Why Broadcast Engineers Are Vanishing from Radio Stations
MAY 4, 202615 MIN
Why Broadcast Engineers Are Vanishing from Radio Stations
MAY 4, 202615 MIN
Description
<p>Most of America's radio stations have lost their chief engineers, and nobody’s really noticing—until towers go dark or FCC fines pile up. When that one station sat silent for six months because no one knew the transmitter failed, it wasn’t an accident. It was a sign that the heart of local broadcast engineering is disappearing.</p><p>Chief engineers used to keep the signal clean, the lights on, and the emergency systems wired. Now, they’re being replaced by remote monitoring and bean counters who don’t quite get how vital hands-on knowledge still is. Their departure isn't just a staffing issue; it affects safety, compliance, and the very reliability of local radio.</p><p>We break down how industry changes—like telecom deregulation, consolidation, and low wages—have hollowed out the traditional engineering ranks. The numbers tell a story: membership in the Society of Broadcast Engineers is shrinking, the median age is climbing, and the incoming crowd is barely keeping pace with retirements. Meanwhile, tower thefts and outdated infrastructure threaten the remaining stations' survival.</p><p>If local radio is going to stay on the air, the tech side needs a serious rethink. This isn’t just about fixing towers; it’s about safeguarding the infrastructure that keeps broadcasters accountable and connected. Listen closely—what’s lost in these quiet stations might be what’s lost in the public safety net altogether.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to The Tyler Woodward Project at <a href="https://tylerwoodward.me/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4">tylerwoodward.me/subscribe</a>