It seems to me that 25 such stations is a substantial number. The total number 
of stations authorized in the expanded band is only what, about 60 stations? 
That means that over 1/3 of them still retain dual licenses. 

The future of AM seems pretty clear. With a shrinking audience, increased 
interference and congestion, and now the migration of more stations to FM 
translators. How long can owners continue to justify the expense of maintaining 
a transmitter, antenna site, power bills, etc.? 

Fewer stations on the bands would ease congestion, reduce interference, and 
allow for something closer to the original “clear channel” concept at 
night—where fewer stations could reach larger geographic areas still not served 
well by FM. 

If you drive through West Texas at night, and other parts of the West, there 
are areas where FM stations within range are few and far between. AM radio at 
night still serves these areas well. Minority communities will small numbers 
will also be a growing audience on the AM dial, where demographics may make it 
unfeasible to have an FM outlet. 

AM is also well suited to disseminate emergency information during regional 
disasters. We saw this extensively during Hurricane’s Katrina and Rita, and 
also during Superstorm Sandy. 

AM Radio is independent of infrastructure. Relying only on the power of the 
transmitter and the ionosphere to deliver vital emergency information over 
large areas of the country. I think that’s a resource worth protecting. But I 
doubt it will be possible for the band to continue to support the large number 
of stations on every channel that it does now. 

It’s human nature to want to “have your cake and eat it too.” But these 
stations accepted licenses in the expanded band with the understanding that 
they would someday have to surrender their original allocation. 20+ years seems 
like more than enough time to build an audience in the expanded band. 




73,

Les Rayburn, N1LF
121 Mayfair Park
Maylene, AL 
EM63nf

Member WTFDA, IRCA, NRC. Former CPC Chairman for NRC & IRCA. 

Elad FDM-S2 SDR, AirSpy SDR, Quantum Phaser, Wellbrook ALA1530 Loop, Wellbrook 
Flag, Clifton Labs Active Whip. 


> On Feb 24, 2016, at 3:47 PM, Dennis Gibson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> http://www.radioworld.com/article/expanded-band-owner-objects-to-am-surrender-plan/278222
> 
> Sent from my iPad
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