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WDCQ-TV
CityBad Axe, Michigan
Channels
BrandingDelta College Public Media PBS
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerDelta College
WUCX-FM
History
First air date
  • October 12, 1964; 60 years ago (1964-10-12) (intellectual unit)
  • December 31, 1986; 37 years ago (1986-12-31) (Bad Axe transmitter)
Former call signs
  • WUCM-TV (1964–1997)
Former channel number(s)
Analog: 35 (UHF, 1986–2009)
  • NET (1964–1970)
Call sign meaning
Delta College Quality
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID16530
ERP200 kW
HAAT309 m (1,014 ft)
Transmitter coordinates43°32′33″N 83°39′37″W / 43.54250°N 83.66028°W / 43.54250; -83.66028 (WDCQ-TV)
Links
Public license information
Websitewww.deltabroadcasting.org

WDCQ-TV (channel 19), branded Delta College Public Media, is a PBS member television station licensed to Bad Axe, Michigan, United States, serving the FlintTri-Cities television market. The station is owned by Delta College in University Center, an unincorporated community in Frankenlust Township in southwestern Bay County. WDCQ-TV's transmitter is located in Quanicassee, in northwestern Tuscola County.

History

The station first signed on the air on October 12, 1964, as WUCM-TV; the "UCM" stood for University Center, Michigan, its city of license. The station was initially affiliated with National Educational Television (NET) until 1970, when the present-day PBS replaced NET. In 1986, WUCM established a satellite, WUCX-TV (channel 35) in Bad Axe, to better cover Michigan's Thumb area. In 1997, concurrent with a rebranding to "Q-TV", both stations changed their calls, with WUCM becoming WDCQ-TV, and WUCX becoming WDCP-TV.

The analog channel 19 transmitter was located on a 496-foot (151 m) tower on the campus of Delta College, near the corner of 4-Mile and Delta Roads in Bay County. The analog channel 35 tower was located just south of Ubly.

The WUCX calls are still used today for Delta College's NPR member station, WUCX-FM (90.1). That station is owned by Central Michigan University, and jointly run by Delta College and CMU.

WDCQ is currently the third most-watched PBS station in Michigan, behind WTVS in Detroit and WGVU-TV in Grand Rapids.[citation needed] As of 2021, Thomas Bennett is the general manager of WDCQ and WUCX-FM.[2]

In late August 2020, Delta College re-branded its public broadcasting operations from "Q-TV" to "Delta College Public Media" to better identify its TV and radio stations as associated with Delta College.[3]

Programming

Programming on WDCQ consists of the general primary PBS fare, with some locally produced shows, such as Currently Speaking, a weekly, live current events discussion program hosted by Andy Rapp, who's been a personality at WDCQ since the early 1970s, when he hosted a daily discussion program, Day by Day, which ran on the old WUCM into the 1980s.

Starting in 2005, WDCQ-TV began to produce local documentaries which looked at aspects of local history in the Great Lakes Bay Region and surrounding areas. These documentaries received many state and national awards including four Michigan Association of Broadcasters "Excellence in Broadcasting" Awards, numerous "Telly" awards among others. Documentaries produced include:[4]

  • Ag 2.0: Agriculture - Changes, Challenges & Trends
  • BREACHED! The Tittabawassee River Disaster
  • Breaking New Ground: Women of the Saginaw Valley
  • Coal in the Valley: Mid-Michigan Mining History
  • Flint: The 19th Century - The Crossroads of Michigan
  • Flint: The 20th Century - The Vehicle City Rises
  • The Korean War: Voices from the 38th Parallel
  • Margin of Victory - Saginaw Valley's Role in Winning World War II
  • More Than a Movie - The US-23 Drive-in Experience
  • Restored to Glory - Classic Automobiles, Collectors & Their Stories
  • Sailing Into the Past: Travels Aboard El Galeón & The Tall Ship Celebration
  • Sawdust & Shanty Boys - Logging the Saginaw Valley White Pine
  • Settling In: Immigrants & Cultures That Built Mid-Michigan
  • Taking Flight: The History of Aviation in the Great Lakes Bay Region
  • Tracks Through Time - Michigan Railroads - History & Impact
  • Vanishing Voices of World War Two
  • Vietnam Voices: Mid-Michigan Remembers the Vietnam War

Technical information

Subchannels

The station's signal is multiplexed:

Subchannels of WDCQ-TV[5]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
19.1 720p 16:9 WDCQ-DT Main WDCQ-TV programming / PBS
19.2 480i 4:3 World
19.3 Create
19.4 PBS Kids
19.5 Michigan Learning Channel

Analog-to-digital conversion

With the impending end of analog broadcasting in the United States, Delta College decided to use one digital station to cover its entire coverage area. Since it was widely believed that digital signals would travel further than analog signals, Delta College anticipated this would make up for the main WDCQ signal's shortfall on the Thumb. When each analog station was assigned a digital channel, WDCQ-TV in University Center was assigned channel 18 while WDCP-TV in Bad Axe was assigned channel 15 for digital. For practicality and monetary reasons, school officials opted to activate only channel 15, from a location that was close enough to the Tri-Cities to provide city-grade coverage to the area. Accordingly, on November 28, 2003; the two stations switched callsigns, with channel 19 becoming WDCP-TV, and channel 35 becoming WDCQ-TV.

WDCQ-TV discontinued regular programming on its analog signal, over UHF channel 35, on June 12, 2009, the official date on which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 15,[6] using virtual channel 19—reflecting the analog channel position of WDCP. Even though FCC regulations would usually mandate that WDCQ use "35" as its virtual channel, Delta College sought and received permission to use "19" instead. This is because most of its viewers live in the Flint–Tri-Cities area and had watched the station on channel 19 for almost half a century. However, WDCQ-TV is on channel 35 for DirecTV customers in its market.

References