KSL-TV

KSL-TV (channel 5) is a television station in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States, affiliated with NBC. It is the flagship television property of locally based Bonneville International, the for-profit broadcasting arm of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), and is sister to KSL radio (1160 AM and 102.7 FM). The three stations share studios at the Broadcast House building in Salt Lake City's Triad Center; KSL-TV's transmitter is located on Farnsworth Peak in the Oquirrh Mountains, southwest of Salt Lake City. The station has a large network of broadcast translators that extend its over-the-air coverage throughout Utah, as well as portions of Arizona, Idaho, Nevada and Wyoming.

KSL-TV
Salt Lake City, Utah
United States
ChannelsDigital: 23 (UHF)
Virtual: 5
BrandingKSL 5; KSL News
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
OwnerBonneville International Corporation
KSL (radio), KRSP-FM, KSFI, KBYU-TV
History
First air date
June 1, 1949 (1949-06-01)
Former channel number(s)
Analog:
5 (VHF, 1949–2009)
Digital:
38 (UHF, 1999–2018)
  • Primary:
  • CBS (1949–1995)
  • Secondary:
  • ABC (1949–1954)
  • DuMont (1949–1955)
  • NTA (1956–1961)
Call sign meaning
Salt Lake City
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID6359
ERP398 kW
HAAT1,267 m (4,157 ft)
Transmitter coordinates40°39′33″N 112°12′10″W
Translator(s)See below
Links
Public license information
Profile
LMS
Websiteksltv.com
The Triad Center, in downtown Salt Lake City, with the KSL Broadcast House at far left.

KSL-TV is one of a few for-profit U.S. television stations owned by a religious institution (most U.S. TV stations owned by religious institutions are affiliated with non-profit religious broadcasting networks).

History

As a primary CBS affiliate

The station first signed on the air on June 1, 1949, operating from studios in the Union Pacific Building on Main Street. It was owned by the Deseret News, who also owned KSL radio (1160 AM and 100.3 FM, call letters KSFI). It originally operated as a CBS affiliate, owing to its sister radio station's longtime affiliation with the CBS Radio Network. In addition to its primary CBS affiliation, the station also shared ABC programming with NBC affiliate KDYL-TV (channel 4, now KTVX). The two stations continued to share ABC programming until KUTV (channel 2) signed on in September 1954 as the market's full-time ABC affiliate. The station also broadcast some programming from the DuMont Television Network, and during the late 1950s, the station was also briefly affiliated with the NTA Film Network.[1]

A few months after its sign-on, KSL moved its operations to studio facilities at the Broadcast House on Social Hall Avenue. In 1952, a 370-foot (110 m) transmission tower was constructed on Farnsworth Peak to improve the station's signal coverage along the Wasatch Front and into Tooele County. It also began building a massive translator network that eventually stretched across five states.

The KSL stations operated as a division of the Deseret News until 1964, when Bonneville International was formed as the parent company for the LDS Church's broadcasting holdings. Soon afterward, channel 5 began broadcasting its programming in color. In 1984, the station moved to its current facility at Triad Center, also named Broadcast House.[2]

As an NBC affiliate

In July 1994, CBS and Westinghouse Broadcasting (Group W) agreed to a long-term affiliation deal that saw longtime ABC affiliate WJZ-TV in Baltimore and longtime NBC affiliates KYW-TV in Philadelphia and WBZ-TV in Boston become CBS affiliates. Westinghouse's other two stations, KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh and KPIX-TV in San Francisco, were already longtime CBS affiliates.[3] That November, NBC traded KCNC-TV, which was the network's owned-and-operated station at the time, to CBS in return for CBS' former O&O in Philadelphia, WCAU-TV, as a result of a complex ownership deal between the network, Westinghouse and NBC.[4] CBS had originally planned to sell WCAU-TV to NBC as part of its plan to move its affiliation to KYW-TV, but discovered that an outright sale would incur heavy capital gains taxes on proceeds from the deal. To make the transaction a legal trade, the network swapped ownership of KCNC-TV and KUTV (which was acquired by NBC earlier that year), along with the VHF channel 4 frequency and transmitter in Miami (then home to WTVJ), to CBS in exchange for WCAU-TV and the channel 6 frequency in Miami (then home to WCIX, which subsequently became WFOR-TV).[4] The deal took effect on September 10, 1995, resulting in the first network affiliation switch in Salt Lake City since KTVX swapped affiliations with KUTV and became an ABC affiliate in 1960. Initially, NBC sought to reaffiliate with KTVX; but after that station renewed its affiliation agreement with ABC, NBC then secured an affiliation deal with KSL-TV. KUTV continued to air one NBC program, Saturday Night Live, for five more months until January 1996, when it was moved to then-WB affiliate KOOG-TV (now CW affiliate KUCW).

