Frequency 88.3 FM | Broadcast area Cincinnati, Ohio Format Community Radio | |
Slogan What Radio Is Meant to Be |
WAIF (88.3 FM) is a community radio station licensed to Cincinnati, Ohio.
Contents
Overview
WAIF is an all-volunteer community radio station, one of only a handful in the USA. WAIF reception varies because of the hilly local terrain, but it can be heard over the air within the Cincinnati-area I-275 belt in Southwestern Ohio, Northern Kentucky, and Southeastern Indiana. WAIF also broadcasts over the Internet.
Organizing for the station began in 1973. WAIF went on the air in 1975. Rather than wait for an open frequency, the organizers decided to share the 88.3 MHz frequency with the local vocational school's station, WJVS, an arrangement that remained in place until WJVS ceased operations on May 10, 2012 (over a week earlier than expected), following the failure of its transmitter.
WAIF is managed by a Board of Trustees of between 7 and 11 members, elected to two-year terms at an annual membership meeting in September of each year. The Board of Trustees elects officers and appoints staff and management for the station.
WAIF's motto is "What Radio Is Meant To Be" Originally, the station referred to their organization as "Stepchild Radio", and had close ties to WYSO, the Antioch College station in Yellow Springs.
Programming
WJVS formerly broadcast on the 88.3 frequency during regular school hours; WAIF broadcast at all other times. When WJVS ceased broadcasting on May 10, 2012, the station notified WAIF that it could begin full-time operations on 88.3 FM immediately.
Over the years WAIF has broadcast the work of more than a thousand volunteer programmers, producers and activists. As of June 2006, local programmers do all programming. Individual programs vary in length, but run between one and three hours, once a week.