South Carolina Educational Television

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

South Carolina Educational Television
Affiliation(s)PBS, APT
AffiliatesSee § Regional television stations
NET (1958–1970)
Official website
www.scetv.org

South Carolina Educational Television (branded South Carolina ETV, SCETV or simply ETV) is a state network of

state government which holds the licenses for all of the PBS member stations licensed in the state. The broadcast signals of the eleven television stations cover almost all of the state, as well as parts of North Carolina and Georgia
.

The network's primary operations are located on George Rogers Boulevard in

.

History

SCETV's first telecast in 1958, from Dreher High School.

The state network began in 1958, after the

closed circuit television.[1]
Following approval of the study, the South Carolina General Assembly created the South Carolina Educational Television Commission (ETV), a state agency, on July 1, 1960. By 1962 ETV extended closed-circuit, classroom television service to most South Carolina counties.

In 1963, the Commission launched the first open-circuit (broadcast) educational station in South Carolina, WNTV in Greenville. One year later, WITV in Charleston signed on. Two years later, WRLK-TV in Columbia, made its debut. The network grew to eleven television transmitters covering all of the state. After years of receiving NET and PBS programs on tape delay, it entered PBS' satellite network in 1978. In 2000, SCETV broadcast the first digital television program in the state. Since 2003, the state network identifies on-air as simply "ETV."

Station identification for ETV HD (circa 2009).

South Carolina Educational Radio (

public radio) began in 1972, when WEPR in Clemson signed on the air with maximum power of 100,000 watts (WEPR later moved its city of license to Greenville). The network eventually expanded to eight radio transmitters (five 100kW and three 30kW transmitters). The South Carolina Educational Radio Network was renamed ETV Radio in 2003. "ETV" was viewed as a general brand name for both radio and television. In 2015, the radio network was called South Carolina Public Radio
.

R. Lynn Kalmbach was selected as the network's project director in 1958 and led it until his death in 1965. Henry J. Cauthen became ETV's president and general manager and served in numerous leadership roles developing American public broadcasting, including chair of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). Cauthen retired in 1997. Paul Amos served as ETV's third president from 1998 until his death in 2000. Maurice "Moss" Bresnahan was ETV's president and CEO from 2001 to 2008. David Crouch served as interim president in 2009. Linda O'Bryon was president from 2010 to 2017. Anthony Padgett is the current president and CEO.[2]

Digital TV era

Despite the

DTV Delay Act
national transition extension to June 12, 2009, SCETV discontinued the analog signals of its 11 full-power stations February 18, 2009.

Each station's post-transition digital allocations and the FCC Repack Plan (2017) are as follows:

Call Letters Initial Analog
Channel
Pre-Transition
Digital Channel[3]
Post-Transition
Digital Channel
FCC Repack
Plan (2017)[4]
WEBA-TV 14 33 33 21
WHMC 23 9 9 11 (28)
WITV 7 49 7 9 (24)
WJPM-TV 33 45 45 16
WJWJ-TV 16 44 44 32
WNEH 38 18 18 26
WNSC-TV 30 15 15 34
WNTV 29 9 9 8
WRET-TV 49 43 43 8 (shared with WNTV)
WRJA-TV 27 28 28 29
WRLK-TV 35 32 32 33

On April 13, 2017, the FCC identified SCETV will be compensated $43.2 million to have WRET-TV go off-the-air as part of the Spectrum auction.[5] WRET will relinquish RF 43 and go into a channel sharing arrangement with WNTV, starting on January 23, 2018. On August 30, 2017, PBS Kids was added on new subchannel .4 and online.[6][7]

On October 31, 2017, SCETV submitted an application to change the digital terrestrial signal of WITV from channel 7 (VHF) to channel 24 (UHF); the changeover was scheduled to take place between May and July 2020.[8][9]

Commission

There are nine members of the ETV Commission. Eight are appointed by the Governor for six-year terms—one from each Congressional District and one from the State at-large who serves as Chairman. The ninth member is the State Superintendent of Education who is ex-officio.[10]

Network

SCETV's television network of 11

Asheville
). SCETV's headquarters and main production facility is located in Columbia, with production facilities (regional stations) in Rock Hill, Spartanburg and Sumter.

