The construction of a radio station on 106.3 MHz in Northampton took more than 15 years to accomplish. The first application for the frequency was filed on December 16, 1983, by a company controlled by Boston radio DJ Kenneth Carberry (known on air as Ken Carter). Three other applications were made, including one in 1984 by Carol Moore Cutting (then under the name of Cutter Broadcasting), and the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) designated the set for
comparative hearing in April 1986. Cutting had been inspired to file for the frequency when she moved to Northampton in 1971 and noted a lack of variety in local radio as well as a lack of Black-owned stations regionally. All except the Cutting and Carberry applications left the field, and FCC administrative law judge Joseph Stirmer issued an initial decision in January 1988 favoring Cutter, which the FCC review board then affirmed. It was not until 1992 that a construction permit was issued, after Carberry exhausted appeals to the full FCC and a federal appeals court. The station then faced another seven years of delays regarding difficulties securing a tower site. Prolonged negotiations with local AM station
WHMP were compounded by the need to replace that station's overloaded tower and, according to Cutting, by
Robert F. X. Sillerman, who had allegedly made it "quite clear [she] wasn't going to be on the air any time soon". During this time, Cutting considered giving up but credited staying in the fight to seeing another Black woman on television:
Gayle King, then an anchor at
WFSB television in nearby
Hartford, Connecticut, who provided her mentorship. Much of the studio equipment had been bought as much as five years before the station started broadcasting. The station began broadcasting in mid-1999 with full commercial operation by year's end, airing its present mix of
smooth jazz and
adult contemporary music. The station cost $750,000 to start, financed by Cutting's savings and members of her family. By 2020, WEIB remained the only Black-owned radio station in New England. ==References==