On January 14, 1999, a shooter entered the station's Broadcast House facility, allegedly looking for a KSL-TV reporter. Anne Sleater, an employee of another company that was housed in the building, AT&T Wireless Services, was shot during the incident and later died from her injuries. De-Kieu Duy, a 24-year-old female, was arrested in connection with the shooting.[5] Duy was later found mentally incompetent to stand trial and is currently housed in the Utah State Hospital.[6]

In 2002, Bruce Christensen was named the president of KSL-TV; Christensen was a former president of PBS, the former dean of the BYU College of Fine Arts and Communications, as well as a former KSL-TV reporter. During the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, KSL-TV was very influential in bringing coverage and technology to NBC. The station heavily lobbied to NBC that the ceremonies be broadcast live.

In July 2010, KSL-TV entered into a local marketing agreement (LMA) with independent station KJZZ-TV (channel 14), after the LMA between that station and KUTV concluded after five years; the LMA was terminated in 2016, after KUTV's owner, Sinclair Broadcast Group, purchased KJZZ.[7]

Programming

In addition to locally produced news and sports programs, and syndicated shows, KSL broadcasts most of the programs seen on NBC's schedule.

Due to its ties to the LDS Church, KSL-TV also airs programs relevant to Mormonism, such as History of the Saints, Music and the Spoken Word and Mormon Times, and preempts regularly scheduled programming to carry the twice yearly LDS General Conference.[8] KSL-TV is one of the few remaining television stations in the United States that still "signs off" at night (though only nominally, because programming immediately continues afterward), doing so at 3:30 a.m. on Sundays.

Program preemptions and deferrals

Historically, KSL-TV has been known to occasionally preempt or assign out-of-pattern scheduling to certain network programs, either to make room for other local or syndicated programs or because of internal concerns over subject matter that station management deems objectionable, typically due to conflicts with to longstanding LDS Church beliefs. (Many of these preempted programs have aired instead on KUCW (channel 30) or KMYU (channel 12) over the years.) Preemptions based on content objections have periodically led to inquiries over the sustainability of a religious institution owning a network-affiliated station as content standards and practices in broadcast television have relaxed in recent decades in a reflection of cultural change.[9]

As a CBS affiliate, in 1977, Match Game host Gene Rayburn mentioned that the often risque then-CBS daytime game show was not being aired in Salt Lake City.[10] In 1987, the station was among several affiliates—amid criticism from parental organizations over concerns it would be merely a program-length ad for the controversial namesake toys and trading cards, the show's violent content and humor ridiculing the handicapped—that announced that it would not air the children's animated series Garbage Pail Kids ahead of its originally scheduled premiere. (Amid the controversy, CBS elected not to air it in the U.S., though its distribution arm syndicated it in some international markets.) In the years leading to its switch to NBC, KSL also preempted the 1989–91 sitcom Doctor Doctor (partway into its third season in November 1990),[11] and three shorter-lived series—Dirty Dancing (in 1988),[12] prime time soap opera 2000 Malibu Road and adult-oriented sitcom Grapevine (both in 1992)—because of their sexual content.[9] KSL removed Picket Fences midway through its first season, partly due to objections over a January 1993 episode ("Nuclear Meltdowns") centering on a teenage girl who becomes pregnant through an incestuous plural marriage with a polygamist Mormon and the perpetrator's allusion that, although plural marriage within the LDS Church ceased after the 1890 Manifesto (issued in response to Congressional acts to disincorporate and seize assets of the church over the practice), many Mormons still held beliefs in polygamy.[13] The drama series returned to KSL in its normal network time slot in April 1993[14] before being shifted to a one-day delay at 11:00 p.m. Saturdays for its second season in September 1993.[15] The station also did not air CBS' late-night lineup from September 1990 until the September 1993 premiere of the Late Show with David Letterman,[16] and preempted the network's Saturday morning children's program lineup after September 1989. It also was among several Mountain Time CBS stations that aired CBS This Morning and its predecessors on a one-hour-ahead basis (from 6:00 to 8:00 a.m.) until it shifted the morning show in-pattern in September 1994 to accommodate an expanded (and relocated, as it was moved up two hours to 6:00 a.m.) local morning newscast.[17]

