR, which is a joint venture ofAlabama State University,Troy University (both of which already owned NPR stations of their own in the Montgomery area) and UA.
In September 2007, WQPR received a grant from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to assist in its conversion from analog to digital broadcasting.[1]
In 2011, due to the desire of licenseeSpring Hill College to exit public broadcasting, Spring Hill's NPR member station, WHIL-FM in Mobile, joined APR, effective July 1. That station had been affected, like many throughout the country, by declining listener contributions, which influenced the College to sell the 32-year-old outlet.
APR's studios have been housed in various locations on campus. They were first located on Bryce Lawn Drive and moved to Phifer Hall around 1990. In February 2014 they moved to the University's Digital Media Center, a facility located insideBryant–Denny Stadium that houses commercial TV stationWVUA-CD; the Center for Public Television and Radio (APR's parent organization that produces some regular programs forAlabama Public Television); and Crimson Tide Productions, which is devoted to producing shows featuring UA athletics for commercial broadcast.[2]
Four stations currently comprise the network:
| Call sign | Frequency | City of license | FID | ERP (W) | HAAT | Class | Transmitter coordinates | FCC info | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WHIL | 91.3 FM | Mobile, Alabama | 61999 | 100,000 | 325 m (1,066 ft) | C | 30°41′20″N87°49′49″W / 30.68889°N 87.83028°W /30.68889; -87.83028 | LMS | Serves southern Alabama and theGulf Coast |
| WQPR | 88.7 FM | Muscle Shoals, Alabama | 65441 | 20,000 | 130.8 m (429 ft) | C2 | 34°34′41.3″N87°47′2.1″W / 34.578139°N 87.783917°W /34.578139; -87.783917 | LMS | Serves northwestern Alabama toDecatur |
| WAPR | 88.3 FM | Selma, Alabama | 6125 | 53,000 | 427 m (1,401 ft) | C | 32°8′30.5″N86°44′42.9″W / 32.141806°N 86.745250°W /32.141806; -86.745250 | LMS | Serves theBlack Belt andMontgomery |
| WUAL-FM[a] | 91.5 FM | Tuscaloosa, Alabama | 69168 | 100,000 | 158 m (518 ft) | C1 | 33°5′40″N87°24′47″W / 33.09444°N 87.41306°W /33.09444; -87.41306 | LMS | ServesBirmingham to theMississippi state line |
WLJS-FM (91.9 FM), the student-operated station ofJacksonville State University which broadcasts to eastern central Alabama, simulcasts the first hour of classical music on APR each weekday. No other affiliations, either in personnel or in programming, exist between the two entities.
In addition to the full-power stations, Alabama Public Radio relays its signal via a low-powered translator to widen its broadcast area. The translator station was transferred to Edgewater Broadcasting, Inc under the authority of Summit Media and is a translator of WENN-AM 1320, with an effective radiated power of 35 W at a height above ground level of 846 feet. Also, the WQPR signal has a translator (W264AI) that covers theHuntsville-Decatur market on 100.7 FM. The area also has two other public stations,WLRH andWJAB.
| Call sign | Frequency | City of license | FID | ERP (W) | HAAT | Class | Transmitter coordinates | FCC info | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| W261BX | 100.1 FM | Birmingham, Alabama | 150818 | 35 | 341.64 m (1,121 ft) | D | 33°29′2.4″N86°48′21.0″W / 33.484000°N 86.805833°W /33.484000; -86.805833 | LMS | RelaysWENN |
| W264AI | 100.7 FM | Maysville, Alabama | 76191 | 10 | 302.68 m (993 ft) | D | 34°44′15.3″N86°32′1.9″W / 34.737583°N 86.533861°W /34.737583; -86.533861 | LMS | WQPR |
Unlike many NPR-affiliated stations in recent times, APR has always featured a heavy schedule of locally hosted programs, many of which are unique in featuring special genres of music. Among them are the following: