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KGHP serves critical role for KP
By Rick
Sorrels
Special to
KP News
The fictional “WKRP in Cincinnati”
was popular with television viewers, but Gig Harbor and
the Key Peninsula have the “real thing” with KGHP, found
at 89.3, 89.9, and 93.7 on the FM dial.

Alex Benzegala is “on the air” at KGHP.
Alex, a Key Pen resident who will be a
sophomore at Peninsula High School,
will work at KLAY 1180 AM this summer.
Photo by Hugh McMillan |
The product of four resourceful and
community-minded citizens (Stanley Rippon, Keith Stiles,
Max Bice, and Milton Boyd), KGHP became fully licensed
by the FCC and aired its first broadcasts in 1988.
Stiles is the only founder still alive, and still serves
as the station’s chief engineer as well as its heart and
soul.
The radio station is owned by the
Peninsula School District, with studios located at
Peninsula High School. “Our primary transmission tower
(89.9) is located at the south end of the KP. Translator
towers are located at Fox Island (89.3) and along SR-16
(93.7),” Stiles said. “We can be heard in Puyallup, Fort
Lewis, Olympia, Belfair, Vashon, and Federal Way.”
Stiles said the station is a
“critical and essential communications element in times
of emergency” for the area west of the Tacoma Narrows
Bridge. “We have backup generators for when power goes
out. We’ve only been taken off the air on one occasion.
That was in 2006, when trees took out our phone line
carrying our signal to the primary,” he said. “We
broadcast 24 hours a day, seven days a week.”
High school students are
responsible for producing programs Monday through Friday
from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. In addition, 13 community
volunteers run the studio and programming every day
until 9 p.m. and automated programming fills in the rest
of the time, including the summer months when school is
out.
Leland Smith has been the broadcast
journalism instructor since April 1996. The “Intro to
Broadcast Journalism” class teaches all aspects of the
media, and students do the research, write the scripts,
produce “canned” broadcasts, and conduct on-air
operations. The “Radio Broadcast Lab” class has students
actually running all the day-to-day operations of KGHP-FM.
The news and sports coverage aired by KGHP are student
products.
According to Smith, “Other schools
with similar broadcast journalism programs include
Nathan Hale High School in Seattle (KNHC-FM), Mercer
Island High in Seattle (KMIH-FM), a school in Eugene,
Ore. (KVRS-FM), and Clover Park Vocational Tech (KVTI-FM).
Students cannot get a job in this media directly after
graduating from high school. The industry pretty much
requires a college degree to break in, but it does give
the students such a great head start that they tend to
excel. We’ve had a lot of success stories.”
Julie Miller, class of 2004, is
now broadcasting live for KVTI-FM in Tacoma. Jessica
Biber (2005) is majoring in journalism at Pepperdine, an
d is the TV anchor for the college
station. Patrick Erickson (2006) is the radio sports
announcer for Southern Illinois University, and travels
with the teams. Russell Houghtaling (2002) graduated
with degrees in broadcast journalism and sports
management from Washington State University and is now a
sports radio announcer. Malissa Enfield (2001) graduated
from WSU with a degree in broadcast journalism and is
now a sports anchor for a TV station in Medford, Ore.
“KGHP is an incredible utility,”
Smith said. “It’s an absolute jewel with amazing
potential. But this public relations race car needs some
gas put in it. We need to hire a general manager. We
have no backup engineer if anything happens to Keith
Stiles. The superintendent and the school board need to
decide whether we are a ‘school education station’ or a
full-service eclectic radio station.”
Live DJs can be reached at 857-3589
if you have requests or comments, or if you want to
volunteer.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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