Regional television stations

SCETV initially planned to make all eleven of its television stations capable of airing local programming. Four full-fledged stations were built and staffed in Beaufort, Rock Hill, Spartanburg and Sumter before the idea was abandoned in the early 1980s. In 2012, WJWJ-TV in Beaufort was converted into a repeater of the network.[11]

The original plan was for each station to carry callsigns of the form WxTV, but after WNTV and WITV signed on it was determined that there were not enough such callsigns available.[12] Beginning with the third station, WRLK-TV in Columbia, most of the remaining callsigns represent prominent officials who either supported SCETV or represented the station's coverage area.

SCETV stations
Station City of license
Facility ID ERP
HAAT
Transmitter coordinates First air date Public license information
WEBA-TV Allendale 14 (21) 61003 371 kW 240.4 m (788.7 ft) 33°11′16″N 81°23′49.5″W / 33.18778°N 81.397083°W / 33.18778; -81.397083 (WEBA-TV) September 5, 1967
WJWJ-TV Beaufort 16 (32) 61007 385 kW 365.5 m (1,199.1 ft) 32°42′42.5″N 80°40′53.8″W / 32.711806°N 80.681611°W / 32.711806; -80.681611 (WJWJ-TV) September 6, 1975
WITV Charleston 7 (24) 61005 1,000 kW 561.8 m (1,843.2 ft) 32°55′29″N 79°41′57″W / 32.92472°N 79.69917°W / 32.92472; -79.69917 (WITV) January 19, 1964
WRLK-TV Columbia 35 (33) 61013 281 kW 316.9 m (1,039.7 ft) 34°7′7″N 80°56′12.7″W / 34.11861°N 80.936861°W / 34.11861; -80.936861 (WRLK-TV) September 6, 1966
WHMC Conway 23 (28) 61004 950 kW 245.8 m (806.4 ft) 33°56′59″N 79°6′30″W / 33.94972°N 79.10833°W / 33.94972; -79.10833 (WHMC) September 2, 1980
WJPM-TV Florence 33 (16) 61008 67 kW 241.9 m (793.6 ft) 34°16′48.1″N 79°44′34.4″W / 34.280028°N 79.742889°W / 34.280028; -79.742889 (WJPM-TV) September 3, 1967
WNTV Greenville 29 (8) 61010 180 kW 389.3 m (1,277.2 ft) 34°56′28.4″N 82°24′37″W / 34.941222°N 82.41028°W / 34.941222; -82.41028 (WNTV) September 29, 1963
WNEH Greenwood 38 (26) 60931 147 kW 234.4 m (769.0 ft) 34°22′19.9″N 82°10′3.9″W / 34.372194°N 82.167750°W / 34.372194; -82.167750 (WNEH) September 10, 1984
WNSC-TV Rock Hill 30 (34) 61009 1,000 kW 209.9 m (688.6 ft) 34°50′23.3″N 81°1′6″W / 34.839806°N 81.01833°W / 34.839806; -81.01833 (WNSC-TV) January 3, 1978
WRET-TV
Spartanburg
49 (8) 61011 180 kW 389.3 m (1,277.2 ft) 34°56′28.4″N 82°24′37″W / 34.941222°N 82.41028°W / 34.941222; -82.41028 (WNTV) September 8, 1980
WRJA-TV Sumter 27 (29) 61012 158.8 kW 354.6 m (1,163.4 ft) 33°52′52″N 80°16′14″W / 33.88111°N 80.27056°W / 33.88111; -80.27056 (WRJA-TV) September 7, 1975

Many of the stations have

Spartanburg County's Chamber of Commerce from 1951 to 1979.[13][14] WJPM-TV, WJWJ-TV and WRJA-TV were all named after state legislators: WEBA-TV for Edgar Brown, WJPM-TV for James Pierce Mozingo III, WJWJ-TV for James M. Waddell, Jr.[15] and WRJA-TV for R. J. Aycock.[16][17]

WHMC used the callsign WIIB before sign-on.[18] WJWJ-TV (branded as "ETV Lowcountry") previously maintained a regional production facility which was closed down in 2012.[11] WNSC-TV (branded as "ETV Carolinas"), WRET-TV (branded as "ETV Upstate"), and WRJA-TV (branded as "ETV Sumter") are regional production facilities. The other six transmitters are full-time relays of WRLK (branded as "ETV Headquarters"). WRET-TV used the callsign WRTS-TV before sign-on.[14]

Digital television

SCETV offers four

standard definition
.

