WRFK In May 1957, the Union Theological Seminary of Richmond (now known as the
Union Presbyterian Seminary)
signed on an FM radio station at 90.1, WRFK. Its non-commercial schedule of classical music, religion and talk programs proved to be popular. The station relocated to 106.5 in the 1960s and boosted its power, first to 16,000 watts, and later 50,000 watts, covering all of Richmond and its suburbs. When
National Public Radio debuted in the 1970s, WRFK became the organization's member for Richmond, airing programs such as
All Things Considered. It operated as a noncommercial broadcaster despite being on a commercial frequency. In the late 1980s, the seminary discovered that its charter did not allow it to operate a radio station and put WRFK on the market. It initially reached a deal to sell the station to the Federated Arts Council. However, it opted to take a larger offer from a commercial broadcaster. Meanwhile, Richmond's PBS member, WCVE-TV, which signed on in 1964, expressed an interest in operating a public radio station as a companion to Channel 23. With the help of interested businessmen and lawmakers who wanted to see the NPR/fine arts format preserved in Richmond, Commonwealth Public Broadcasting won a radio license.
WCVE-FM In 1988, WRFK was sold to The Daytona Group of Virginia, Inc. The station switched to a commercial
adult contemporary format as WVMX (now
urban contemporary station
WBTJ). WRFK signed off for the last time on May 6, 1988. Soon afterward, WCVE-FM signed on from 101.1 FM as Richmond's new NPR member station. Most of WRFK's staff transferred to WCVE-FM, along with nearly all of WRFK's programming and music library. Its
effective radiated power was 8,300 watts, with its
transmitter at the WCVE-TV tower, at 840 feet in
height above average terrain. It originally aired classical music much of the day, with some NPR programs, jazz and local news. With the expansion of NPR's schedule in the 1990s, more NPR shows were added, to the point where the station became all news and information on weekdays, with music heard at night and on weekends. In the early 2000s, WCVE-FM nearly doubled its power, to 17,500 watts, from the same 840-foot tower. In the 2010s, the station reduced its power to 10,000 watts, coupled with an increase in antenna height, now at . That gives WCVE-FM the same coverage but at less power due to the use of a taller tower.
News and music split On December 20, 2017, Commonwealth Public Broadcasting Corporation announced that they would acquire stations
WBBT-FM 107.3 and
WWLB (93.1 FM) from
Alpha Media. As part of the purchase, the station would move its music programming to the new acquisitions. WCVE-FM began simulcasting on the two new stations on February 15, 2018; on June 1, 2018, WCVE-FM rebranded as "WCVE News", while the two new stations became "WCVE Music". WCNV and WMVE, WCVE-FM's existing repeaters, began airing programs from both services. On August 5, 2019, WCVE-FM was rebranded as "VPM News" while both WBBT-FM and WWLB were rebranded as "VPM Music". ==Network==