Federal Communications Commission DA 20-316 Before the FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20554 In the Matter of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and First Energy Corp. Request for Amendment of Waiver ) ) ) ) PS Docket No. 19-255 ORDER Adopted: March 20, 2020 Released: March 20, 2020 By the Chief, Policy and Licensing Division, Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau: I. INTRODUCTION 1. In this Order, we address a petition for waiver of the Commission’s rules, jointly filed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania) and FirstEnergy Corp. (FirstEnergy) (together, Petitioners). Petition of Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and FirstEnergy Corp. Request for Amendment of Waiver DA-1756, PS Docket No. 19-255, at 2 (filed Nov. 4. 2019) (Petition). In 1999, the Wireless Telecommunications Bureau (WTB) granted a waiver of section 90.179 of the Commission’s rules allowing Pennsylvania and First Energy’s predecessor to jointly operate a statewide 800 MHz Public Safety/Power Radio Service system on a non-profit, cost shared basis. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and GPU Energy Request for Waiver of Section 90.179 of the Commission’s Rules, Order, 14 FCC Rcd 14029, 14029, para. 1 (WTB 1999) (1999 Waiver Order) (granting waiver for 800 MHz shared use). In the instant request, Petitioners ask the Commission to interpret the 1999 Waiver Order to allow Petitioners to add VHF channels to the joint system. See Initial Channels Subject to Sharing Arrangement, PS Docket No. 19-255 (filed Nov. 4, 2019) (VHF List) (List of FirstEnergy and Commonwealth of Pennsylvania proposed shared callsigns and frequencies). In the alternative, Petitioners request that the 1999 waiver be amended or that a new waiver be granted to permit adding the VHF channels. Supplement to Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and FirstEnergy Corp. Request for Clarification or Amendment of Waiver, PS Docket No. 19-255, at 2 (filed Nov. 4. 2019) (Supplement). As we noted in this proceeding’s opening public notice, Petitioners jointly submitted its materials to Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau staff for consideration. See Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau Seeks Comment on Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and FirstEnergy Corp. Request for Clarification or, in the Alternative, Waiver to Share VHF Frequencies, Public Notice, DA 19-1131, at 1 n.2 (PSHSB Nov. 1, 2019) (Public Notice). Based on the record in this proceeding, and for the reasons discussed below, we grant a new waiver allowing addition of VHF channels to Petitioners’ statewide system. II. BACKGROUND 2. The 1999 Waiver Order granted Pennsylvania and GPU Energy—a predecessor in interest to FirstEnergy Corp., a waiver of section 90.179 to construct and operate a shared network on 800 MHz Public Safety and Industrial/Land Transportation (I/LT) frequencies to be used by Public Safety and Power Radio eligibles on a non-profit, cost-shared basis. 1999 Waiver, 14 FCC Rcd at 14036, para. 15. Petitioners claim that the statewide system has now reached the end of its lifecycle and is being upgraded, at least in part, to Project 25 Phase II technology. Pennsylvania Reply at 1. As part of the upgrade, Petitioners propose to add 422 VHF channels to the system to increase coverage and replace legacy 800 MHz facilities in certain areas. Id.; FirstEnergy Reply at 1-2. Petitioners state that the legacy system, with pole-mounted antennas, “do[es] not have equipment shelters, adequate backup power, or robust backhaul.” Supplement at 2. Petitioners also submit that upgrading the legacy system without using the requested VHF channels “would impose overwhelming financial and logistics burdens.” Id. 3. In their March 12, 2019 filing, Petitioners ask the Commission to interpret the 1999 Waiver Order to allow them to add VHF channels to their system and to use the channels on the same shared basis as the system’s 800 MHz channels. Petitioners originally