| Introduction to
KRUA
KRUA’s broadcast license is owned by the University
of Alaska Anchorage Board of Regents and is licensed
as an non-commercial, educational FM radio station by
the Federal Communications Commission. The station receives
funding from UAA student fees. Currently students pay
an $11.00 media fee, of which KRUA receives $5.25. Because
KRUA is a non-commercial radio station, we do not seek
revenue from community businesses for on-air advertisements.
However, the station may conduct fundraisers to supplement
the budget.
Under the current license, KRUA has a responsibility
to the public to broadcast programming events which
reflect community, university and student needs (FCC
Exhibit 1). The station airs public service announcements
four times an hour for non-profit agencies and university
events. KRUA has newscasts, sportscasts, and a weekly
public affairs program.
On another level of the license, KRUA is an education
station created to enhance the UAA department of journalism
and public communication by offering real-life broadcast
situations. The atmosphere is fun, but the main goal
is that volunteers are trained in the many different
aspects of broadcast radio. The station provides student
staff and volunteers a chance to get more out of college
than a degree.
History of KRUA 88.1 FM
KRUA began transmitting in the spring of 1987 when it
was not known as KRUA, but as KMPS. During this time,
they borrowed a small transmitter from Augie Hiebert
of Northern Television, Inc. The station worked on a
small budget and received only $1.50 per student through
a student fee.
KMPS was a carrier current station. The signal traveled
through telephone lines and could only be heard in specifically
targeted places. In this case, KMPS could only be heard
in student housing and the campus center. The schedule
was sporadic and depended on the school schedules of
volunteer DJ’s . The station tried to air from
noon to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, but occasionally
missed an hour or two.
During the school year of 1989-90, actual proceedings
began to create an FM station at UAA. After meetings
with the University of Alaska Anchorage journalism and
public communications department, local FCC offices,
and the Anchorage Associated Broadcasters, Inc., documentation
to create a non-commercial, educational station began.
In 1991, KMPS received the approval to move forward
with the construction of a tower site for the young
station, and 88.1-megahertz was assigned as its frequency.
A referendum to increase student fees to $5.25 per student
passed by a landslide: this allowed the station to move
towards FM status.
On February 14, 1992, at approximately 5 p.m., KRUA’s
weak signal was suddenly being heard on the Hillside,
in Turnagain and around the Anchorage area. REM’s
"It’s the End of the World as We Know It”
was the first song Anchorage listeners heard from KRUA.
In February 2002, KRUA celebrated ten years of FM broadcasting.
As KRUA continues to evolve, one element is constant:
KRUA volunteers. Our volunteers are a valuable part
of KRUA and continue to make KRUA a great station, and
an excellent place to work and learn. Thank You!
|