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Thu, Dec 13 2007 
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Globe/Roger Nomer Warren McDonald works on the air Wednesday afternoon at radio station KBTN in Neosho. The ice storm in the area has hit some radio stations hard.

Published December 12, 2007 10:35 pm - Chris Freund, news director for Community Radio Group, said anyone who believes that a frequency switch is a publicity stunt should visit a twisted pile of metal in Columbus, Kan.

Community Radio to switch frequencies, rebuild tower



By Joe Hadsall

jhadsall@joplinglobe.com

Chris Freund, news director for Community Radio Group, said anyone who believes that a frequency switch is a publicity stunt should visit a twisted pile of metal in Columbus, Kan.

A 312-foot radio tower, which broadcast active-rock station KJML on 105.3 FM, collapsed Wednesday. Station officials believe the weight of ice accumulation caused two of the tower’s three legs to break.

“We wish it was just a stunt,” Freund said. “The tower basically broke in half.”

KJML is now broadcast on 107.1 FM and replaces KMOQ, a current-hit/top-40 station. Freund said KJML performed better in the most recent Arbitron ratings period.

KMOQ will be broadcast on 105.3 FM once the tower is replaced.

Several other stations remained off the air Wednesday because of power outages. Freund said KCAR 104.3 FM remained off the air.

Ron Petersen said both of his stations, KMXL-FM and KDMO-AM, have been off the air since 4 p.m. Sunday — the longest outage he has experienced in 44 years, he said.

The tower that sends the signal for KMXL at 95.1 FM is in Carthage and powered by Empire District Electric Co. Petersen said he doesn’t understand why radio stations and other media are not afforded priority regarding restoration of power.

“Obviously, emergency services, hospitals, police, those should be A-priority,” Petersen said. “But media should be in the B’s, in my mind. We are the mouthpiece for those services and can talk to the mass.”

Many disaster-preparedness kits recommend keeping a radio and batteries handy.

Petersen said power for his tower is critical, because KMXL is designated as the local primary-one station for the Emergency Alert System. A primary-one station is responsible for broadcasting alerts to all other stations.

When a flash-flood warning was issued Tuesday for Newton County, his station was unable to inform other stations about the danger. KBTN-FM is the backup station in the event that KMXL cannot broadcast.

Warren McDonald, operations manager for Community Radio Group, said KBTN-FM and the company’s other stations have been on and off sporadically. They have been working to pass along information related to the storm.



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