More Shuffling at KFMB

By now, we all know that when a group owner buys a broadcast property from a privately-held company, there’s bound to be a lot of change. After all, there’s a big mortgage to pay. Centralized human resources, accounting, promotions, graphics composition, and master control send laid-off local employees looking for work. Newsrooms shrink. And accountants look over spreadsheets and start looking for ways to layoff, dismiss, or have senior or highly-paid employees retire.

TEGNA bought family-owned KFMB-AM-FM-TV in December of 2017, and since then, veteran engineers have been leaving.

Last year, Manager of Technology Chris Hoffman was picked up from a sister TEGNA outlet in Buffalo, NY. Dean Imhof left. Senior Engineer Chris Aamodt was laid off. Long-time RF Supervisor Rick Bosscher resigned. Earlier this year, Director of Engineering Leann Lanflisi, who had been at the job just two years, retired.

We learned this month that Mark Goodman, a brilliant engineer acquired when XETV closed its San Diego facilities in 2017, has moved to KPBS. Mark says he’s happy to be making the change, which puts him closer to home, working with a great team of veterans, and, to paraphrase, “is less stifling.”

Scott Casale is leaving KFMB to join KUSI in the coming week as the Assistant Chief Engineer. Scott had been with KFMB since 2004, doing everything from RF to data transmission set-up and systems installations.

In the plus column for KFMB, Steve Cilurzo joined this month as an Engineering Supervisor, taking over Rick Bosscher’s office though with broader duties like a radio studio rebuild. He said he feels very fortunate to have such “big shoes to fill” and much to do. He was downsized at Entercom in June.

Disclosure: I worked for KFMB for 15 years as a staff engineer and briefly as Director of Engineering before the TEGNA purchase.

Sage ENDEC Updating Firmware & Software

In mid-July, Sage Alerting Systems announced a firmware update for its popular ENDEC model 3644.

Sage says on its website:

This free update addresses a changed requirement in the FCC EAS rules, Part 11.33(a)(10), which affects how the valid time frame of an alert is determined. This rule change takes effect on August 12, 2019. The ENDEC currently employs a slightly different method of determining the valid time frame. The update will have no adverse effect on the reception and relay of valid alerts. All users must install this update to keep your ENDEC compliant. The update also adds the BLU alert to the list of valid alerts if you have not previously installed version 89-32.

NOTE: This release does not affect the ENDEC’s reception and relay of the scheduled August 7, 2019 National Periodic Test. Whether your ENDEC is running version 89-30, 89-32, or this new version 89-34, your ENDEC will relay the NPT.

A software “major release” is planned for September 2019 to address changes in the distribution of CAP messages from IPAWS. This update will cost users $349 per unit, sold through distributors. The major distribution is available for free for units purchased new after March 1, 2018. Sage says registered users will be notified by email when the update is available.

July 2019 Meeting – Entercom Studio Tour

JR Rogers addresses Chapter 36 at the new Entercom

Last year, newly consolidated CBS and Entercom broadcast teams moved to a new facility on Granite Ridge Drive, across from the iHeart and NBCUniversal studios, forming a new media row. On July 29, 2019, JR Rogers and his staff allowed Chapter 36 to peek at the new studios recently and we can report they’re gorgeous. The new digs incorporate a modern Audio Over IP (AoIP) architecture by SAS, so fewer wires were used in building the system out. Al Salci of SAS gave us a rundown of the system architecture and some of its options. Many thanks for lunch, Al!

Al Salci from SAS, Chapter Chair Tony McDaid, and Vice-Chair Mike Curran chat in the hallway at the new Entercom facility during the July 2019 Chapter 36 Meeting and tour.

KVIB-LP FM Granted License to Cover

On June 27, 2019, the FCC granted low power FM broadcaster KVIB-LP a license to operate on 101.1 MHz from its facility at the World Beat Cultural Center in Balboa Park, San Diego. However, as of the first week in July, no signal was heard when in the vicinity, and no new transmit antenna is in place there. KRTH-FM has a dominant 50 kW signal on 101.1 from Mt. Wilson, easily receivable throughout most of the San Diego area. World Beat can’t build a tower above tree level due to its location in the flight path for the San Diego Lindbergh Field airport.

Family Radio Wins FM Auction

KECR 910 kHz El Cajon won the latest FCC auction to get an AM “cross-service” 10 watt translator on 100.1 MHz at Mt. San Miguel. According to the July 3, 2019 FCC announcement, Family Radio prepaid $35,000 for their bid.

The new translator assignment is part of the FCC’s AM Revitalization program in which AM stations, where possible, have been granted FM translator channels to retransmit their primary signals.

Many AM stations in San Diego now have an FM translator in place in San Diego County.

Society of Broadcast Engineers