submitted their Petition and Supplement via emailed letters to the Public Safety and Homeland Security and Wireless Telecommunication Bureau staff. See Letter from Gregory E. Kunkle, Keller and Heckman LLP, to Donald Stockdale, Chief, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, and Lisa M. Fowlkes, Chief, Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau (Mar. 12, 2019); Supplement to Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and FirstEnergy Corp. Request for Clarification or Amendment of Waiver (Aug. 19, 2019). Petitioners subsequently filed these documents electronically via ECFS in the instant docket on November 4, 2019. Alternatively, Petitioners request that the Commission allow incorporation of VHF channels into the shared system either by amending the 1999 waiver Petition at 2. or by granting a new waiver. Id. 4. On November 1, 2019, the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau (Bureau) placed Petitioners’ proposal, as supplemented, on public notice. Public Notice. The Bureau received comments from the State of Maryland Department of Information Technology (Maryland) and the Commonwealth of Virginia Department of State Police (Virginia), See Comments of State of Maryland Department of Information Technology (Maryland Comments), and the Commonwealth of Virginia Department of State Police (Virginia Comments). and Pennsylvania and First Energy filed reply comments. See Reply Comments of FirstEnergy Corp. (FirstEnergy Reply), Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania Reply). Maryland generally supports Petitioners’ request, as does Virginia, with some qualifications. Maryland submits that “a plain reading of the 1999 waiver supports the use of both [800 MHz and VHF] frequency bands in a shared land mobile radio communications system.” Maryland Comments at 1. Virginia asserts that the Commission’s rules “make no provision for amending previously granted waivers” Virginia Comments at 2. and asks that any waiver granted be limited to operating within the territorial limits of Pennsylvania, since FirstEnergy operates in multiple states. See Virginia Comments at 2-4. Virginia notes that FirstEnergy Corp. has customers in “West Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia, and facilities in Virginia.” Virginia Comments at 2. In its reply, FirstEnergy states that it does not object to Virginia’s conditions, See FirstEnergy Reply at 2-3. and Pennsylvania clarifies that Petitioners only seek to “share facilities serving Pennsylvania.” Pennsylvania Reply at 2. III. DISCUSSION 5. Petitioners propose to add VHF channels to the statewide system as follows: (1) Pennsylvania will contribute 301 Part 90 Public Safety channels See infra Appx. A. The channels are licensed to Pennsylvania under 53 call signs. ; and (2) FirstEnergy will contribute 83 Part 90 Industrial/Business channels and 38 Part 22 VHF channels. See infra Appx. B. The channels are licensed to Fist Energy under 5 call signs We address these channel categories in turn. A. Pennsylvania Public Safety Channels 6. We grant Petitioners’ request for a waiver of Section 90.179 with respect to the use of Pennsylvania’s VHF Public Safety pool channels. As a threshold matter, we decline Petitioners’ request to interpret the 1999 Waiver Order to allow shared use of VHF channels. The initiating waiver request that led to the 1999 order was limited to 800 MHz channels and did not seek use of VHF channels or channels in any other band. Had WTB intended to include other spectrum bands besides 800 MHz in the 1999 Waiver Order, it would have explicitly done so. We also do not agree with Maryland that the order can be assumed to have authorized use of VHF channels because it did not explicitly exclude them. Maryland Comments at 1. Such an interpretation is overbroad in that it would potentially allow Petitioners to use any frequency suitable for land mobile use, independent of the effect on incumbent licensees, without notice to the Commission or other stakeholders. 