City | Spokane, Washington |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Inland Empire |
Branding | Spokane Public Radio |
Frequency | 91.1 MHz (also on HD Radio) |
Translator(s) | See § Translators |
Repeater(s) | See § Repeaters |
First air date | January 20, 1980 (originally experimental c. 1971-1980) |
Format | NPR/classical music/jazz |
ERP | 56,000 watts |
HAAT | 725 meters (2,379 ft) |
Class | C |
Facility ID | 61942 |
Transmitter coordinates | 47°34′13″N 117°05′0″W / 47.57028°N 117.08333°W |
Callsign meaning | PuBlic Broadcasting |
Affiliations | NPR |
Owner | Spokane Public Radio, Inc. |
Sister stations | KSFC, KPBZ |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | kpbx.org |
KPBX-FM is a public radio station serving Spokane, Washington. It broadcasts at 91.1 MHz with an ERP of 56,000 watts and is one of three stations operated by Spokane Public Radio. KSFC and KPBZ are the others.
Through seven full-power repeaters and six translators, it reaches 70,000 listeners in eastern Washington, northeastern Oregon, northern Idaho, western Montana and southern British Columbia.
The station traces its history to a ten-watt transmitter erected in the early 1970s in the home of George Cole in the South Hill neighborhood of Spokane. It broadcast various kinds of music eight hours a day from 5 p.m. to 1 a.m.. In 1974, David Schoengold, a record store owner and law school student, took over the station from Cole and expanded its broadcast schedule to 24 hours a day. It became very popular, with people waiting at all hours of the day to go on the air. It also gained the attention of National Public Radio, which sent tapes of All Things Considered. The nearest NPR station in the area was KWSU in Pullman, which was all but unlistenable in most of the city despite being only an hour south.
Schoengold wanted a better station for the area, so he formed the Spokane Public Broadcasting Association to raise funding for a full-power public radio station. The 10-watt transmitter went off the air at the suggestion of one of Schoengold's friends in order to make it easier to raise the money. After several years of fundraising and several delays in the on-air date, KPBX finally went on the air on January 20, 1980. The station had to postpone its first pledge drive because it was scheduled for May 18, the date Mount St. Helens erupted, and Pacific Northwest Bell requested that phone lines be used for emergencies only.