Stafford FM

Stafford FM is a local community radio station serving Stafford, Staffordshire, England. It broadcasts on 107.3 FM and online as an mp3 stream. The station was one of two to apply in 2014 for an FM community radio licence to cover Stafford. The other was BFBS.[1]

On 3 October 2014, Ofcom announced that both applications had been successful and that 5-year full-time licences will be awarded.[2]

History

1990s

There have been a number of volunteer-run radio broadcasting projects in the area at intervals over nearly 20 years, and many of the volunteers have taken part in several of them. An experimental project called the Stafford Broadcasting Society, organised by the late Robert Leighton (an electronics engineer and part-time presenter on Radio Caroline) carried out a restricted service licence (RSL) broadcast in the mid-1990s, using a transmitter near Hopton.

2001-2003

Stafford FM was first set up in 2001 by broadcast engineer Richard Lamont and local broadcaster Ray Crowther to do 28-day RSL FM trials, serving Stafford and the surrounding area from studios in Gaol Mews and a transmitter near Hopton. It aimed to gain a permanent small-scale commercial radio licence from the then regulator, the Radio Authority. A total of four RSLs at six-month intervals were carried out between 2001 and 2003. By then the Radio Authority had been replaced by Ofcom, which announced that no more small-scale commercial radio licenses were going to be handed out, so the project was put on ice indefinitely.

Between 2003 and 2012 Super Radio was launched by Steve Rowney and Ray Crowther. Broadcasting by streaming on the internet the station kept the dream of local radio for Stafford alive. Significantly, the team behind Super Radio proved the business model for online community radio.

2011-2012

Stafford FM re-emerged as a community station in 2011, launching online.[3] At the time, the station was based in studios on Marston Road, Stafford. While at the Marston Road studios, the station held three RSL licences, using a transmitter at the same Hopton site as the earlier project. This was in an attempt to gain a community radio licence for the town.

XL FM

After a falling out of key members during December 2012, Stafford FM went off air for a time, until, on Sunday 3 February, the station re-launched as XL FM.[4] This was branded under a re-structuring, and the station promised a variety of shows and a wide range of music. However, it was announced on 19 August 2013 that the station would revert to its original name.[5]

Stafford FM now

Stafford FM now broadcasts online from studios in Mount Street, Stafford, near to Stafford Market. As well as the mainstream daytime programming, the station carries specialist programming during the evening, and covers local sport, including live match commentaries on Stafford Rangers FC, Brocton FC and Stafford Town FC. It is funded by advertising, sponsorship, grants and donations. The station is structured as a company limited by guarantee and owned by members. It has no shareholders.

Stafford FM broadcast its eighth and final FM trail (RSL) for 28 days from Monday 31 March 2014 on 87.7FM, using a transmitter in the town centre. After being awarded a full-time community FM licence from ofcom in October 2014, the station commenced full-time broadcasting on 107.3 FM at noon on Saturday 25 April 2015. Ray Crowther presented a special 2 hour launch programme after selecting Neil Diamond's "Beautiful Noise" as its first track.

Steering Group

Stafford FM has a steering group, including the Leader of Stafford Borough Council, Mike Heenan, Councillor Patrick Farrington, Olympic Archer Alison Williamson, local businessman and Town Centre Partnership member Jonathan Price, Chair of the Clinical Commissions Group Dr. Anne Marie Houlder, Founder of the Francesco Group of Hairdressing Francesco Dellicompagni and former BBC Sport presenter, Frank Burns.

Current daytime line up

As well as the daytime shows, the station broadcasts specialist programming during the evening and at the weekend to cater for a variety of tastes. This includes local music, northern soul, dance music classics, folk music and music from the musicals.

References

  1. http://radiotoday.co.uk/2014/07/27-community-applications-for-the-midlands/ Radio Today | 27 community applications for the Midlands
  2. http://media.ofcom.org.uk/news/2014/community-radio-awards-sep14/
  3. http://radiotoday.co.uk/2011/08/former-signal-staff-revamp-stafford-fm/ Radio Today | Former Signal staff revamp Stafford FM
  4. http://radiotoday.co.uk/2013/01/stafford-station-re-structures-for-2013/ Radio Today | Stafford station re-structures for 2013
  5. http://www.staffordshirenewsletter.co.uk/XL-FM-reverts-original-Stafford-FM/story-20158361-detail/story.html XL FM reverts to original Stafford FM name | Staffs Newsletter

External links

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