City | Arcata, California |
---|---|
Broadcast area | North Coast |
Slogan | "Diverse Public Radio" |
Frequency | 90.5 MHz |
Repeater(s) |
KHSR 91.9 MHz Crescent City KHSF 90.1 MHz Ferndale KHSG 89.9 MHz Garberville |
First air date | October 17, 1960 (originally carrier current 1947-1960) |
Format | Public radio |
ERP |
KHSU: 8,500 watts KHSR: 4,500 watts KHSF: 300 watts KHSG: 75 watts |
HAAT |
KHSU: 459 metres (1,506 feet) KHSR: −59 metres (−194 feet) KHSF: 538 metres (1,765 feet) KHSG: 779 metres (2,556 feet) |
Class |
KHSU: C1 KHSR: A KHSF: C3 KHSG: A |
Facility ID |
KHSU: 28111 KHSR: 28112 KHSF: 172798 KHSG: 172843 |
Transmitter coordinates | 40°43′37″N 123°58′22″W / 40.72694°N 123.97278°W |
Callsign meaning | K Humboldt State University |
Former callsigns | KHSC (1960-1972) |
Owner | Humboldt State University |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | khsu.org |
KHSU-FM (90.5 FM) is an NPR-member radio station, licensed to Arcata, California, United States. The station is currently owned by Humboldt State University.
KHSU provides the region encompassing Humboldt and Del Norte Counties in California as well as portions of Trinity and Mendocino Counties in California and Curry County in Oregon, with news information and entertainment from public radio producers like National Public Radio (NPR), Public Radio International (PRI) and American Public Media (APM).
The station began as a radio classroom experiment in 1941 on the campus of what was then Humboldt State College, with broadcasts airing on KIEM for two months until the attack on Pearl Harbor. The radio program resumed in full in 1947, when KHSC-AM signed on as a 10-watt carrier current station. In January 1960, Humboldt State applied for the first non-commercial radio license on a California college or university campus. The new station signed on for the first time on October 17, operating at 10 watts on 90.5 FM. It became KHSU in 1972, shortly after Humboldt State was elevated to university status.
The station remained almost exclusively a student training ground until 1982, when it boosted its power to 100 watts and moved to 91.5 FM. At that point, the station began a gradual process of professionalization, picking up an NPR membership in 1984. It returned to 90.5 in October 1984, this time with a greatly increased signal of 9,000 watts. In 1988, facing the prospect of waiting five years to qualify for grants from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, KHSU shuffled its budget in order to enable it to hire the five full-time employees it needed for CPB funding within only five months of applying.