#Phlo tv .edu tv#
"Public TV station to change call letters".
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The station continues to air public television from other sources such as American Public Television and the National Educational Telecommunications Association. Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 15. The station's digital signal continued to broadcast on its pre-transition UHF channel 33. WDSC-TV shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 15, which due to major equipment failure had been operating at significantly reduced power since September 25, 2008, on December 15 of that year. The station's digital signal is multiplexed: (WUCF-TV moved to the former WMFE-TV in 2012, a move that led to WBCC, now WEFS, departing PBS as well.) These moves left WBCC of Cocoa, which began branding as WUCF-TV at that time, as the only PBS station in the Central Florida television market. PBS programming disappeared from channel 15 on JWMFE also left PBS on the same date due to its then-planned sale to Daystar. However, on June 16, 2011, WDSC and PBS announced that the station would leave PBS, as Daytona State College could no longer afford to purchase its programming, following $4.8 million of funding to Florida's public radio and television stations vetoed by Governor Rick Scott in May 2011. While it had been available on cable in Orlando for over a decade, its digital signal, located in Bithlo with most other television stations in the market, gives it an over-the-air coverage area comparable to the market's previous primary PBS station WMFE-TV. With the advent of digital broadcasting, WDSC-TV began billing itself as a full-market PBS station, including Orlando. The college subsequently changed its name again to Daytona State College to reflect this, in November 2008, channel 15 changed its call letters to the current WDSC-TV, after purchasing the rights to the call letters from a radio station in Dillon, South Carolina. In January 2008, it rebranded itself again merely as Channel 15, after DBCC became Daytona Beach College. In 2005, WCEU rebranded itself as DBCC 15 to better reflect its relationship with DBCC. It moved to its current facility in 1999. In 1992, a signal expansion and must-carry rules expanded WCEU's audience to over 1.3 million viewers in Central Florida, including Orlando itself. By January 1989, it was a full-fledged PBS member station, though it didn't expand to a fuller broadcast day until 1993. Support in the area was enough that within nine months, it was recognized by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Channel 15 signed on February 8, 1988, as WCEU with a limited schedule of three hours a day, three days a week.
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They felt WMFE-TV, the PBS station in Orlando, was neglecting Daytona Beach.
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In 1985, DSC (then known as Daytona Beach Community College), Bethune–Cookman College, Stetson University, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and the Atlantic Center for the Arts formed the Coastal Educational Broadcasters consortium in order to bring a public television station to Volusia and Flagler counties.