Stations
| Station | City of license | Channels (Digital) |
First air date | Call letters’ meaning |
ERP (Digital) |
HAAT (Digital) |
Facility ID | Transmitter Coordinates |
| WLPB-TV | Baton Rouge | 27 (UHF) | September 6, 1975 | Louisiana Public Broadcasting |
200 kW | 295 m | 38586 | 30°22′23″N 91°12′17.3″W / 30.37306°N 91.204806°W / 30.37306; -91.204806 (WLPB-TV) |
| KLTM-TV | Monroe | 13 (VHF) | September 8, 1976 | Louisiana Television Monroe |
6.7 kW | 153.8 m | 38589 | 32°31′40″N 92°6′8.7″W / 32.52778°N 92.102417°W / 32.52778; -92.102417 (KLTM-TV) |
| KLTS-TV | Shreveport | 24 (UHF) | August 9, 1978 | Louisiana Television Shreveport |
57 kW | 258 m | 38591 | 32°40′40.1″N 93°55′30.6″W / 32.677806°N 93.925167°W / 32.677806; -93.925167 (KLTS-TV) |
| KLPB-TV | Lafayette | 24 (UHF) | May 19813 | Louisiana Public Broadcasting |
50 kW | 463.2 m | 38588 | 30°2′39″N 92°22′15.3″W / 30.04417°N 92.370917°W / 30.04417; -92.370917 (KLPB-TV) (analog) 30°19′18.1″N 92°16′58.7″W / 30.321694°N 92.282972°W / 30.321694; -92.282972 (KLPB-TV) |
| KLTL-TV | Lake Charles | 18 (UHF) | May 5, 1981 | Louisiana Television Lake Charles |
55 kW | 299.1 m | 38587 | 30°23′46.8″N 93°0′3.6″W / 30.396333°N 93.001°W / 30.396333; -93.001 (KLTL-TV) |
| KLPA-TV | Alexandria | 25Bold text (UHF) | July 1, 1983 | Louisiana Public Alexandria |
76 kW | 413 m | 38590 | 31°33′57.2″N 92°32′50.7″W / 31.565889°N 92.547417°W / 31.565889; -92.547417 (KLPA-TV) |
Note: 1. The Broadcasting and Cable Yearbook says KLPB-TV signed on May 2, while the Television and Cable Factbook says it signed on May 13. 2. In the New Orleans market, WLAE-TV is 50% owned by LPB and carries some LPB programming, mostly news and public affairs. WYES has rights to most PBS programming in prime time in New Orleans.
Read more about this topic: Louisiana Public Broadcasting
Famous quotes containing the word stations:
“The only road to the highest stations in this country is that of the law.”
—William Jones (17461794)
“After I was married a year I remembered things like radio stations and forgot my husband.”
—P. J. Wolfson, John L. Balderston (18991954)
“A reader who quarrels with postulates, who dislikes Hamlet because he does not believe that there are ghosts or that people speak in pentameters, clearly has no business in literature. He cannot distinguish fiction from fact, and belongs in the same category as the people who send cheques to radio stations for the relief of suffering heroines in soap operas.”
—Northrop Frye (b. 1912)