WCRO

WCRO is an American radio station, operating at 1230 AM in Johnstown, Pennsylvania broadcasting an Soft Adult Contemporary format. The station is owned by the Greater Johnstown School District and is operated by Lightner Communications out of Altoona, Pennsylvania. WCRO broadcasts at the federally assigned frequency of 1230 kHz, with a full-time power of 1,000 W.

WCRO
CityJohnstown, Pennsylvania
Broadcast areaJohnstown, Pennsylvania
Frequency1230 kHz
Branding102.9/1230 WCRO
SloganEasy Favorites
Programming
FormatSoft Adult Contemporary
Ownership
OwnerGreater Johnstown School District
History
First air date
September 26, 1947
Call sign meaning
"Something to CROw About!" (former slogan; no longer used)
Technical information
Power1000 W (unlimited)
Translator(s)W275CV (102.9 MHz, Johnstown)
Links
WebcastListen Live

History

WCRO has the distinction of retaining the same call letters since first going on the air in September 1947, and that it has never had a sister FM station co-located with it. The application was first filed on July 29, 1946, with a construction permit granted on December 11, 1946.

WCRO's first owner was Century Broadcasting Corporation, headed by John Keel. John Hanssen served as the station's first general manager. The station operated then at a power of 250 Watts, and was an affiliate of the ABC radio network. Studios were located at 317 Main Street in downtown Johnstown but were moved in 1952 to the Fort Stanwix Hotel at 332 Main Street. In 1961, the station was granted permission to raise its daytime power output from 250 watts to 1,000 watts, three years after initially applying for a frequency change from 1230 kHz to 850 kHz. The latter frequency would later be adopted by WJAC (now WKGE).

The station moved in 1966 from the Ft. Stanwix Hotel to the second floor of the Carnegie Building at the corner of Main and Clinton Streets in Johnstown. Eleven years later, Century Broadcasting Corporation changed the name of the licensee to Century Broadcasting of Pennsylvania.

In March 1984, Century Broadcasting, after more than 37 years of ownership, sold WCRO to Hamilton Communications, a company headed by Robert Hamilton. Doris Lichtenfels took over as general manager after Sandy D. Neri left to join WJAC-AM/FM, the latter being newly rechristened as WKYE "Key 95", in September 1983. Studios were then moved to 407 Main Street.

By this time, WCRO had gone into a decline, largely because of the collapse of Johnstown's lucrative coal and steel industries, resulting in a domino effect to the local retail economy. Hamilton Communications responded by selling WCRO to Tschudy Communications in August 1989.

Shortly after Tschudy's takeover, WCRO's full-time airstaff was laid off and replaced with ABC/SMN's "Starstation" adult contemporary format (known today as "Hits and Favorites") also used by neighboring stations WCCS and WOKW. Though the reduced operating costs did help the station's fortunes somewhat, a sale from then-owner Tschudy Communications was inevitable to keep the station from falling into bankruptcy.

WCRO was sold in February 1991 from Tschudy Communications to J. Richard Lee, who formed the Eagle Radio Network, making WCRO its flagship station. Lee had purchased two other AM stations north of Johnstown that had recently gone dark and their studios vacated and assets liquidated through bankruptcy proceedings. Because those stations, WNCC and WRDD, no longer had separate studio buildings or facilities of their own other than their tower sites, they became repeaters for WCRO.

WCRO and Eagle Radio Network operations then moved to 616 Main Street.

Eagle Radio operated with a format of time-brokered Christian Talk and teaching and had been successful for about four years until the FCC approved a series of applications for FM translators and power increases for Christian-formatted competitors on that band. Faced with the prospect of being squeezed out of business by its FM counterparts, Eagle Radio put all three stations up for sale in the mid-1990s.

WNCC and WRDD were sold in February 1997 to Vernal Enterprises of Indiana, Pennsylvania, which owned WTYM and low-powered television station WLLS-LP. A new facility for both WNCC and WRDD was built in WNCC's city of license in Northern Cambria and full-service local programming resumed on those stations.

Vernal Enterprises declined an offer to purchase WCRO, which was then sold to the Greater Johnstown School District in January 1999 for $80,000. The station then moved out of its dilapidated building on Main Street and onto the high school campus at 222 Central Avenue, with all new digital, state-of-the-art equipment. Ralph Osmolinski, the district's Technology Coordinator, took over as general manager. Not long after WCRO's sale to Greater Johnstown School District, the station adopted Al Ham's Music of Your Life format, with local breaks being done by a student airstaff. The station ran in the manner of a commercial broadcast operation, and marketing itself as "The Voice of the Trojans" airing the district's high school football and boys' basketball games as part of its program offerings.

WCRO today

In October 2018, it was announced the Lightner Communications out of Altoona would take over the day to day operations of the station. It was also announced that WCRO planned to put on an FM translator to rebroadcast the signal into the Johnstown area on 102.9 FM. The translator signed on a year later in November 2019. With the addition of the translator, WCRO launched with a Christmas format branding as "102.9/1230 WCRO The Christmas Station," a branding used on Lightner station WTRN in Tyrone. On January 1, 2020, WCRO launched their new format using the moniker "102.9/1230 WCRO Easy Favorites." This was also the format and branding used on WTRN at the time. The station runs jockless throughout the day but does occasionally take breaks to air sports and other programming produced by the Greater Johnstown School District.

WCRO is also known for broadcasting a variety of sports including University of Pittsburgh football and men's basketball, as Pitt maintains a branch campus in Johnstown. It also airs NASCAR's racing schedule, delivered by the Motor Racing Network.

Christmas Music

Since Lightner Communications took over as operator, WCRO has run a Christmas Music format from the Monday before Thanksgiving until News Year Day, like sister station WTRN. During this time frame, WCRO competes with WCCL for the Christmas music audience in Johnstown and the surrounding areas.

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