WVVI-FM

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WVVI-FM
City of license Christiansted, U. S. Virgin Islands
Branding Caribbean Country
Slogan "Today's Country and Yesterday's Favorites"
Frequency 93.5 FM (MHz)
First air date July 19, 1988
Format Country
ERP 9600 Watts
HAAT 246 meters (808 feet)
Class B1
Facility ID 62114
Transmitter coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Former callsigns WAVI (1988-1999)
WYAC (1999-2003)
WYAC-FM (2003-2008)
Owner Philip E. Kuhlman and Ellen N. Kuhlman, Joint Tenants
(RWave, Inc.)
Webcast Listen Live
Website http://www.wvvifm.com/

WVVI-FM (93.5 FM) is a radio station licensed to serve Christiansted, U. S. Virgin Islands. The station is owned by Philip E. Kuhlman and Ellen N. Kuhlman as joint tenants. The station is operated by Rain Broadcasting under a leasing agreement. WVVI-FM recently switched to a country format. Previously, the station aired an adult contemporary/talk radio format.

History

File:WYAC-FM logo.jpg
The station's former logo as WYAC.

The Federal Communications Commission assigned WAVI as the call letters for this station on July 19, 1988. There were switched to WYAC on February 15, 1999 which they remained until WYAC signed on from San Juan, Puerto Rico, forcing a modification. The station operated under the WYAC-FM call letters from October 24, 2003 to October 13, 2008, when it changed to the current WVVI-FM.[1]

Ownership

In June 2004, Philip E. and Ellen N. Kuhlman acquired WYAC-FM from El Morro Broadcasting Inc. (Luis A. Mejia, president) for a reported sale price of $300,000.[2]

In January 2007, Rain Broadcasting Inc. (Roger Morgan, president) announced it was buying WYAC-FM from Philip E. and Ellen N. Kuhlman for $375,000.[3]

In December 2007, the FCC dismissed a bid by a coalition of Virgin Islands senators and citizens to deny the transfer of the WYAC-FM broadcasting license from its current owners, Philip and Ellen Kuhlman, to the station's lessee, Roger W. Morgan. The station has been leased by Morgan's company, Rain Broadcasting, Inc., for almost four years. However, the FCC ruled that the Kuhlmans had failed to properly monitor the management of the station under Morgan's lease. Under a consent decree, the Kuhlmans agreed to pay $15,000 and Morgan agreed to pay $8,000 to the US government.[4]

References

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  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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http://www.wvvifm.com/

External links


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