City | Pacific Grove, California |
---|---|
Slogan | NPR for the Monterey Bay Area |
Frequency | 90.3 MHz |
Format | Public Radio |
ERP | 3,400 watts |
HAAT | 168 meters |
Class | B1 |
Facility ID | 43591 |
Transmitter coordinates | 36°33′09″N 121°47′17″W / 36.55250°N 121.78806°W |
Owner |
California State University, Monterey Bay (Foundation of California State University, Monterey Bay) |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | kazu.org |
KAZU (90.3 FM) is an NPR-member radio station, licensed in Pacific Grove, California, United States. The station is currently owned and operated by the California State University, Monterey Bay.
On April 5, 2017 CSUMB filed an application with the Federal Communications Commission to purchase the licenses of the K207CN (Santa Cruz), K217EK (Palo Colorado Canyon) and K237EV (Big Sur Valley) translators owned by KUSP. The purchase price is $5,000.
KAZU began broadcasting in August 1977 from an upstairs office in downtown Pacific Grove. The station was started in hopes of being a local community radio station, with a focus on the south Monterey Bay cities. The station operated with 10 watts, and had about 90 volunteers who ran the on-air operation; a small board of directors oversaw the fiscal and legal operations of the corporation that owned KAZU was called The Great Silence Broadcasting Foundation.
Because of the low power, the reach was limited, so the station signal was added to the Monterey cable system in 1978. The transmitter was relocated to Hidden Hills, east of Monterey in 1980, and coverage was expanded to reach the entire Monterey Bay area. Programming and volunteer participation expanded as well, and the station migrated to larger studios in the same building in the mid-1980s.
A fire at the studio in the late 1990s briefly put KAZU off the air. Temporary studios were quickly built and the station moved out of downtown Pacific Grove to Lighthouse Avenue in Pacific Grove. After a series of managers and program directors, the station struggled to survive high rents for the new studios and the old transmitter site. The locally produced music and talk programming remained popular with the community, but financial support did not grow sufficiently to cover the new expenses.
In the late 1990s, the fiscal situation worsened, and cuts to staff were made. A new manager was hired in 1998, and plans were made to change the station to an NPR/PRI affiliate and reduce volunteer programming.