As an NBC affiliate, KSL declined to air Saturday Night Live throughout its first 18 years with the network; despite this, between 1995 and 2013, the station carried all of the long-running sketch comedy's "best-of" compilations, actor tributes, documentary specials and Saturday evening repeats that NBC aired in prime time. Unlike most of the later preemptions, while potentially objectionable content in the series were somewhat an issue for the station (NBC rebuffed KSL management inquiries about delaying SNL to midnight), the decision was largely made to retain its popular local sports discussion and highlight program SportsBeat Saturday. SNL initially remained on KUTV under arrangement with CBS until January 1996, before moving to then-WB affiliate KOOG (now KUCW). (KOOG similarly acquired local rights to Sunset Beach, airing the soap opera in lieu of KSL throughout its 1997–99 run.) [18][19] In June 2013, KSL announced that it would start airing SNL in its regular timeslot beginning that fall, after revealing that viewership for SportsBeat had declined in recent years (and was also being beaten by the similar KUTV program Talkin’ Sports in its slot).[20]

Content-wise, Channel 5 declined the short-lived 2003 sitcom Coupling because of its sexual humor and content, and preempted much of NBC's poker programming (such as Poker After Dark throughout its 2007–11 run) due to Church, ownership and LDS-member viewers’ objections toward gambling. In September 2011, KSL-TV also preempted The Playboy Club (replacing it with the locally produced newsmagazine We Are Utah),[21] on grounds that the fledgling drama was "completely inconsistent" with the station's mission and branding, not wanting to be associated with the Playboy brand, even though the program did not specifically focus on the magazine nor include any nudity.[22] (KSL sponsors "Out in the Light," a campaign aimed at educating Utahns on mental, marital and sociological issues associated with viewing pornographic material.)[23] The program aired on KMYU in its Monday 9:00 p.m. time slot[24] until it was canceled by NBC after its third episode. KSL continued to air already-recorded episodes of We Are Utah in the 9:00 p.m. slot until the October 31, 2011 premiere of Rock Center with Brian Williams.[25] On August 24, 2012, KSL-TV announced it would not air The New Normal due to objections to the sitcom's storyline surrounding gay parenting, crude dialogue and potentially offensive characterizations. KUCW ran The New Normal instead in a Saturday night slot, while channel 5 aired the Live Well Network series My Family Recipe Rocks! in the sitcom's Tuesday timeslot.[26][27] In a twist, although the show was canceled after its first season in May 2013, The New Normal was the first NBC prime time show that KSL has declined to air since it joined the network in 1995 (and the first prime time network show to have been preempted by Channel 5 since Picket Fences) that lasted at least a full season. (Other prime time series declined by the station for objectionable content have, by coincidence due to insufficient national viewership, been among the network's initial cancellation orders during their debut seasons.)

On April 29, 2013, KSL-TV pulled Hannibal after four episodes, due to the drama's graphic violent content and material revolving around the Hannibal Lecter series of novels and films, an action compared by executive producer Bryan Fuller to how Russian newspaper Pravda structured its news coverage to fit the Soviet Communist Party’s narrative.[28] KUCW aired the program on Saturday nights (initially following Saturday Night Live, before moving to 11:00 p.m. for the show's second season), while Hannibal's regular timeslot was occupied on Channel 5 by the weekly newsmagazine KSL In Depth.[29][30] Hannibal was cancelled after its last episode in August 2015, and the station cleared NBC's entire seasonal prime time schedule for the first time in the 2015–16 season. On September 4, 2013, KSL announced it was moving Days of Our Lives out of daytime to 1:05 a.m., leading out of the network's late-night talk lineup, effective September 9; a local lifestyle program replaced Days in its former 2:00 p.m. slot (one of the alternate timeslots that NBC assigned for affiliates to air the soap opera). Other than the plausible outcome that locally originated programming in the daytime hour could allow KSL to retain ad revenue, no reason for the move was explicitly stated, although another theory was the move was prompted by the show's storyline involving openly gay characters Will Horton and Sonny Kiriakis, who later became the first gay couple to be legally married in-canon. (Though, KSL continued to air Days in late night even after the character of Will was killed off in October 2015, and again after Sonny and the resurrected Will left the show as regular characters by storyline dictate in August 2020.)[31]

