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- From: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu (TELECOM Moderator)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: Praise the Lord and Pass the RF Filters
- Message-ID: <telecom12.860.1@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Date: 20 Nov 92 00:00:00 GMT
- Sender: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Reply-To: TELECOM Moderator <telecom@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
- Lines: 207
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
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-
- [Moderator's Note: This article first appeared in TELECOM Digest on
- Thursday, June 22, 1989. (Volume 9, Issue 208). I thought newer
- readers would enjoy seeing it and older readers might enjoy a repeat
- as part of the thread on Broadcasting Towers. Since this was written,
- most of the problems have been corrected. PAT]
-
- -----------
-
- Indiana Bell service in the northeast section of Hammond, IN has gone
- to hell, but the telco says its not their fault, and they are trying
- to work with the people involved to correct the problem.
-
- For instance, consider the case of Steve Gescheidler, a resident of
- north Hammond, living just a few blocks from the Illinois/Indiana
- state line: he shares a party line with Jesus. When he picks up his
- telephone, a voice will often be on the wire reading from Ephesians,
- or bellowing at him to repent before he Burns In Hell forever.
- Sometimes the voice is trying to sell him spiritually enlightening
- audio tapes -- Visa and MasterCard accepted, of course.
-
- His neighbor around the corner, Judy Maruszczak, has a heavenly
- instrument also: When she tries to make a phone call, it will often
- times be drowned out by hand-clapping gospel music. Her VCR also likes
- to preach to her.
-
- The Hammond legal firm of Efron and Efron owns a pious dictaphone
- machine. When the secretary is in the midst of transcribing legalese,
- threats of fire and brimstone suddenly are heard on the tape. In
- addition, their phone system is electronic, and when they put calls on
- hold, as often as not a few seconds later the hold is broken and the
- call is lost. Several times per day the phone will ring, and no one is
- on the line at all.
-
- Linda Reynolds, another resident in the area said her television, her
- VCR and her cordless phone all began urging her down the righteous
- path last fall. She said sometimes at night the cordless phone begins
- ringing by itself, and going off hook for no reason, tying up their
- wire-line.
-
- Nine year old Tommy Kotul learned how to find salvation while he was
- trying to play 'Sports Baseball', an Atari game cartridge. He also
- said that one day in school, a choir started singing hymns over the
- school's public address system, which is in the form of speakerphones
- connected to the intercom phone on each teacher's desk.
-
- Although the sanctified interference shows up in the damndedest ways,
- on all sorts of electronic gizmos, it invariably is on the phone lines
- of the good (and presumably by now, God-fearing) residents of North
- Hammond, an Indiana community which straddles the Illinois state line
- with the communities of Burnham and Calumet City, Illinois to the
- south and west, and Chicago at it's northwest tip on the state line.
-
- So people began asking Indiana Bell, "what the heck is this, anyway?"...
-
- WYCA-FM Christian Broadcasters, Inc. ... that's what it is ... this
- religious station, operating at 92.3 on the dial, licensed in Hammond,
- IN, with transmitter facilities in Burnham, IL is the culprit.
- Operating with an antenna height of 500 feet, and 50,000 watts of
- radiated power, the folks at WYCA-FM Christian Broadcasters, Inc. are
- literally *saturating* a two mile area around the northern end of the
- Indiana/Illinois state line, 24 hours per day, seven days per week.
-
- Gescheidler lives about four blocks from WYCA's transmitter. He first
- began noticing the sanctified interference last fall, and it became
- louder and louder as the months went on, always on his end. "It seems
- like when I am in the middle of an important conversation, some
- preacher always comes on and tells me I'm going to Hell," he said,
- adding that the phone lines had already gone to hell, and no one
- seemed to give a damn about it.
-
- After complaining several times to Indiana Bell, Gescheidler and his
- neighbors complained to the Federal Communications Commission, the
- Indiana Utilities Regulatory Commission, and finally to the radio
- station itself. No one, he realized, least of all the radio station,
- was willing to take any responsibility for the problem.
-
- WYCA isn't breaking any broadcasting rules according to Paul Gomell,
- an FCC Chicago office technician whose duties include periodic
- examination of WYCA's equipment. "The home equipment is probably not
- adequately filtered," he said.
-
- "The problem has nothing to do with Indiana Bell's equipment," said
- Delores Steur-Wagner, Indiana Bell's community affairs manager for
- Hammond. "If there are complaints, they should go to the FCC."
-
- Chris Alexander, Dallas-based Vice President-Engineering for WYCA-FM
- Christian Broadcasters' parent corporation said, "The signal is so
- strong, you expect this kind of interference in devices that are not
- well-shielded. We try to advise people as best we can, and we have
- worked closely with Indiana Bell and Illinois Bell to resolve
- complaints."
-
- In November, 1986, the station raised its antenna to 500 feet from 400
- feet, and increased its power from 30,000 to 50,000 watts, Alexander
- said. "We made these changes only after receiving permission to do so
- from the Federal Communications Commission." Alexander said that this
- change in power and antenna height created a so-called 'blanketing
- area' -- an area of about 1.7 miles in any direction of the
- transmitter and antenna -- where the signal is so strong and so
- permeating, it is literally everywhere, in everything.