SCETV multiplex[19]
Channel Res. Aspect Short name Programming
xx.1 1080i
16:9
ETV Main SCETV programming / PBS
xx.2 480i SCC South Carolina Channel
(local documentaries / Create from 12 midnight
to 8 p.m.)
xx.3 ETVW ETV World
(PBS West Coast feed and block programming
from
NHK World
)
xx.4 ETVK ETV Kids

Cable and satellite availability

SCETV's television network is carried on nearly every cable television provider in South Carolina. Additionally, Rock Hill's WNSC-TV is carried on

Charter Spectrum
's systems on the North Carolina side of the Charlotte market.

On DirecTV and Dish Network, WRLK-TV, WNTV, WITV, WNSC-TV, WJWJ-TV, WEBA-TV and WJPM-TV are respectively carried on the Columbia, Greenville/Spartanburg/Asheville, Charleston, Charlotte, Savannah, Augusta and Florence/Myrtle Beach local feeds. The South Carolina Channel, ETV World and SCETV PBS Kids have yet to be offered by satellite services.

Former logos

  • South Carolina Educational Television logo, 1963
    South Carolina Educational Television logo, 1963
  • South Carolina ETV Network, first color logo, 1967
    South Carolina ETV Network, first color logo, 1967

SCETV original programming

Past programming

References

  1. ^ ""In Our Schools" Features Finalists in Teacher of the Year Program". SCETV. April 9, 2013. Archived from the original on March 1, 2010. Retrieved April 26, 2013.
  2. ^ "SCETV Names New President | South Carolina ETV". Archived from the original on March 31, 2018. Retrieved July 22, 2022.
  3. ^ "DTV Tentative Channel Designations for the First and the Second Rounds" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 29, 2013. Retrieved March 24, 2012.
  4. ^ "RabbitEars.Info: Repack Plan for South Carolina ETC". April 13, 2017. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
  5. ^ "FCC Broadcast Television Spectrum Incentive Auction" (PDF). Federal Communications Commission. April 13, 2017. p. 1. Retrieved April 13, 2017.
  6. ^ "Stations for Owner - South Carolina Educational Television Commission". RabbitEars.Info. Retrieved February 17, 2017.
  7. ^ "SCETV Kids Goes 24/7". August 31, 2017. Retrieved August 31, 2017.
  8. ^ "Modification of a DTV Station Construction, Permit Application #0000034488". Federal Communications Commission. October 31, 2017. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
  9. ^ "System Status". Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  10. ^ "ETV Commission".
  11. ^ a b http://www.islandpacket.com/2012/02/02/1950600/wjwj-studios-close-for-financial.html
  12. ^ a b "A selection from a decade of visits to tower and studio sites in the Northeast and beyond". Fybush.com. Retrieved April 26, 2013.
  13. ^ Davis, Kathleen (April 30, 1998). "S.C.'s 'secret weapon' lures industry to area". Spartanburg Herald-Journal.
  14. ^ a b "About ETV Upstate". South Carolina ETV. April 30, 2018.
  15. ^ "James Madison Waddell". The Greenville News. January 17, 2003.
  16. ^ "South Carolina Legislature Online - Member Biography". South Carolina Legislature.
  17. ^ "South Carolina Educational Television Commission Program Evaluation Report [July 2018]" (PDF). South Carolina House of Representatives.
  18. ^ "WHMC Facility Data". FCCData.
  19. ^ "Digital TV Market Listing for WEBA-TV". www.rabbitears.info. Retrieved December 1, 2022.
  20. ^ "ETV Lowcountry". South Carolina ETV. June 15, 2018. Retrieved May 10, 2019.
  21. ^ "Carolina Classrooms". May 18, 2023.
  22. ^ "A Chef's Life".
  23. ^ "PBS Programs and Promotions Win 17 Daytime Emmy® Awards". PBS.
  24. ^ "Media Kit | Expeditions with Patrick McMillan | South Carolina ETV". Archived from the original on April 13, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  25. ^ SCETV Presents
  26. ^ "Making It Grow". October 10, 2023.
  27. ^ "Palmetto Scene". June 16, 2022.
  28. ^ "Reel South | South Carolina ETV". Archived from the original on August 31, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2016.
  29. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 3, 2016. Retrieved April 27, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  30. ^ "NatureScene - South Carolina ETV - YouTube". YouTube.
  31. ^ "Primary Colors: The Story of Corita".
  32. ^ https://www.learner.org/catalog/producers/vvcreators[permanent dead link]

External links