Ocean State Media
Ocean State Media Group, doing business as Ocean State Media, is an American public broadcasting organization serving Rhode Island and parts of Southeastern Massachusetts. It operates the NPR and PBS member stations for the region, led by WPVD—flagship station of OSM's statewide radio network, and WSBE-TV in Providence, Rhode Island. Its main radio studios and offices are located in the historic Union Station in Downtown Providence.
The organization was formed in 2007 as Rhode Island Public Radio, which originally acquired WPVD from Boston University to give it independence from WBUR after several years of financial uncertainties; WRNI had been Rhode Island's NPR station since 1998. In 2011, RIPR began to acquire additional FM stations to expand its coverage across Rhode Island and surrounding regions. In 2018, the network rebranded as The Public's Radio to reflect the expansion of its coverage into Southeastern Massachusetts.
In 2023, RIPR announced its intent to merge with Rhode Island's PBS member station WSBE-TV, which went on the air in 1967; the merger was completed in 2024. In October 2025, the two networks rebranded as Ocean State Media.
History
Boston University
In the 1990s, a group of Rhode Islanders formed the "Foundation for Ocean State Public Radio" to bring a local public radio station to the state. Clare Gregorian was described as the "driving force" behind the idea. At the time, Rhode Island was the only state in New England and one of only two in the entire country that did not have a full-service NPR station within its borders. Most of the state got at least a grade B signal from Boston's public raido stations, WGBH and WBUR; Providence is within WGBH's city-grade signal. However, both stations focus primarily on Boston and its suburbs.After a few years of looking, they found a partner in Boston University, owner of WBUR. BU agreed to buy WRCP, a 5,000-watt station that had been on the air since 1947. The price tag was $1.9 million. The foundation conducted a statewide drive to help raise the funds. For many years, 1290 AM had been known as WICE, but switched to Portuguese language programming as WRCP in 1983.
WRNI and WXNI
On May 1, 1998, WRCP's call sign changed to WRNI, and the license was officially transferred. The new owner was the WRNI Foundation, a separate fundraising group set up by WBUR to handle local underwriting.Even though BU doubled WRNI's transmission power to 10,000 watts, its signal was not strong enough to reach the southern and western portion of the state. Accordingly, in 1999, BU bought WERI in Westerly, which had been on the air since 1949. BU changed WERI's call letters to WXNI, and made it a full-time satellite of WRNI. The station brought a city-grade NPR signal to southern Rhode Island for the first time.
BU and WBUR had big plans for WRNI at first. It moved WRNI from its longtime studio on Douglas Avenue to a state-of-the-art facility at Union Station. It also started a daily two-hour local news magazine, One Union Station. There were plans to set up a third station to fill the gaps in WXNI's 1,000-watt signal.
However, budget problems brought on by the September 11, 2001 attacks forced One Union Station's cancellation. It was replaced with a one-hour news magazine but that was also canceled in 2004. At that point, WRNI's local operations were significantly cut back, with most of the station's staff either laid off or transferred to Boston. As a result, WRNI's schedule became almost identical to that of WBUR.
Controversy over sale of 1290 AM
On September 17, 2004, with no advance warning, WBUR Group general manager Jane Christo announced that WRNI and WXNI were being put up for sale. She would not give any specifics, only saying that it was time for Rhode Islanders to buy the stations if they wanted to keep NPR programming in the state. WBUR claimed that it never planned to operate WRNI on a long-term basis, and had only intended to help develop it into a self-sustaining service.The reaction in Rhode Island was negative. In an editorial, The Providence Journal said that WBUR had made numerous long-term commitments to WRNI. The Journal claimed that if the station's local backers had to buy WRNI, it would be tantamount to buying the station twice.
The announcement led Rhode Island Attorney General Patrick Lynch to open an investigation into WBUR and WRNI.
On September 27, BU interim president Aram Chobanian delayed the sale of WRNI and WXNI, citing concerns raised by both Lynch and Rhode Island Governor Don Carcieri. Memos obtained by The Boston Globe revealed that WBUR felt the Rhode Island stations were money bleeders, and had decided to either lease or sell the stations at the earliest opportunity. The furor over the WRNI sale was one factor in Christo's resignation almost a month later.
In June 2005, BU took WRNI and WXNI off the market. It promised to hire a full-time general manager based in Providence, and also stepped-up local news coverage. As a result, Lynch closed his investigation in November 2006.