7. While we do not adopt Petitioners’ interpretation of the 1999 Waiver Order, we conclude that their alternative waiver request has merit. To obtain a waiver of the Commission’s rules, a petitioner must demonstrate either that (i) the underlying purpose of the rule(s) would not be served or would be frustrated by application to the present case, and that a grant of the waiver would be in the public interest; 47 CFR § 1.925(b)(3)(i). or (ii) in view of unique or unusual factual circumstances of the instant case, application of the rule(s) would be inequitable, unduly burdensome, or contrary to the public interest, or the applicant has no reasonable alternative. 47 CFR § 1.925(b)(3)(ii). 8. Section 90.179(a) provides that “persons may share a radio station only on frequencies for which they would be eligible for a separate authorization.” 47 CFR § 90.179(a). This limitation was imposed to ensure adequate spectrum is available for each service category (e.g., Public Safety and Industrial/Business) and to avoid incompatible services interfering with one another. See generally, e.g., Middle Tennessee Electric Membership Corp., 34 FCC Rcd 2455, (PSHSB April 25, 2019), citing State of Ohio and FirstEnergy Corp., Order, 31 FCC Rcd 8758 (PSHSB 2016); State of Michigan, et al, Order, 27 FCC Rcd 214 (PSHSB 2012); State of Ohio and Ohio Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc., Order, 24 FCC Rcd 2289 (PSHSB 2009). Petitioners assert that granting a waiver to allow shared use of VHF channels in their combined system will serve a multitude of federal, state, and local agencies, and that giving local entities currently using VHF facilities access to a shared network with VHF channels promotes interoperability and would be less costly than constructing 800 MHz facilities. See Supplement at 3-4 (claiming the entities to be served are the Department of Agriculture, Department of Conservation & Natural Resources, Department of Corrections, Department of Environmental Protection, Department of General Services - Capitol Police, Department of Health, Department of Military & Veterans Affairs, Department of Transportation, Office of Attorney General, Office of Inspector General, Pennsylvania Board of Probation & Parole, Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency, Pennsylvania Game Commission, Pennsylvania House of Representatives, Pennsylvania Office of Administrative Services, Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, Pennsylvania Treasury Department, Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission, State System of Higher Education, Pennsylvania State Police, US DOJ-ATF, US DOJ-DEA, US DOJ-US Marshalls, US DOI-National Park Service, Warren County, Mifflin County, Montour County, Columbia County, FirstEnergy). 9. We conclude that Petitioners have demonstrated the need to add VHF public safety channels to the system on the same shared-use basis that applies to its 800 MHz channels. Petitioners note that due to the superior propagation characteristics of VHF transmissions, VHF channels provide optimum coverage in Pennsylvania’s rugged terrain and densely forested areas. Supplement at 1. They point to a recent incident – the largest manhunt in Pennsylvania’s history – in which the existing 800 MHz system did not provide full coverage in these areas. Id. at 1-2. Petitioners state that VHF was needed during the manhunt to “adequately cover the area” and that VHF sites are presently being incorporated to “increase coverage outside . . . of more highly populated areas.” Id. at 1, 3. Petitioners’ showing that Pennsylvania’s 800 MHz system has provided insufficient coverage in rural, rugged, and forested areas demonstrates that strict application of section 90.179(a) in this case would be unduly burdensome and costly. Given the documented coverage problems inherent in Petitioners using an 800 MHz-only system in rural and rugged environments, and in light of the fact that there appear to be no reasonable alternatives available to Petitioners to meet the coverage shortfall, we find the public interest dictates granting the waiver. B. FirstEnergy Industrial/Business and Part 22 Channels 10. Part 90 Industrial/Business Channels. Section 90.179(h) of the Commission’s rules provides that “licensees authorized to operate radio systems on Industrial/Business Pool frequencies designated in § 90.35 may share their facilities with Public Safety Pool entities designated in § 90.20 and with federal agencies on a non-profit cost-shared basis.” Therefore, section 90.179 poses no impediment to FirstEnergy sharing its Industrial/Business 800 MHz and VHF frequencies with Pennsylvania and with federal agencies. 