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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

KCLP-CD
Channels
Programming
Subchannels18.1 Retro TV
Ownership
OwnerTreasure Valley Telecasting LLC
History
FoundedOctober 24, 1991
Former call signs
  • K22DX
  • KCLP-LP
  • KCLP-CA
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID27621
ClassClass A
ERP15 kW
Transmitter coordinates43°45′18″N 116°5′55″W / 43.75500°N 116.09861°W / 43.75500; -116.09861
Links
Public license information

KCLP-CD is a low-power Class A television station in Boise, Idaho, broadcasting locally on UHF channel 18. Founded October 24, 1991, the station is owned by Treasure Valley Telecasting LLC.

History

On October 24, 1991, the FCC granted a construction permit to Hope Broadcasting Corporation to build a low-power television station on UHF channel 22 to serve the cities of Boise and Caldwell, Idaho. The FCC assigned the callsign K22DX to the station and following two extensions of the construction permit, the station was licensed on August 23, 1994 with a modification of the city of license to only specify Boise. The station took the call letters KCLP-LP in December 1997 and Alpha & Omega Communications LLC acquired the station in September 1999.

Local PBS member station KAID received UHF channel 21 in the DTV Table of Allocations in April 1997 and began building the station in July 2000. Because the digital station was adjacent to KCLP-LP, Alpha & Omega applied to move their station to UHF channel 38 in September, and was granted the permit in April 2001, along with a permit to upgrade the license to Class A. The station was licensed as a Class A station on August 8, 2001. The following November, however, the FCC granted permission to KM Communications to change the specified channel of their new full-power construction permit from UHF channel 14 to UHF channel 39, adjacent to the new channel for KCLP-LP. KCLP-LP applied for a license to cover the move to channel 38 in July 2002, then canceled the application in November. Studies had determined that the new full-service station on channel 39, KKJB, would cause interference to 96% of the households served by the low-power station, now called KCLP-CA, on channel 38 [1][permanent dead link]. In January 2004, KCLP-CA applied to move to channel 18; the FCC granted the application in May. On March 31, 2006, KCLP-CA was licensed to operate on channel 18.

Alpha & Omega sold KCLP-CA to Treasure Valley Telecasting LLC in 2015, at the same time that the station converted to digital. Its only subchannel is Retro TV.

External links

  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for KCLP-CD". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
This page was last edited on 5 January 2024, at 18:37
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