Even with its tradition of screening possibly objectionable programs, some, such as The Book of Daniel (which was not shown by several other NBC affiliates, especially in Bible Belt states) and a paid political message criticizing the Iraq War (which featured Cindy Sheehan) have been aired by the station.[32][33]

Sports programming

Owing to NBC's longstanding contract with the International Olympic Committee (IOC), KSL-TV was the local broadcaster for the 2002 Winter Olympics held in Salt Lake City. It also aired Utah Jazz games selected for national broadcast, first through CBS Sports from the team's move to Salt Lake City in 1979 until 1990, then NBC Sports from 1995 to 2002. The NBC years saw two Jazz appearances in the NBA Finals (1997 and 1998), both ending in losses to Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls.

News operation

KSL ENG SUV at the Utah State Capitol.

KSL-TV presently broadcasts 30½ hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 5½ hours each weekday and 1½ hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). Despite its roots in the Deseret News and its link to KSL radio, channel 5 was initially an also-ran in news. That changed in 1965, when the station poached sportscaster Paul James (better known as the voice of BYU football and basketball) and weatherman Bob Welti from KCPX-TV and teamed them with anchor Dick Nourse. Within a few months, channel 5 had rocketed into first place. It would be the dominant news station in Utah for most of the next 45 years, garnering some of the highest ratings in the country. Nourse, James and Welti would remain together until 1991, with Nourse staying on as top anchorman until 2007. In 2008, KSL-TV became the second television station in the Salt Lake City market (after KUTV, which converted in April of that year) to begin broadcasting its local newscasts in high definition. For a long time, the station's newscasts were branded as Eyewitness News; the name was scrapped in 2009 in favor of KSL 5 News, and is now known simply as KSL News.

In November 2010, KUTV, long a distant runner-up, unseated KSL-TV in most timeslots, though channel 5 remained ahead at 10 p.m. However, in February 2011, KSL-TV lost the lead at 10 p.m. for the first time in recent memory. In December 2011, KSL-TV restored its lead in every time slot in the Nielsen ratings except one—the early morning news slot on weekdays (in the 25- to 54-year-old demographic), where the station finished in third place.[34] Since then, however, KSL-TV has dropped back to a distant runner-up behind KUTV in most time slots. According to media observers, channel 5's ratings slumped after Mark Willes became president of Deseret Management Corporation, the for-profit arm of the LDS Church and Bonneville's parent company, and abandoned the station's longtime focus on hard news in favor of "values-based" reporting. Willes was fired in 2012, but the station's ratings have yet to recover.[35]

It has used the slogan, "News Specialists" or "The News Specialists" in some variation or form since at least the 1980s, while still affiliated with CBS.

Notable current on-air staff

  • Carole Mikita, Anchor/Reporter
  • Nadine Wimmer, Anchor
  • Mike Headrick, Anchor
  • Lori Prichard, Anchor
  • Kevin Eubank, Chief Meteorologist
  • Debbie Worthen, Anchor/Reporter
  • Dan Rascon, Anchor/Reporter
  • Kirsten Van Dyke, Meteorologist
  • Andrew Adams, Reporter
  • Jed Boal, Reporter
  • Tamara Vaifanua, Reporter
  • Lauren Steinbrecher, Reporter

Notable former on-air staff

  • Craig Bolerjack – sports anchor (presently a play-by-play announcer with the Utah Jazz in addition to play-by-play for college and NFL football broadcasts by CBS Sports)
  • Gretchen Carr - weekend anchor
  • Jane Clayson – weekend anchor (later co-host of CBS' The Early Show)
  • Paul James - sports anchor (1965–1991, passed away 2019; part of Nourse/Welti/James team)
  • Whit Johnson – weekday anchor and reporter (later working for KNBC in Los Angeles; now at ABC News)
  • Bruce Lindsay - weeknights at 5, 6 and 10 p.m. anchor (retired May 23, 2012 after 38 years with KSL)
  • Dave McCann – weeknight anchor (retired 2021)
  • Keith McCord - weekend anchor/reporter (retired after 39 years with KSL)
  • Jim Nantz – sports anchor (now the lead announcer for CBS Sports)
  • Dick Nourse – weeknight 10 p.m. anchor (part of Nourse/Welti/James team; retired November 27, 2007 after 43 years with KSL)
  • Ruth Todd - weeknight 10 p.m. anchor, Saturday Morning anchor (left KSL in 2001)
  • Bob Welti - meteorologist (Moved over from KDYL Channel 4 in 1965 with Paul James; part of Nourse/Welti/James team)