11. Part 22 Channels. FirstEnergy proposes to contribute 38 Part 22 VHF channels to the shared system. See generally VHF List (showing FirstEnergy Part 22 callsigns); Supplement at 2. In its reply comments, FirstEnergy notes that no waiver is required for shared use of Part 22 channels. FirstEnergy Reply at 2-3 (“the Request applies only to Part 90 channels and no waiver is required for shared use of Part 22 channels.”). We agree. In 2017, the Commission eliminated Section 20.9 of the rules, which required licensees on channels allocated for commercial use to seek waivers or submit certifications to the Commission in order to provide non-commercial services. See Amendments to Harmonize and Streamline Part 20 of the Commission’s Rules Concerning Requirements for Licensees to Overcome a CMRS Presumption, Report and Order, 32 FCC Rcd 10731, 10738, para. 14 (2017). The Commission stated that the “elimination of Section 20.9 will help bring beneficial services to businesses, state and local governments, and the public safety community, while reducing the administrative burdens and processing delays that certain providers of these services currently face.” Id. at 10739 para 16. As a result of this rule change, Petitioners’ proposed non-commercial shared use of Part 22 channels as part of the Pennsylvania/FirstEnergy system is permissible without a waiver. We remind Petitioners, however, that use of Part 22 channels must conform to the Part 22 technical rules. Should Petitioners wish to deviate from the Part 22 technical rules, they must first obtain a waiver. C. Applicability of the Waiver to Future Facilities and Channels. 12. Petitioners ask that any waiver relief not only apply to the specific VHF channels identified in the Petition but also to any future stations that may be added later, “to avoid the unnecessarily burdensome administrative task of refiling a waiver request each time a site is constructed or modified.” Supplement at 5. We have declined to grant such open-ended relief in similar waiver cases, See, e.g., American Electric Power Service Corporation, 15 FCC Rcd 15553, 15557, paras. 10-12 (WTB 2000) (discussing [denying?] public safety pool licensees’ request to inter alia “add their frequencies to AEP’s [American Electric Power] system without further authorization.” Id. at 15557, para. 10.). and we decline to do so here, as it would foreclose the Commission from being able to assess the impact of future expansion of Petitioners’ system on the supply of frequencies available for other users in the area, especially public safety users. However, should Petitioners apply for additional VHF channels or facilities to expand their system in the future, they may request amendment of this waiver to include such channels or facilities, subject to an appropriate showing that the Commission’s waiver criteria are met. IV. ORDERING CLAUSES 13. Accordingly, IT IS ORDERED, that pursuant to sections 4(i), 303(c), and 303(r) of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. §§ 154(i), 303(c), and 303(r), and sections 1.3, 1.925, 90.179(a), 1.3, and 1.925, of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR §§ 1.3, 1.925, and 90.179(a), the waiver request jointly filed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and FirstEnergy Corporation, as supplemented, IS GRANTED IN PART to the extent that the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and FirstEnergy Corporation may share the frequencies currently licensed to the call signs listed in the Appendix. 14. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the portion of the waiver request jointly filed by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and FirstEnergy Corporation, as supplemented, that seeks a waiver to share Part 22 frequencies is DISMISSED AS MOOT. 15. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that, in the event of a use conflict between a public safety user of the shared system and any other user, priority shall be afforded to the public safety user. 16. This action is taken under delegated authority pursuant to sections 0.191 and 0.392 of the Commission’s rules, 47 CFR §§ 0.191 and 0.392. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION Michael J. Wilhelm Chief, Policy and Licensing Division Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau Appendix A Part 90 VHF Public Safety Callsigns and Frequencies List of approved Commonwealth of Pennsylvania part 90 VHF public safety pool call signs and frequencies approved for sharing with FirstEnergy by the Bureau by this Order: 2 Call Sign Frequency (MHz) WQUZ231 159.21 WQVL664 154.935 WQVL664 154.92 WQUX679 151.3475 WQUX679 151.1525 WQUX679 151.295 WQUX679 154.95 WQUX679 156.0075 WQUX679 156.15 WQUE282 158.73 WQUE282 159.1275 WQUE282 159.375 WQUE282 154.7175 WQUE282 156.0375 WQUE282 156.0825 WQUC589 151.235 WQUC589 159.33 WQUC589 151.475 WQUC589 153.95 WQUC589 155.985 WQUC589 156.03 WQUX677 151.115 WQUX677 151.22 WQUX677 151.415 WQUX677 154.95 WQUX677 155.91 WQUX677 156.0375 WQVB532 151.4675 WQVB532 155.5275 WQVB532 156.1275 WQVB532 153.7475 WQVB532 153.8975 WQVB532 153.9575 WQVV847 155.73 WQVV847 159.1425 WQVV847 159.3225 WQVV847 153.8075 WQVV847 153.8825 WQVV847 154.0025 WQVF450 151.01 WQVF450 154.0625 WQVF450 159.1275 WQVF450 155.5275 WQVF450 155.6325 WQVF450 156.045 WQLT327 151.175 WQLT327 151.295 WQLT327 151.385 WQLT327 151.4 WQLT327 154.905 WQLT327 154.92 WQLT327 155.505 WQLT327 155.58 WQLT327 154.755 WQUY910 159.1875 WQUY910 154.83 WQUY910 155.85 WQVR897 151.1975 WQVR897 155.3025 WQVR897 155.5425 WQVR897 153.7475 WQVR897 153.8375 WQVR897 154.0175 WQVT983 151.0325 WQVT983 159.405 WQVT983 154.71 WQVT983 155.91 WQUE287 158.8125 WQUE287 159.105 WQUE287 159.24 WQUE287 153.9425 WQUE287 154.65 WQUE287 156.0675 WQUX222 155.67 WQUX222 154.68 WQUX222 154.8525 WQUX222 159.3 WQUX222 159.4125 WQUX222 158.985 WQVG226 155.58 WQVG226 154.905 WQVG226 151.385 WQVG226 159.4275 WQVG226 159.3525 WQVG226 159.255 WQUV758 151.2275 WQUV758 155.52 WQUV758 156.21 WQUV758 158.9025 WQUV758 158.9625 WQUV758 159.03 WQUY467 154.1675 WQUY467 154.905 WQUY467 155.46 WQUY467 150.805 WQUY467 159.2025 WQUY467 159.3975 WQUY816 154.13 WQUY816 154.4225 WQUY816 154.9725 WQUY816 158.7825 WQUY816 151.025 WQUY816 151.13 WQRJ856 154.665 WQRJ856 154.755 WQRJ856 154.92 WQRJ856 155.445 WQRJ856 158.7525 WQRJ856 158.91 WQRJ856 158.955 WQRJ856 159.1275 WQWG501 158.7975 WQWG501 159.2175 WQWG501 159.2325 WQWG501 151.2425 WQWG501 154.4375 WQWG501 156.0375 WQVL665 154.9425 WQVL665 155.4675 WQVL665 155.505 WQVL665 159.345 WQVL665 151.4 WQVL665 159.42 WQWE404 151.085 WQWE404 151.4825 WQWE404 154.1375 WQWE404 155.85 WQWE404 155.985 WQWE404 158.985 WQVA509 151.385 WQVA509 151.1825 WQVA509 155.2425 WQVA509 158.865 WQVA509 158.9475 WQVA509 159.0225 WQUX676 158.8425 WQUX676 159.09 WQUX676 159.1875 WQUX676 153.8 WQUX676 154.89 WQUX676 154.95 WQVG945 154.4075 WQVG945 159.27 WQVG945 158.7825 WQVG945 158.85 WQVQ416 155.55 WQVQ416 156.1125 WQVQ416 155.445 WQVQ416 153.74 WQVQ416 151.16 WQVQ416 153.92 WRCM947 151.1675 WRCM947 151.3925 WRCM947 151.445 WRCM947 154.01 WRCM947 159.42 WRCM947 155.9775 WQVR394 159.465 WQVR394 159.1275 WQVR394 159.315 WQVR394 154.01 WQVR394 154.77 WQVR394 154.83 WQUU666 151.205 WQUU666 151.34 WQUU666 151.4675 WQUU666 153.95 WQUU666 155.85 WQUU666 158.865 WQUU666 154.2575 WQUU666 154.8525 WQUU666 155.1375 WQUU666 158.9175 WQUU666 159.045 WQUU666 156.165 WQVR895 158.76 WQVR895 159.1125 WQVR895 159.39 WQLN571 158.8275 WQVR895 154.8375 WQVR895 155.9925 WQVR895 151.3475 WQVR895 151.295 WQUY802 151.445 WQUY802 151.2725 WQUY802 151.4 WQUY802 154.65 WQUY802 155.97 