-
- "Indeed this is the case," said one neighbor five blocks from the
- site. "I have gone for early morning walks in the open field where
- the antenna is constructed. In the crisp, early morning air, you can
- almost feel the signal; smell that ozone; sense the corona."
-
- Alexander said, "We operate completely within the law. We observe all
- FCC regulations at all times." He noted that one condition for the
- change in antenna height and power output being granted by the
- Commission was that WYCA was ordered to assume responsibility for
- correcting certain types of radio interference in an area 1.7 miles in
- any direction of the station for a period of *one year* afterward.
- Alexander said during that time they worked closely with the telcos
- involved and "....anyone who complained about interference was given
- free of charge the filtering devices they needed ... some of our
- people helped install them ... just what the FCC said we had to do, we
- did it, in the geographic area required, for the length of time
- required...."
-
- Alexander noted one of the first complaints about the increased power
- came when prosecutors in a federal drug trial in Hammond tried to play
- wiretap evidence for the jury: instead, the tape recorder offered up
- hymns and homilies.
-
- Paul Gomell of the FCC noted that they have received complaints about
- the station relating to answering machines, speed-dialing equipment,
- cordless phones, cheapie phones, hold buttons, Touch-Tone service, and
- VCR's. These appurtenances and others -- like the preaching Atari game
- -- lend to the appearance that God is everywhere, at least in Hammond.
-
- One Indiana Bell service representative spoke, on the condition that
- she could remain nameless, saying that the telco had handled over 130
- WYCA-related problems in the past year, but Bell spokeswoman
- Steur-Wagner said the company does not keep track of such things and
- she had no way of confirming this report.
-
- The next step to reduce the interference -- with no guarentees that it
- will completely end -- is to have all the interior phone wire shielded
- in steel casings, said Tim Timmons, Indiana Bell's regional
- maintainence manager for northern Indiana, "...plus of course have
- good filtering where the phone lines come into the building..."
-
- "What a deal!", said Gescheidler. He recently priced the job at $300
- per phone from an independent contractor. "Indiana Bell said *maybe*
- they could do it a little cheaper for us ... but they say it is not
- their obligation to resolve the problem any further." He mentioned
- that, "...one day some guy from WYCA came here with a phone man; they
- had some cheapie looking filter they plugged in ... it didn't seem to
- do any good."
-
- Although the parent corporation of WYCA in Dallas may have good public
- relations, the neighborhood says local staff at WYCA-FM Christian
- Broadcasters, Inc. isn't at all concerned any longer. "They have heard
- so many complaints I guess they quit listening to them any longer,"
- said a neighbor. "When I called one day -- one day when it seemed like
- they were much louder than usual -- and asked them in a nice way
- couldn't they modulate their signal a little better, a lady there told
- me I was being blasphemous. She told me it was anti-religious to
- complain. She said I should be thankful that I was able to hear the
- Word of God, and she hoped I would someday realize I would Burn In
- Hell without accepting Jesus as my Savior. That's the last time I
- bothered calling *them* to complain. Now the FCC and Indiana Bell say
- *they* can't do any more either?"
-
- No madame, they cannot. As Chris Alexander, VP-Engineering has
- explained time and again when asked, the Corporation follows all FCC
- rules at all times. "We ALWAYS do exactly what the government tells us
- to do," he said.
-
- And Indiana Bell brings the wire to the drop by your house. They say
- the line is as clean as it can be at that point. You do the rest.
-
- An old folk-prayer says, "My Lord ... nothing is going to happen that
- You and I can't handle together. Amen." But one can have too much
- togetherness, as the residents of North Hammond will attest.
-
- Said Steve Gescheidler, "On the radio, they are praying for me.
- Meanwhile, I am praying for a phone line I can talk on without being
- disrupted by the choir and the organist."
-
-
- Radio Station WYCA-FM
- Studios and Executive Offices
- 6336 Calumet Avenue
- Hammond, IN 46301
- 92.3 on FM dial throughout northern Illinois and northern Indiana.
-
-
- [Moderator's Note, appended 1/1/91: Shortly after this article
- appeared, tbe FCC instructed WYCA to intensify their efforts to
- resolve the problems of the Hammond residents. 'Better' RF filters
- were devised and technical help was given in their installation. For
- about a month, WYCA was required to announce over the air at intervals
- that assistance would be provided freely on request to anyone within a
- 1.7 mile radius of the transmitter experiencing problems. There have
- been no recent complaints, so I assume things are better now. PAT]
-
-
- [Moderator's Note: Several people requested this reprint in recent
- days. When WYCA first went on the air in the late 1950's, not that
- many people in Hammond had FM radios. WYCA's solution was to announce
- that you could also hear them 'quite well' on your television set by
- setting the dial to channel 6 and running the fine tuning upward a
- distance ... of course, channel 6 comes in around what? 80 megs or so;
- the old television sets of the era could be warped up enough to reach
- 92.3 ... that's how eager they were to be heard, praise the Lord! :) PAT]
-