Technical information

Subchannels

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect Short name Programming[36]
5.11080i16:9KSL-DTMain KSL-TV programming / NBC
5.2480iCOZI-TVCozi TV[37]
5.3thisTVThis TV

On January 1, 2009, KSL ended its affiliation with NBC Weather Plus on its 5.3 subchannel due to the service's discontinuation by NBC, and relaunched the subchannel as a locally compiled automated weather channel, the Live 5 Weather Channel, which was one of the first local digital weather subchannels in the country to be presented in 480i widescreen. KSL-TV also carried Universal Sports on its 5.2 subchannel until it began to be exclusively distributed through cable and satellite television in January 2012; it was replaced by Live Well Network in 2013.[38] On January 1, 2014, KSL replaced Live Well Network with Cozi TV on digital subchannel 5.2.

Analog-to-digital conversion

KSL-TV shut down its analog signal, over VHF channel 5, on June 12, 2009, as part of the federally mandated transition from analog to digital television.[39] The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 38,[40] using PSIP to display KSL-TV's virtual channel as 5 on digital television receivers. Effective September 17, 2018, the station moved its digital signal from channel 38 to channel 23, as part of the broadcast spectrum repacking.

Translators

City of license Callsign Channel ERP HAAT Facility ID Transmitter coordinates Owner
AltonK29JA-D 290.038 kW235 m (771 ft)18237737°22′26.1″N 112°32′10.4″WWestern Kane County Special Service District #1
AntimonyK34OC-D 340.033 kW−6 m (−20 ft)16810038°10′56.7″N 112°2′27.2″WPiute County
Beaver, etc.K24FE-D 240.239 kW1,214 m (3,983 ft)637038°31′4.8″N 113°17′5.8″WBonneville International Corporation
Beryl
Modena, etc.
K29FA-D 290.1 kW154 m (505 ft)2917337°42′13.8″N 113°44′31.8″WIron County
Blanding
Monticello
K10RK-D 100.15 kW1,073 m (3,520 ft)5886237°50′22.5″N 109°27′44.6″WSan Juan County
BloomingtonK20GJ-D 200.4 kW70 m (230 ft)7099837°3′49″N 113°34′20″WBonneville International Corporation
Bluff, etc.K17JF-D 170.0025 kW16 m (52 ft)18271237°16′13″N 109°33′16.4″WSan Juan County
BoulderK33IZ-D 330.003 kW−29 m (−95 ft)16783537°53′53″N 111°25′10.5″WGarfield County
CainevilleK33OM-D 0.054 kW−30 m (−98 ft)16707738°21′38.2″N 110°53′39.4″WWayne County
Capitol Reef National ParkK34OA-D 340.06 kW−86 m (−282 ft)16707338°17′46.3″N 111°17′32.6″W
Cedar CityK17NK-D 170.32 kW390 m (1,280 ft)13115537°38′17.9″N 113°1′54.8″WIron County
CirclevilleK14RG-D 140.045 kW−239 m (−784 ft)16787138°12′40.8″N 112°14′4.1″WPiute County
Clear CreekK33PO-D 330.07 kW−75 m (−246 ft)18238839°38′45.1″N 111°9′17.5″WCarbon County
CoalvilleK36OT-D 360.107 kW−215 m (−705 ft)16717340°55′26.1″N 111°23′53″WSummit County
Delta, etc.K34OX-D 340.15 kW−9 m (−30 ft)16791639°21′11.9″N 112°21′8.5″WMillard County
