KULF


KULF is a terrestrial AM daytimer radio station, paired with an FM relay translator, based in Bellville, Texas.
Licensed to Bellville, Texas, United States, it serves the Victoria and Houston regional area. The station is owned by Jerome Friemel, through licensee JLF Communications, LLC.
The station operates on a Class D daytime license on 1090 kHz. Because KULF shares the same frequency as clear-channel station KAAY in Little Rock, Arkansas, it only broadcasts during daytime hours.
It previously was on 790 AM from August 1970 to early July 1982, when the call letters changed to KKBQ.

History

Birth of Radio 1090 KACO

1090 signed on the air in 1974 as Austin County's first and only licensed radio station. It was owned by Mr. and Mrs. J. Lee Dittert. 1090 was granted the calls of KACO, representing not just service to its community of license Bellville, but to the entire Austin County population. KACO started as a 250-watt daytimer featuring a country & western format.

KACO Sold; Henderson Stewardship

In 1990, the Dittert family sold the facility to Roy Henderson, with the original KACO call letters being retired in 1993, as 1090 changed its callsign to KFRD, which itself had been located at 980 AM in Rosenberg, Texas, since its sign-on in 1949.
Four years later, 1090 received a grant to change its call letters again and use the KNUZ calls that had occupied 1230 AM in Houston since the 1940s. As KNUZ, and under Roy Henderson's direction, the station simulcasted "Lite 94.1" KLTR out of Brenham.
In November 2009, the facility dropped the KNUZ call letters and briefly used KBAL, until a switch could be made with the co-owned facility in San Saba. As a result of the call switch, the KNUZ calls are now used for 106.1 FM in San Saba, the former KBAL.

Sale to JLF Communications; Flip to Brokered

In December 2009, the station was sold for a reported $500,000 by Roy E. Henderson to JHT Ventures, Inc., 100% controlled by Janice Hollan. JHT sold KULF to Jerome Friemel's JLF Communications, LLC at a purchase price of $10,000; the transaction was consummated on January 29, 2013. 1090 returned to the air with an Oldies format stunt that lasted until paid programming could be secured for the signal to air. Once that occurred, the temporary Oldies format was dropped and replaced with Spanish language Christian programming "La Luz". This programming would prove to be short lived as well.
In August 2015, JLF Communications added a translator at 102.5, bringing 1090's programming to FM.
In January 2016, KULF was stopped as a result of non-payment of rent to the landowner on which the KULF towers and transmission equipment reside. According to radio insider sources, the landowner had a court order that gave him legal possession of all equipment related to KULF, sans the broadcast license itself. The Houston FCC agent took KULF off of the air, as for a period of over a month, 1090 remained on air both day and night, running 1,000 watts of dead air.
As of May 2016, KULF has returned to the air at full power, resuming programming.

Translator