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Feds move to shut pirate radio station

Earlier this month, federal agents seized the equipment used by an unlicensed Mattapan radio station whose signal brought complaints from a licensed broadcaster - and Logan Airport.

The US Attorney's Office in Boston reports FCC agents executed a warrant against Datz Hits Radio which broadcast on 99.7 FM from Outlook Road in Mattapan. In a statement, US Attorney Carmen Ortiz said:

It is easy to take for granted the variety and quality of sound we enjoy in local radio stations. Underlying this is the licensing authority of the FCC, which ultimately ensures that legitimate stations can operate without interference from pirate stations.

Recent years have seen the rise of a number of pirate stations in the Boston area serving African-American and Haitian communities.

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Comments

Nice job broadcasting on a first adjacent to WCRB, you morons.

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I don't really care if pirate radio happens, because I know that small local voices can't get licenses, but the ones that are close enough to legit stations to interfere with them PISS ME OFF. I enjoy 99.5 now that they've been bought out and don't play the Tchaikovsky Piano Concerto and Handel's Water Music on an endless loop, and it drives me crazy that I can't listen to it in half of the city.

Bye bye, pirates!

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Let's see if this helps reception for WCRB in Boston. We'll know soon enough. Anyone out there notice a difference?

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This would not be a problem if the FCC reserved spectrum for the little guy / small community rather then raking in billions of dollars from the commercial radio companies like Clearchanel.

I feel so much better that my tax dollars are used to take out community radio while lining the pockets of large national companies.

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They do have that. It's on the FM band between 88.1 and 91.9.

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Is it easier for those stations to get a license? Most of them are connected to colleges and things, and I assumed they still paid up the ass to get permission to broadcast...

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if you're in that range, you just have to deal with NPR lining the FCC pockets

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Most smaller wattage non-commercial stations are grandfathered from the days when the FCC was more willing to dole out licenses to lower wattage stations. Later on, probably as a result of the FCC's revolving door and lobbying, they thought it more efficient use of spectrum to grant fewer licenses to larger wattage stations, commercial or not. And then there's the use of translators to help stations reach holes in their transmissions (for example, when a station lists it has more than one frequency during a break..)

A few things to note:

3rd adjacency rules are outdated. Modern transmitters and tuners can be made better, (some already are) stations can be closer. This would open up more frequencies in crowded markets.

The new LPFM licenses pretty much leave out urban centers, where these stations can actually be effective because there's a concentrated enough population.

Online broadcasting doesn't necessarily make it easy for small groups and small companies, either. The expense of licensing to broadcast ASCAP/BMI/etc music is too high, the rules too..difficult. I suppose it's fine for unlicensed music, but it's hard to break through the clutter and still hard to get into people's vehicles. But more widespread adoption of the internet does make it easier, through blogging and podcasting, to have a voice. However, radio is more entrenched in some cultures than others, and the media habits of a target audience have to be considered.

Lastly, if they were interfering with airport communications, that's bad. However, it's often used as an excuse and rarely the case. There are licensed stations that cause interference.

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I wish they would do just that and let local stations that don't travel far anyway share frequencies. But with things the way they are, this station interferes with 99.5, so shut it down already. 99.5 is following the rules and trying to run a legit station.

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won't ever happen. Why?

Because radio stations depend on demographics/broadcast area to sell ad spots. The FCC knows this.

For example, let's say radio station "WHUB" on 99.1 FM broadcasts at 3000watts from the top of Prospect Hill in Somerville. WHUB says "we reach 100% of Somerville in our broadcast area". So lets say... Diesel wants to advertise. Diesel pays for the spot knowing it will reach all of Somerville.

Well lets say a un-licensed 'pirate' station broadcasts on 99.1 FM at 100w (very low power) from a dorm room at Tufts. Now the two frequencies are conflicting, so depending on how close you are to the pirate radio station, the less likely you will get WHUB since the frequencies are jammed (conflicting).

What happens is, the advertisers get mad, and the radio station gets mad because now its lost half its broadcast area due to this pirate station.

The FCC tries to regulate this knowing that x station @ 1000watts on this frequency from this location can reach this many square miles from its transmitter. They try not to overlap the stations as little as possible.

Regions are setup by the FCC as different classes (Boston is a Class A region, while Providence and Manchester are Class B). This is also why you almost never see any overlap in TV station numbers (NTSC stations). Hense why the channel numbers 2,4, 5, and 7 are only used in Boston, and the next city that gets those is NYC (as WCBS (2), WNBC (4), WFOX (5), and WABC (7). And why Channel 3 is WSFB in Hartford, CT, and Channel 3 is WCAX in burlington.)

I think I've waay over explained the point, but yea I agree, it sucks I can't have a low powered station and am reduced to the low end of the dial (which has a far lower transmission range than the higher end (99.1-107.9)

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740 AM (now WJIB). The call letters supposedly stood for Watertown Cambridge Arlington Somerville -- the only communities where their puny 250-watt signal was sure to reach. And yes, they did have local commercials for Somerville and Cambridge restaurants.

Back when they were WCAS, they had to sign off at sunset -- which meant 4:15 pm in the middle of winter. This was to protect a Canadian station that shared the frequency. Now as WJIB they can stay on the air ... but only transmitting 5 watts ! Although WJIB has a commercial license, the owner prefers not to run any ads, and instead raises money from his listeners.

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That guy (Bob?) gets a lot for his money if he's only cranking five watts.

I used to listen to that station driving around town in my old fm-antenna-wasn't-working car. Outside of RedSox broadcasts, WJIB and the Dominican station were my salvation when I got sick of WBZ

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They transmit 250 watts during the day, but only 5 watts at night. I can barely receive it in Davis Square at night, even though I could walk to their transmitter site in about a half hour.

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Surprisingly erratic reception in our home in Watertown. We can pick it up just fine in one room, but not at all in another just 20 feet away. And it's not the receiver, as we've moved a radio from room to room and lost it completely. No other reception problems in the room where we can't get it, either. Other stations come in fine, sometimes even distant ones. Just odd, even at 5 watts.

Suldog
http://jimsuldog.blogspot.com

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"It is easy to take for granted the variety and quality of sound we enjoy in local radio stations."

I haven't tuned in for a while, but last time I checked, most stations were still smack in the middle of a 9-year rock block of The Eagles. Has that changed?

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It doesn't care to listen to the consumers, it only wants to listen to a handful of egotistical consultants feeding it bad information. It's not just the iPod, radio has a strong hand in its own death.

I gave up on commercial radio in the early 1990's for anything other than a traffic update or quick news summary. For anything musically relevant these days, one has to listen to college radio, and even that isn't what it was ten years ago, maybe because young people coming up don't have any experience of what good radio was like.

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Did anybody else cringe reading that statement from Mr. Ortiz? Ick, only a bureacrat could come up with something as hard to read as that.

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I wonder if they paid royalties to the artists whose music they played... I'd guess they didn't.

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It was noted pirate Hot 97 (actually at 87.7) has been off air a couple days. May be a good reason: a post on radio-info.com from someone who heard the FCC raided them and took away transmitter and
antenna. Again, unconfirmed, but this could be why. On the facebook page for hot 97, people were wondering why they couldn't hear them anymore.

I guess they're still online but not on terrestrial radio. (They're
called Hot 97 harkening back to the old WBOT-FM 97.7 which was hip hop, etc. till Entercom took it over and made it a simulcast of WAAF. Allegedly a pirate was to start up at 97.1, which would have been WAY too close to WTKK at 96.9...they went just under the
standard FM dial to 87.7 though)

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