WDIY has an air staff of over 90 volunteers and a professional staff of six employees, including an executive director. The station is licensed to the Lehigh Valley Community Broadcasters Association, Inc., a nonprofit organization whose mission "is to engage the Lehigh Valley community through a wide-ranging exchange of music, arts, news and culturally diverse information."[4][5]
Background
WDIY began broadcasting on January 8, 1995, operating at 100 watts.[2] Before then, the Lehigh Valley was one of the few areas of Pennsylvania without a locally-based NPR station. WHYY-FM in Philadelphia provides grade B coverage to most of the Lehigh Valley, while WVIA-FM in Scranton has long operated low-powered translators serving parts of the region.
Although WDIY's transmitter power was very low for a full NPR member, its antenna on top of South Mountain enabled the station to reach most of the immediate Lehigh Valley region. In 2015, the Federal Communications Commission approved a request to triple the station's power to 300 watts. Although still operating with relatively modest power for a full NPR member, the power increase significantly expanded WDIY's reach, enabling the station to serve a coverage area of over a half-million people. Its full broadcast area now extends 70 miles, from Clinton, New Jersey to the eastern edge of Reading, Pennsylvania.[6][7]
As a public station, WDIY depends on listener support as one of its major sources of revenue. Due in part to the power increase, the station's membership of listener supporters nearly doubled, increasing from 1,100 in 2008 to around 2,000 today.[8]
WDIY began broadcasting on 88.1 FM at 100 watts. Even though its South Mountain transmitter was at 843 feet above average terrain, the station had a relatively limited reach, confined for the most part to Lehigh and Northampton counties. Easton, the region's third-largest city, on the eastern edge of Northampton County, only received a grade B signal.[6][9] To improve its Easton coverage, WDIY installed a translator at 93.9, which also serves neighboring Warren County in New Jersey. With its power increase to 300 watts in 2015, WDIY covers not only the Valley but now can be heard in the surrounding regions of eastern Pennsylvania as well as additional parts of western New Jersey.[5]