KSVY (Washington)
KSVY was a radio station operating at 1550 AM in Opportunity, Washington, serving Spokane. It operated from 1962 to 1996. HistoryKDNC went on air September 1, 1962.[1] The station broadcast during the day at 1440 kHz and was owned by the Independent Broadcasting Corporation, with transmitter at Havana and 44th in Spokane; it aired a "golden music" format.[2] After two years in operation, KDNC moved its studios to the Davenport Hotel.[3] KDNC also spawned KDNC-FM 93.7, which signed on September 30, 1965.[4] Alexander P. Hunter of Spokane acquired KDNC-AM-FM in 1967[5] and sold it two years later to Radford Sorensen, Wayne Wakefield and Edward Kelley for US$158,813 (equivalent to $1,319,503 in 2023).[6] KDNC became KXXR on April 15, 1974.[7] The AM station was playing country music in 1979,[8] beautiful music in 1980[9] and the Music of Your Life format in 1981.[10] The station also broadcast some sporting events; after initially agreeing to carry University of Idaho football for the 1983 season, it abruptly dropped the Vandals after one game to carry University of Notre Dame football instead.[11] KXXR changed frequency from 1440 to 1550 kHz in January 1984 as part of a major facility change that saw the city of license change from Spokane to Opportunity, as well as a daytime power increase to 10,000 watts and the beginning of nighttime service with 2,500 watts from a new tower site. The new tower site had been approved in 1981, even though local residents feared that the construction of a radio facility close to a school would cause issues with construction crews, as had happened with KGA at another school site.[12] Harold Orr, who had been the station's president in 1975,[4] acquired the station in 1983 after being a former creditor.[13] Orr, whose primary business ventures were 115 H&R Block tax offices in Oregon and Washington and a leasing company,[13] took the money-losing station off the air in October 1985[14]—after a six-month stint with pop music—but he retained the license.[15] When the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) told him he had to keep the station on the air 72 hours a week to keep the license active, he responded by bringing in former general manager Dick Wright to put together a team of young announcers to run the station 12 hours a day, 6 days a week, beginning in September 1987.[15] The new KSVY did not play commercials, clinging instead to a mix of big band music and oldies, all while remaining up for sale.[15] In 1990,[16] the format shifted to classical music, interrupted by sports broadcasts (including the return of Idaho football) which subsidized the remainder of the operation.[13] ClosureAt noon on July 18, 1996, vandals broke in and caused $32,000 (equivalent to about $62,000 in 2023) in damage to the station's equipment, an act that turned out to be the end of KSVY.[17] The station never resumed operations, though Orr paid for years to keep the tower beacons lit until the facility was finally dismantled in 2005.[13] The license was officially canceled by the FCC on April 14, 1999.[18] References
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