Independence from WBUR
On March 21, 2007, WBUR announced that it was selling WRNI to Rhode Island Public Radio for $2 million. Rhode Island Public Radio also announced it was buying WAKX in Narragansett Pier from the Davidson Media Group to serve as a repeater for WRNI in southern Rhode Island. WAKX, which signed on in 1989, had been a smooth jazz station. As part of the sale agreement, BU agreed to provide engineering and programming assistance to RIPR for five years.RIPR officially took control of WAKX on May 17, 2007. The call sign was changed to WRNI-FM. The addition of WRNI-FM made WXNI redundant, and BU sold that station separately to Diponti Communications, which renamed it WBLQ. RIPR took control of WRNI on September 1, 2008.
Migration to FM, expansion of coverage
RIPR recognized the long-term challenges of public radio on the AM dial. There was a general expectation by listeners that public radio stations transmit on the noncommercial end of the FM band. In 2011 WRNI began to expand into a statewide network of FM signals. Accordingly, it also began branding itself exclusively as "Rhode Island Public Radio".In July 2011, RIPR entered an agreement with WCVY, which is owned and operated by Coventry High School and covers the Kent County region. Previously, because WCVY did not broadcast 24/7, they had been forced, under Federal Communications Commission rule 73.561, to "share-time" 16 hours per day of the frequency with the now-defunct religious station WRJI. After WRJI lost its license, RIPR assisted WCVY in "reclaiming" the frequency for 24/7 operation. With the 2011 agreement, WCVY aired its own student-created programming on weekdays from 2-8p.m. when school is in session, and The Public's Radio filled the remainder of the time to avoid another "share-time" challenge. The lease agreement ended in April 2021 and WCVY left the network.
In October 2011, RIPR signed a 10-year lease with The Wheeler School, a K-12 private day school and owner of WELH. RIPR's content would be heard 24/7 on 88.1 in Providence except for a student-produced sports talk program midnight-3 Saturday mornings. The remainder of Wheeler's student media was migrated to internet radio and, more recently, to internet video projects. As part of this new lease, the previous lease tenants on 88.1, Brown Student Radio, and Latino Public Radio, each broadcasting a limited number of hours each day, were displaced:
- BSR began an internet radio station "BSRlive" and, in January 2015, was granted an FCC license for an LPFM station, WBRU-LP, on 101.1 FM in Providence, in conjunction with Providence Community Radio and AS220.
- Latino Public Radio signed a lease with RIPR to broadcast on RIPR's 1290 AM signal, WRNI, and moved to 1290 AM the same day RIPR moved to 88.1 FM. In addition to allowing LPR to broadcast 24/7, it also gave them a larger signal.
Construction quickly began to expand 89.3 by refurbishing the old WLNE tower, and a "license to cover" was applied for with the FCC on August 2, 2018 indicating imminent operation from the new facility. Three days earlier, WXNI changed its call letters to WNPN. On September 1, 2018, WNPN began transmitting full-time from the Tiverton facility. The move roughly doubled the coverage of the original facility, providing at least secondary coverage to all of Rhode Island. Notably, it added 700,000 new listeners in Rhode Island and the South Coast. The following month, Rhode Island Public Radio rebranded its network as The Public's Radio; CEO Torey Malatia explained that since they now served the South Coast as well as Rhode Island, RIPR staff no longer believed it was accurate to brand the network as merely being a Rhode Island service. After originally considering a rebranding to "Southern New England Public Radio", Malatia and his colleagues decided it was best to choose an identity "based on what we do as opposed to our zip code".
After the Portsmouth Abbey School returned the license for WJHD to the FCC in September 2021, RIPR asked them to rescind the license deletion and purchased it on November 26, 2021, for $7500 plus technical assistance in their "podcast studio". The call letters were changed to WNPK and an application filed to move 90.7 off-campus to a tower in South Kingstown near the University of Rhode Island, greatly expanding the signal. At the moment, the now-WNPH operates at a low power while waiting for the FCC to approve its application to move to a new tower in and greatly expand the signal.
At the end of September 2021, repeater station W275DA began broadcasting on 102.9 FM in Providence from the WPRO-FM tower on Neutaconkanut Hill. Concordantly, RIPR elected not to renew the 10-year lease of WELH upon its expiration. On September 30, 2021, WELH reverted to Wheeler School-created programming full-time.
In December 2021, to avoid significant looming infrastructure repair costs and ongoing operating expenses, WPVD's signal was modified from 10,000 watts directional to 400 watts day and 16 watts night.