*** Welcome to piglix ***

WBUZ (defunct)

WBUZ
City Fredonia
Broadcast area Western New York
Branding 1570 The Buzz
Slogan "The Sound of the Country"
Frequency 1570 (kHz)
First air date August 11, 1957
Last air date June 1, 1991
Format silent (was country music)
Power 250 watts (day)
143 watts (night)
Class D
Callsign meaning BUZz
Affiliations ABC/C
Owner Henry Serafin (dba Catocin Broadcasting)

WBUZ (1570 AM, "1570 The Buzz") is a now-defunct radio station that was based in Fredonia, New York. The station was privately owned by Henry Serafin.

The station signed on the air on August 1957 under the ownership of permittee Louis W. Skelly, who received the permit to build the station on August 27, 1956. Studios and offices were located at 15 East Main Street in Fredonia. The station operated at a daytime-only power of 250 watts.

Skelly, a native of Austintown, Ohio, sold the station to Dunkirk-Fredonia Broadcasting, Inc., which also owned the Dunkirk-Fredonia Observer newspaper. The transaction was finalized on January 1, 1959.

On April 4, 1963, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted permission to move the station to 2 West Main Street in Fredonia. The station would remain at this address until July 6, 1973, when a fire destroyed the building, prompting a temporary relocation to 60 West Main Street, and then 27 East Main Street after a permanent studio location could be obtained. Later in September of that same year, the station received pre-sunrise authorization to operate at 90 watts from 6am to local sunrise.

Catocin Broadcasting Corporation, a company owned by Washington D.C. communications attorney Lauren Colby and Henry Serafin, purchased the station on March 12, 1973. Five years later, Colby's interest in the company was acquired by Serafin, who became the sole stockholder.

WBUZ relocated its studios and offices in 1985 to 136 Clinton Avenue in Fredonia, where it would remain for its duration. By the end of the decade, the station received authorization to operate at night with a limited power of 143 watts.

Catocin, under Serafin's control, maintained ownership until the station fell silent after its license was canceled by the FCC on June 1, 1991.

Public objection to WBUZ's license renewal first surfaced on May 6, 1981. FCC records indicate the filing of an "Informal Objection to License Renewal" by attorney Andrew Schwartzman, who filed the objection on behalf of Chautauqua County Rural Ministry, the Dunkirk-Fredonia League of Women Voters, and the Dunkirk branch of the NAACP. The objections arose out of Serafin's alleged refusal to hire an African-American woman as a secretary, and his refusal to grant equal time to opposing views surrounding matters concerning public housing, local police, and a water fluoridation project as required under the Fairness Doctrine of the era.


...
Wikipedia

...