WQUY802 156.0525 WQWL877 159.09 WQWL877 159.3375 WQWL877 159.3825 WQWL877 153.755 WQWL877 154.01 WQWL877 155.985 WQWX943 151.3025 WQWX943 151.3175 WQWX943 151.3475 WQWX943 151.415 WQWX943 154.83 WQWX943 158.91 WQWX943 159 WQWA746 151.415 WQWA746 159.3675 WQWA746 159.12 WQWA746 154.89 WQWA746 155.97 WQWA746 155.58 WQWA746 155.46 WQVG590 151.145 WQVG590 151.25 WQVG590 151.01 WQVG590 153.995 WQVG590 155.3175 WQVG590 158.8875 WQVL662 154.205 WQVL662 154.325 WQVL662 154.935 WQVL662 156.0375 WQVL662 156.15 WQVL662 158.97 WQUL240 151.3475 WQUL240 159.12 WQUL240 159.39 WQUL240 153.74 WQUL240 153.875 WQUL240 156 WQUW994 153.8825 WQUW994 156.0525 WQUW994 159.0525 WQUZ230 151.01 WQUZ230 151.31 WQUZ230 153.8975 WQUZ230 156.075 WQUZ230 156.2025 WQUX675 151.13 WQUX675 151.28 WQUX675 151.4825 WQUX675 153.935 WQUX675 156.015 WQUX675 156.06 WQUE286 151.1225 WQUE286 151.2575 WQUE286 154.1975 WQUE286 156.0225 WQUE286 156.1575 WQUE286 159.03 WQUG547 154.9425 WQUG547 156.1125 WQUG547 156.225 WQUG547 158.865 WQUG547 158.91 WQUG547 159.0375 WQVB974 151.0625 WQVB974 151.325 WQVB974 151.4975 WQVB974 153.8075 WQVB974 153.9125 WQVB974 154.8975 WQUG532 151.265 WQUG532 154.68 WQUG532 154.9425 WQUG532 156.03 WQUG532 158.955 WQUG532 159.045 WQVV846 151.0625 WQVV846 154.9425 WQVV846 155.0775 WQVV846 155.9175 WQVV846 159.0525 WQVV846 159.2625 WQVG946 151.3175 WQVG946 154.74 WQVG946 154.935 WQVG946 156.0675 WQVG946 156.0825 WQVG946 156.15 WQUI446 155.19 WQUI446 155.46 WQUI446 155.685 WQUI446 153.89 WQUI446 153.98 WQUI446 159 WQWD725 154.7925 WQWD725 154.9425 WQWD725 156.1725 WQWD725 151.3475 WQWD725 158.7975 WQWD725 158.8575 WQLS309 155.67 WQLS309 155.505 WQLS309 154.755 WQLS309 159.33 WQLS309 159.0075 WQLS309 158.925 WRCE588 151.2575 WRCE588 151.2725 WRCE588 151.2125 WRCE588 154.95 WRCE588 154.0025 WRCE588 158.895 Appendix B List of approved FirstEnergy part 90 and part 22 VHF public safety pool call signs and frequencies approved for sharing with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania by the Bureau by this Order. Callsigns marked with asterisks (*) are part 22 callsigns and corresponding part 22 frequencies Call Sign Frequency (MHz) WRBY876 152.8925 WRBY876 159.9450 WRBY876 153.7250 WRBY876 158.1900 WRBY876 153.1250 WRBY876 158.1450 WRBY876 153.7250 WRBY876 159.9600 WRBN333 153.3875 WRBN333 153.1025 WRBN333 159.7875 WRBN333 157.7175 WRBN333 153.4550 WRBN333 153.5225 WRBN333 153.0800 WRBN333 157.6350 WRBN333 157.7175 WRBN333 159.9450 WRBN333 153.2525 WRBN333 153.1850 WRBN333 159.7725 WRBN333 159.8625 WRBN333 153.6125 WRBN333 153.4475 WRBN333 159.7275 WRBN333 159.9075 WRCB536 153.3725 WRCB536 152.4125 WRCB536 160.0050 WRCB536 159.8250 WRCB536 153.1025 WRCB536 153.4550 WRCB536 159.9825 WRCB536 159.7800 WRCB536 153.3050 WRCB536 153.1925 WRCB536 160.1925 WRCB536 159.9825 WRCB536 153.2675 WRCB536 153.1475 WRCB536 158.3250 WRCB536 159.7725 WRCB536 153.1325 WRCB536 153.5900 WRCB536 158.1750 WRCB536 158.2575 WRBT765 151.5425 WRBT765 153.1325 WRBT765 158.2575 WRBT765 158.1825 WRBT765 153.3575 WRBT765 153.1775 WRBT765 160.0200 WRBT765 158.3250 WRBT765 153.5825 WRBT765 153.7250 WRBT765 158.1375 WRBT765 158.2125 WRBT765 153.4325 WRBT765 153.5825 WRBT765 158.2575 WRBT765 158.3250 WRBT765 153.3650 WRBT765 152.2925 WRBT765 160.0200 WRBT765 158.2875 WRBP862 153.1850 WRBP862 153.3200 WRBP862 158.3475 WRBP862 160.1775 WRBP862 153.1325 WRBP862 153.5825 WRBP862 153.6875 WRBP862 158.1675 WRBP862 159.6750 WRBP862 159.8625 WRBP862 153.2150 WRBP862 153.1100 WRBP862 158.3100 WRBP862 159.6075 WRBP862 153.0725 WRBP862 153.4400 WRBP862 159.8625 WRBP862 159.7875 *WPVF282 152.6300 *WPVF282 157.8900 *WPVF288 152.0600 *WPVF288 158.5200 *WPVF296 152.7500 *WPVF296 158.0100 *WPVF289 152.1200 *WPVF289 158.5800 *WPVF297 152.7800 *WPVF297 158.0400 *WPVF301 152.0600 *WPVF301 158.5200 *WPVF303 152.1200 *WPVF303 158.5800 *WPVF313 152.7800 *WPVF313 158.0400 *WPZG551 152.0600 *WPZG551 158.5200 *WPVF349 152.7500 *WPVF349 158.0100 *WPVH206 152.0600 *WPVH206 158.5200 *WPVF365 152.7500 *WPVF365 158.0100 *WPVF387 152.0600 *WPVF387 158.5200 *WPVF397 152.7500 *WPVF397 158.0100