DuchesneK32HX-D 320.012 kW−78 m (−256 ft)16740040°9′17.7″N 110°23′31.6″WDuchesne County
East PriceK09ZU-D 90.07 kW−84 m (−276 ft)16776939°36′37.8″N 110°48′49.5″WCarbon County
EmeryK34PB-D 340.012 kW97 m (318 ft)16722538°55′51.9″N 111°11′27.6″WEmery County
EnterpriseK07ED-D 70.031 kW41 m (135 ft)7100137°35′59.9″N 113°44′2.8″WBonneville International Corporation
EscalanteK32MR-D 320.09 kW−146 m (−479 ft)16781437°47′10.5″N 111°35′39.9″WGarfield County
FerronK34PH-D 340.02 kW−231 m (−758 ft)18237439°5′35.4″N 111°8′42.9″WEmery County
Fillmore, etc.K26OB-D 260.15 kW115 m (377 ft)16790739°2′9.8″N 112°19′33.9″WMillard County
Fishlake ResortK30OW-D 300.01 kW148 m (486 ft)18234438°31′0″N 111°44′48″WSevier County
Fountain GreenK34KQ-D 34−163 m (−535 ft)18219539°32′3.1″N 111°35′12″WSanpete County
FruitlandK16NC-D 160.11 kW−55 m (−180 ft)19001940°12′17.8″N 110°53′46.8″WDuchesne County
Garfield, etc.K17MT-D 170.155 kW751 m (2,464 ft)3634337°45′21.1″N 111°52′29.8″WGarfield County
K33OJ-D 330.088 kW1,003 m (3,291 ft)2322138°32′30.2″N 112°4′22.9″W
Garrison, etc.K33PH-D 0.06 kW−61 m (−200 ft)16794139°6′15.4″N 113°57′12.3″WMillard County
Green RiverK17HW-D 170.02 kW−18 m (−59 ft)16757538°58′34.9″N 110°10′58.4″WGreen River City Television
K34PC-D 34484 m (1,588 ft)16757839°10′57.9″N 110°36′27.5″W
HanksvilleK21IF-D 210.01 kW−58 m (−190 ft)16708038°22′23.4″N 110°42′1.3″WWayne County
Hanna, etc.K34IW-D 340.012 kW−322 m (−1,056 ft)16739640°23′7.8″N 110°45′30.5″WDuchesne County
HatchK19GJ-D 190.028 kW−125 m (−410 ft)16799237°40′35.9″N 112°22′22.4″WGarfield County
Heber
Midway
K27GC-D 270.356 kW329 m (1,079 ft)7092640°33′44.8″N 111°28′32.6″WWasatch County
HelperK08QG-D 80.07 kW−165 m (−541 ft)16777939°41′5.8″N 110°50′31.5″WCarbon County
Henefer, etc.K34OM-D 340.11 kW−95 m (−312 ft)16718940°58′40.2″N 111°26′10.1″WSummit County
HenrievilleK16MH-D 160.01 kW−138 m (−453 ft)16812737°32′58.8″N 111°59′24.2″WGarfield County
Hilldale, etc.K11QQ-D 110.031 kW66 m (217 ft)7100336°54′57.9″N 113°2′0.7″WBonneville International Corporation
HuntingtonK34PI-D 340.02 kW−135 m (−443 ft)18243239°20′7.3″N 110°58′49″WEmery County
Huntsville, etc.K23IC-D 230.012 kW−100 m (−328 ft)16780641°20′19.9″N 111°48′59″WOgden Valley TV
KanabK27JV-D 270.063 kW94 m (308 ft)16763837°3′34.6″N 112°31′12.2″WWestern Kane County Special Service District #1
KoosharemK16MF-D 160.055 kW179 m (587 ft)16734238°28′42.8″N 111°49′25″WSevier County
Laketown, etc.K12MI-D 120.3394 kW339 m (1,112 ft)5612241°52′54.9″N 111°16′12.6″WRich County
LeamingtonK21NO-D 210.95 kW−90 m (−295 ft)16793439°31′55.5″N 112°18′49.4″WMillard County
Loa, etc.K28OL-D 280.031 kW−45 m (−148 ft)16708538°24′24.4″N 111°41′54.5″WWayne County
LoganK20NC-D 202.82 kW524 m (1,719 ft)813041°33′3.3″N 111°56′13.1″WCache County
Long Valley JunctionK04RU-D 40.038 kW48 m (157 ft)16775137°30′25.3″N 112°30′38.3″WWestern Kane County Special Service District #1
