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Coordinates: 55°46′32″N 4°02′51″W / 55.7756°N 4.0476°W / 55.7756; -4.0476
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{{Wikify|date=April 2011}}
{{Wikify|date=April 2011}}


L107 replaced '107 The Edge', which was originally launched as 'Clan FM' from 1999 until 2003, when it was saved from closure by the Kingdom Radio Group and rebranded. Within two years, the station was again saved from closure by former Radio 1 and Radio Clyde presenter Mark Page (founder of the UK forces station Garrison Radio), who led its relaunch as L107, a full service local station.[2]
'''L107''' was the [[Scotland|Scottish]] independent local radio station which broadcast to [[Lanarkshire]] on 107.5 and 107.9 FM.<ref>[http://licensing.ofcom.org.uk/radio-broadcast-licensing/monthly-updates/update1210/ OFCOM Radio Broadcast Update - December 2010]</ref>

The station closed at 10am on 18 August 2008 but reopened at 9am on 26 August 2008 following a buyout and continued broadcasting for another two years.[3] The station went off air for almost a week on 30 April 2010 when its main transmitter was removed from its Hamilton site.[4][5]
==History==
L107 replaced '107 The Edge', which was originally launched as 'Clan FM' from 1999 until 2003, when it was saved from closure by the Kingdom Radio Group and rebranded. Within two years, the station was again saved from closure by former Radio 1 and Radio Clyde presenter Mark Page (founder of the UK forces station Garrison Radio), who led its relaunch as L107, a full service local station.<ref>[http://radiotoday.co.uk/news.php?extend.3713 L107 leaves the airwaves], Radio Today, 18 August 2008</ref>
Transmission of regular L107 programming was interrupted again on Friday 29 October 2010. After a period of a week of dead air followed by several days of automated music & commercials, L107's licence was handed back to the broadcasting regulator Ofcom on Thursday 11 November 2010 with the station's frequencies closed shortly afterwards.[6] Earlier that month, the regulator had recorded a breach of format against the station for providing an insufficient local news service.[7]

ref>[http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binaries/broadcast/radio-ops/sampling/L107.pdf OFCOM Content Sampling Report - L107], 1 November 2010</ref>
The station closed at 10am on 18 August 2008 but was again saved and reopened at 9am on 26 August 2008 following a buyout and managed to continue broadcasting for yet another two years.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.allmediascotland.com/articles/2931/20082008/lanarkshire_station_saved_from_closure|title=Lanarkshire Station Saved from Closure |date=2008-08-20|accessdate=2008-08-22 |publisher=All Media Scotland}}</ref>
The station went off air for almost a week on 30 April 2010 when its main transmitter was removed from its Hamilton site.<ref>[http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/scottish-news/2010/05/01/thieves-nick-radio-transmitter-while-station-is-on-the-air-86908-22225555/ Thieves nick transmitter while radio station is on the air], Daily Record, 1 May 2010</ref><ref>[http://www.hamiltonadvertiser.co.uk/2010/05/13/l107-back-on-air-after-return-of-missing-transmitter-51525-26432735/ L107 back on air after return of missing transmitter], Hamilton Advertiser, May 13, 2010.</ref>

Transmission of regular L107 programming was interrupted again on Friday 29 October 2010 when the main transmitter was again interfered with from outwith the station.
After a period of a week of dead air followed by several days of automated music & commercials, L107's licence was handed back to the broadcasting regulator [[Ofcom]] this attempt was unsuccessful and the licence remained in the hands of the rightful owners but after much discussion over actual ownership and without the agreement of all interested parties being in place yet another attempt at a handback was made which, after much deliberation, was eventually reluctantly accepted by the regulator on Thursday 11 November 2010 with the station's frequencies closing shortly afterwards.<ref>[http://radiotoday.co.uk/news.php?extend.6454.2 L107 hands licence back to Ofcom], 12 November 2010</ref> Earlier that month, the regulator had recorded a minor breach of format against the station with regard to its provision of local news.<ref>[http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binaries/broadcast/radio-ops/sampling/L107.pdf OFCOM Content Sampling Report - L107], 1 November 2010</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 19:34, 10 November 2011


L107 replaced '107 The Edge', which was originally launched as 'Clan FM' from 1999 until 2003, when it was saved from closure by the Kingdom Radio Group and rebranded. Within two years, the station was again saved from closure by former Radio 1 and Radio Clyde presenter Mark Page (founder of the UK forces station Garrison Radio), who led its relaunch as L107, a full service local station.[2]

The station closed at 10am on 18 August 2008 but reopened at 9am on 26 August 2008 following a buyout and continued broadcasting for another two years.[3] The station went off air for almost a week on 30 April 2010 when its main transmitter was removed from its Hamilton site.[4][5]

Transmission of regular L107 programming was interrupted again on Friday 29 October 2010. After a period of a week of dead air followed by several days of automated music & commercials, L107's licence was handed back to the broadcasting regulator Ofcom on Thursday 11 November 2010 with the station's frequencies closed shortly afterwards.[6] Earlier that month, the regulator had recorded a breach of format against the station for providing an insufficient local news service.[7] ref>OFCOM Content Sampling Report - L107, 1 November 2010</ref>

References

55°46′32″N 4°02′51″W / 55.7756°N 4.0476°W / 55.7756; -4.0476