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| City | Fort Pierce, Florida |
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| History | |
First air date | May 9, 1990 (35 years ago) (1990-05-09) |
Former call signs | WTCE (1990–2005) |
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Call sign meaning | Treasure Coast Educational Television |
| Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
| Facility ID | 29715 |
| ERP | 730kW |
| HAAT | 297 m (974 ft) |
| Transmitter coordinates | 27°1′32″N80°10′41.9″W / 27.02556°N 80.178306°W /27.02556; -80.178306 |
| Links | |
Public license information | |
WTCE-TV (channel 21) is areligious television station licensed toFort Pierce, Florida, United States, serving theWest Palm Beach area. It isowned and operated by theTrinity Broadcasting Network through itsCommunity Educational Television subsidiary, which manages stations in Florida andTexas on channels allocated fornon-commercial educational broadcasting. WTCE-TV broadcasts from a transmitter in unincorporated southeasternMartin County (southwest ofHobe Sound).
While it has broadcast TBN programming for its entire history since signing on in May 1990, WTCE was not originally intended to be a Christian television station. The construction permit was obtained in 1986 by a group which sought to start apublic television station for Fort Pierce. Unable to raise federal grant money to build the station, it sold the permit to an affiliate ofPalm Beach Atlantic College (PBAC) at the end of 1987. PBAC intended to build WTCE as the first in a series of new non-commercial stations across South Florida. However, despite coming weeks away from launch and announcing programming, a financial crunch left PBAC without the cash to begin broadcasting. TBN had provided the equipment used to start the station, so PBAC sold the station to TBN despite an earlier agreement with the owner of Miami public TV stationWPBT.
Even though channel 21 in Fort Pierce was allocated for use by a non-commercial educational television station, the only user of the channel by 1985 was a translator forWTOG inSt. Petersburg, which began broadcasting the commercial independent station toSt. Lucie County and the northern part ofMartin County in May 1983.[2] This changed in 1985, when Florida Educational Television applied for channel 21. It proposed to providePBS service to an area that mostly needed cable to watch public television stations.[3] A construction permit was issued by theFederal Communications Commission (FCC) in January 1986,[4] Florida Educational Television estimated that it would need $2 million, primarily from a federal grant, to build its proposed WFET by 1988.[5] Meanwhile, the WTOG-TV translator was shut down by the station at the end of October 1986 to make way for the new educational channel and because its programming duplicated other independent stations available in the Fort Pierce area.[6] Florida Educational Television also held the construction permit forWETV, channel 13 inKey West, and applied for channel 29 inOcala.[7]
Florida Educational Television was never able to pursue the federal grant money it needed to build WFET. In December 1987, Palmetto Broadcasters Associated for Communities, Inc., purchased the construction permit for $76,500. It won an extension of the construction permit.[8] However, it was not until October 1989 that Palmetto—an affiliate ofPalm Beach Atlantic College, a private Christian institution in West Palm Beach—revealed its ambitious and extensive television plans. In addition to WETV, it proposed funding and operating three stations through Palmetto Broadcasters:WPPB inBoca Raton, with programming for senior citizens; WKEB "Hispanavision", to broadcast fromIslamorada with bilingual programming; and a renamed channel 21 with new WTCE call letters.[9] Channel 21 promised to fill a void in the Fort Pierce area; two months prior, commercial stationWTVX had discontinued its local newscasts after it lost itsCBS affiliation, leaving the Treasure Coast without local TV news coverage.[10] However, existing public TV broadcasters in South Florida met Palmetto's announcement with a chilly reception. The Florida state administrator for public broadcasting noted that 99 percent of Floridians already received PBS programming, and in order to receive state funds, WTCE would have to show its signal did not duplicate an existing station. Other officials connected withWXEL-TV inBoynton Beach andWPBT inMiami, both PBS members, also expressed skepticism over the need for additional public stations and Palmetto's ability to finance their high startup costs.[11]
The station was intended to start on December 1, but this was pushed back to January 7, 1990; it planned to broadcast from facilities inPort St. Lucie, and proposed programs included educational shows and local features on business and agriculture.[12] As December 1989 drew to a close, Palmetto pushed the start of WTCE back further to February 4, 1990. It also announced a slate of 14 local programs it hoped to introduce covering education, local business, exercise, and other topics.[13]
Palmetto, however, failed to gather the financial resources necessary to start the mostly-completed television station. In mid-January 1990, Palmetto laid off the five-person staff of WTCE indefinitely. While freeze damage to the transmitter was cited officially as the reason for the delay, newspaper reporting pointed to financial causes, and the acting station manager noted that the layoff announcement did not sound temporary.[14] TheCorporation for Public Broadcasting had no records of Palmetto filing for grant monies. At that time, discussions with WPBT's parent, the Community Television Foundation of South Florida, were ongoing.[14] That month, the Community Television Foundation filed for a federal grant to fund the purchase of WTCE, telling theNational Telecommunications and Information Administration that it had concluded an agreement to acquire channel 21. This met with opposition from WXEL-TV, which in mid-March intimated that it could challenge any deal filed at the FCC. For WXEL-TV, the combination of WPBT and WTCE would have placed the eight-year-old public station between two signals from its largest competitor for viewers and members.[15]
However, Palmetto blindsided the Community Television Foundation in late March when it told the public broadcaster that it had concluded a sale agreement with an affiliate of theTrinity Broadcasting Network (TBN), discarding a sheet of terms that the foundation and Palmetto had signed in January. It emerged that, unbeknownst to Community Television Foundation, TBN owned much of the equipment that was being used to build WTCE.[16][17] Because of this, in order to settle the debt with TBN, Palmetto was forced to sell the station to the religious broadcaster.[18] WETV had gone on air the previous year airing TBN programming.[19] The failure to launch the station was attributed by one of its former employees to an inability to secure a sound business plan.[17]
WTCE began broadcasting in May 1990 with three hours of programming a day from TBN.[18] Within a week, an application was filed to sell the station to Jacksonville Educational Broadcasters, of which TBN founderPaul Crouch was president, for $630,000, with Palmetto retaining airtime in the morning to broadcast programs of local interest.[20] The sale also included an attempt to sell WETV to Jacksonville Educational Broadcasters. However, WETV was forced off the air and the sale turned down by the FCC because an act of Congress had forced the designation of channel 13 at Key West for use to transmitTV Martí to Cuba.[21]
In 1995, WTCE moved into the studios formerly occupied by WTVX when that station's operations were merged withABC affiliateWPBF at its studios inPalm Beach Gardens.[22] After the 2019 repeal of the main studio rule, requiring full-service TV stations like WTCE-TV to maintain facilities in or near their communities of license, TBN closed 27 studio facilities and put them for sale. TBN presidentMatt Crouch estimated that the move would save the network $20 million a year.[23]
As with other CET stations, WTCE carries almost all of the TBN network schedule (though with program promos andpublic service announcements replacing commercial advertising aired on its national feed and commercially-licensed stations[citation needed]). In addition to programming from TBN, the station airs educational programming to prepare local students for theGeneral Educational Development (GED) test to fulfill the requirements under their license service.
The station's signal ismultiplexed:
| Channel | Res. | Aspect | Short name | Programming |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 21.1 | 720p | 16:9 | TBN HD | TBN |
| 21.2 | inspire | TBN Inspire | ||
| 21.3 | 480i | Enlace | TBN Enlace USA |
TBN-owned full-power stations permanently ceased analog transmissions on April 16, 2009.