Manila, etc.K32IA-D 320.0056 kW105 m (344 ft)16795340°57′33.5″N 109°25′1.5″WDaggett County
Manti, etc.K26IH-D 260.14 kW652 m (2,139 ft)16816739°19′23.3″N 111°46′28.5″WSanpete County
MarysvaleK09ZQ-D 90.118 kW187 m (614 ft)16786838°30′25.4″N 112°11′51.5″WPiute County
MayfieldK18IU-D 180.01 kW−197 m (−646 ft)18222339°6′42.3″N 111°43′5.8″WSanpete County
Mexican HatK15JV-D 150.172 kW−149 m (−489 ft)19114437°8′58.6″N 109°51′37.5″WSan Juan County
Mexican Hat, etc.K17JH-D 170.0056 kW−149 m (−489 ft)18282237°8′29.4″N 109°51′37.3″W
Montezuma Creek
Aneth
K16MQ-D 160.011 kW−16 m (−52 ft)16799637°15′36.3″N 109°17′24.9″W
Morgan, etc.K32HK-D 32332 m (1,089 ft)16869241°4′7.2″N 111°39′34.1″WMorgan County
Mount PleasantK21IC-D 210.01 kW−114 m (−374 ft)16816039°32′21.5″N 111°23′19.8″WSanpete County
MytonK21FT-D 0.049 kW692 m (2,270 ft)1764040°21′40.6″N 110°47′33.5″WDuchesne County
Navajo Mountain SchoolK17IE-D 170.0056 kW104 m (341 ft)16798537°1′16.9″N 110°46′0.9″WSan Juan County
OljetoK17IF-D 0.011 kW29 m (95 ft)16798037°2′27.4″N 110°19′49.9″W
OrangevilleK17NQ-D 0.34 kW510 m (1,673 ft)16721439°12′35.8″N 111°8′32.6″WEmery County
PanguitchK16MG-D 160.035 kW−134 m (−440 ft)16749737°49′15.5″N 112°27′29.1″WGarfield County
Park CityK27GD-D 270.077 kW26 m (85 ft)6371440°40′58.8″N 111°31′24.7″WSummit County
Parowan
Enoch, etc.
K36AI-D 360.25 kW233 m (764 ft)2916937°50′30.1″N 112°58′29.4″WIron County
Peoa
Oakley
K35IS-D 350.011 kW92 m (302 ft)16716240°43′20.8″N 111°21′51.6″WSummit County
Pine Valley, etc.K08EN-D 80.031 kW567 m (1,860 ft)7095837°40′35.9″N 113°39′16.8″WBonneville International Corporation
PriceK16NA-D 160.34 kW612 m (2,008 ft)16777339°45′21.8″N 110°59′28.5″WCarbon County
RandolphK36FS-D 360.284 kW360 m (1,181 ft)5610741°37′30.7″N 111°7′25.6″WRich County
Richfield, etc.K16ME-D 160.165 kW470 m (1,542 ft)16732738°38′4.9″N 112°3′36.8″WSevier County
RockvilleK05AR-D 50.031 kW−217 m (−712 ft)7096237°9′8.5″N 113°1′54.9″WBonneville International Corporation
Roosevelt, etc.K09ZW-D 90.047 kW147 m (482 ft)18295940°19′26.8″N 110°9′21.5″WUintah County
Rural Beaver CountyK23KO-D 230.03 kW1,219 m (3,999 ft)18260238°31′13.5″N 113°17′14.9″WIron County
Rural Juab CountyK10RG-D 100.115 kW583 m (1,913 ft)5979439°29′30.8″N 111°49′39.7″WSevier County
Rural Sevier CountyK16MC-D 160.01 kW207 m (679 ft)12546638°30′44.1″N 111°47′3.5″W
SamakK33OX-D 330.063 kW−27 m (−89 ft)16719840°37′56″N 111°15′36.6″WSummit County
Santa Clara, etc.K35FS-D 350.287 kW1,046 m (3,432 ft)7096137°9′14.9″N 113°51′34.8″WBonneville International Corporation
Scipio
Holden
K21NN-D 210.05 kW171 m (561 ft)16792539°12′9.1″N 112°8′37.5″W
ScofieldK32IZ-D 320.006 kW−126 m (−413 ft)18217139°47′40.4″N 111°8′29.8″WCarbon County
Sigurd
Salina
K09ZP-D 90.115 kW826 m (2,710 ft)16733438°52′37.2″N 111°52′34.2″WSevier County
Spring GlenK32NF-D 320.006 kW528 m (1,732 ft)16778839°31′48.8″N 111°3′5.6″WCarbon County
Summit CountyK23NV-D 230.309 kW830 m (2,723 ft)6372840°51′17.8″N 111°28′46.7″WSummit County
Teasdale
Torry
K16MD-D 160.072 kW125 m (410 ft)16706338°16′59.7″N 111°30′38.8″WWayne County
ToquervilleK07CG-D 70.031 kW191 m (627 ft)7097137°16′20.9″N 113°16′36.8″WBonneville International Corporation
TropicK34OD-D 340.09 kW236 m (774 ft)16812337°42′40.9″N 112°4′39.4″WGarfield County
Vernal, etc.K31JL-D 310.17 kW639 m (2,096 ft)16788140°21′2.8″N 109°9′47.5″WUintah County
VirginK08BO-D 80.047 kW192 m (630 ft)7098337°13′53.6″N 113°12′34.1″WBonneville International Corporation
WanshipK34OL-D 340.114 kW−267 m (−876 ft)16718140°48′30.8″N 111°23′43.7″WSummit County
WendoverK20LF-D 200.07 kW15 m (49 ft)18931240°44′28.2″N 114°2′14.2″WUniversity of Utah
Woodland
Kamas
K09ZR-D 90.041 kW46 m (151 ft)16716740°34′0.6″N 111°14′34.7″WSummit County
Cortez, COK32IJ-D 321 kW466 m (1,529 ft)12883037°21′53.9″N 108°08′51.2″WSouthwest Colorado Television Translator Association
Malad, IDK20OF-D 20−78 m (−256 ft)5036542°4′49.7″N 112°12′31.8″WOneida County Translator District
Mink Creek, IDK13HA-D 130.1 kW−22 m (−72 ft)4289142°15′9.7″N 111°43′47.8″WFranklin County TV District #1
Montpelier, IDK19DQ-D 190.09 kW157 m (515 ft)440042°23′21.7″N 111°23′7.7″WBear Lake County T.V. District
Preston, IDK23GR-D 231 kW230 m (755 ft)2233542°7′29.7″N 111°46′32.8″WFranklin County TV District #1
K40GZ-D 40325 m (1,066 ft)12514941°52′59.7″N 112°4′44.8″W
Soda Springs, IDK35HD-D 35349 m (1,145 ft)12512142°37′47.7″N 111°41′2.8″WCaribou County TV Association
Beowawe, NVK14NU-D 140.3 kW687 m (2,254 ft)18387440°37′14.6″N 116°41′20.3″WEureka County Television District
K28LH-D 28687 m (2,254 ft)18549640°37′14.6″N 116°41′20.3″W
Duckwater, NVK26JY-D 26743 m (2,438 ft)18387139°26′57.7″N 115°59′57.2″W
Ely, NVK30CN-D 300.796 kW1,007 m (3,304 ft)7224739°9′44.7″N 114°36′35″WBonneville International Corporation
Ely, NV
McGill, NV
K11EE-D 110.015 kW269 m (883 ft)7224839°15′52.8″N 114°53′38.1″WWhite Pine Television District #1
Eureka, NVK15LU-D 150.3 kW417 m (1,368 ft)18384239°28′29.7″N 115°59′36.2″WEureka County Television District
K22NG-D 22765 m (2,510 ft)1984939°26′58.7″N 115°59′55.2″W
K35KM-D 350.1 kW−85 m (−279 ft)18534939°30′40.7″N 115°57′55.2″W
Lund, NV
Preston, NV
K12DE-D 120.234 kW298 m (978 ft)7223239°13′39.7″N 114°58′33″WWhite Pine Television District #1
Overton, NVK19ME-D 191.8 kW134 m (440 ft)19810536°41′8.7″N 114°31′12.7″WMoapa Valley Television Maintenance District
Ruth, NVK11ED-D 110.008 kW−33 m (−108 ft)7225239°16′26.7″N 114°59′15″WWhite Pine Television District #1
Big Piney, WYK22IY-D 220.27 kW186 m (610 ft)1387842°55′8.7″N 110°0′54.5″WCora Peak TV Association
Big Piney, etc., WYK10HO-D 100.049 kW173 m (568 ft)6948042°34′10.7″N 109°54′41.5″WUpper Green TV System

References

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