
KRTZ 98.7...from Country
Sunshine to a Regional Super Station
The story of KRTZ (call letters derived from its city of license,
Cortez, Colorado) officially began on October 1, 1981 when Rex K.
Jensen entered
into a lease agreement with the US Department of Interior's Bureau of
Indian Affairs, representing the Ute Mountain Indian Agency, leasing a
25-foot by 25-foot tract on Ute Mountain Ute Tribal land.
Phelps Dodge Company built the tower on Hermano Peak (affectionately
known as the left knee of the Sleeping Ute). In the summer of
1982, KRTZ officially signed on the air for the first time.
Back then, KRTZ was a country format station and was billed as "Country
Sunshine FM 99". Most people didn't have digital tuners in those
days and on an analog tuner, 98.7 is at or near the 99 position on the
dial. The "Country Sunshine" label was derived from a popular
song by country legend Dottie West, the chorus of which included the
lyric "I was raised on country sunshine." The station's official
logo depicted an orange setting sun behind a silhouette of the Sleeping
Ute Mountain. Country Sunshine FM 99 broadcast from the Johnson
Professional Building (formerly a hospital) at 925 South Broadway in
Cortez and an alert eye will spot a mural on the northeast face of the
building that was the backdrop for the KRTZ logo. Over time, the
call letters were removed and the landscape remains on the mural.
"As a kid...I think in fifth grade...I remember taking a field trip to
tour the studios on South Broadway. I was absolutely smitten by
the whole scene," current station manager Kelly Turner remembers.
"The people working there were giants in my mind. Our guide on
the tour was the late Stan Talcott who was their news director and
chief engineer, essentially. I remember he wore Buddy Holly style
horn-rimmed glasses, was thin and bald...and very nice."
Kelly also met other radio personalities on the field trip, the people
who were the first voices on KRTZ - Bret King, the late Steve Lynn,
Harvey Twite, Stan McNeil and "The Ol' Hoss" Russ Johnston who hosted
KRTZ's morning show. Kelly recalls the teletype machine by which
news was delivered as a proto-dot-matrix printer that not only consumed
entire stands of trees but also was as loud as the Boeing engine test
building.
Through the remainder of the 80s and all of the 90s, KRTZ remained the
#1 country radio station in southwestern Colorado. In October,
1985, Rex Jensen sold KRTZ to DeLane Broadcasting, Inc, a South
Carolina based organization. Rex focused his attentions on
Willcox, Arizona (hometown of Rex Allen and Rex Allen, Jr and
birthplace of Kelly Turner's grandfather, MC), a radio market in which
he owned a station. Russ Johnston would also move away to work in
Willcox, but recorded and hosted a Saturday morning classic country
show that continued to air on KRTZ. Also, in the mid-80s, KRTZ
experienced a change of address, moving from its South Broadway
location to 200 West Main Street (present location of Dry Dock
Restaurant). The main on-air studio was in the southwest corner
of the building meaning that KRTZ's on-air personalities enjoyed a
picture window view of downtown Cortez. On the northwest corner
was the production studio and in between was the newsroom.
Popular personalities on KRTZ during this era included Scott Sparks,
Johnny Johnson, Steve Rose, Tim Gray, Peter Jakey, Mike Talcott, Bob
Hessom, Desiree Kline, Brenda Kaye (now Severson), Deborah
Vrtatko (now McHenry) and a little-regarded nobody high school kid with
a monotonously insecure voice named Kelly Turner who began working
overnights on KRTZ in 1990.
In 1991, it was time for another change of address, as DeLane
Broadcasting purchased the AM740 frequency. Traditionally known
as KVFC, this frequency was one of the first radio stations to sign on
in the Four Corners Region (in 1955). The frequency had been part
of the operation of KISZ-FM, a Top 40/AC station, broadcasting from
studios at 2402 East Main Street in Cortez. When the owners of
KISZ made the decision to move their broadcast studios to Farmington,
New Mexico, DeLane Broadcasting bought the property and the AM740
frequency. The building was renovated to its existing layout and
KRTZ began broadcasting from a broadcast booth in the dead center of
this building. KVFC, which was revived into an oldies format
station, had a studio in the room next to KRTZ.
A short time later, KRTZ experienced another change of address,
although no actual move was involved. The City of Cortez changed
the name of the street upon which the radio station was located.
So, with the simple act of replacing a sign, KRTZ's address went from
2402 East Main to 2402 Hawkins Street. This move was done to
alleviate confusion as US160, known as Main Street through a majority
of Cortez, became Main Street through the entirety of Cortez.
Hawkins Street, which requires a southbound turn off of US160, was
named after Mr. Jack Hawkins, a radio pioneer and businessman in
southwestern Colorado who owned KVFC-AM when it first signed on the air
in 1955.
Popular personalities on KRTZ in the 1990s included Tim Weaver (Webb),
Don Kremer, Karrie Franklin, Nihla McCabe, Marc Wondra, Barrett James
(Gerdes) and Harvey Twite who returned to the Cortez radio scene as an
aggressive news director.
In 1995, it was announced that DeLane Broadcasting intended to sell
KRTZ and KVFC to Rocky Mountain Radio Company, LLC, a partnership with
headquarters in Avon, Colorado. RMRC owned several other radio
stations in Colorado's mountain towns (Vail, Breckenridge, Steamboat
Springs, Aspen). The partners of RMRC also owned Radio One
Networks, LLC, an innovative satellite music format which provided
radio programming to stations across the United States. KRTZ
became the first station to broadcast Radio One's country format in
1996.
In 1999, Rocky Mountain Radio Company announced its intentions to sell
most of its stations to American General Media, LLC, a partnership with
headquarters in Bakersfield, California. The ownership group
became known as AGM-Rocky Mountain Broadcasting, LLC. Over the
next five years, AGM would sell most of the Colorado mountain stations
to NRC Broadcasting but retain ownership of KRTZ and KVFC. AGM
would also end up purchasing other heritage stations in the Four
Corners region. In Durango, AGM would purchase KPTE-FM (formerly
known as KWXA) and KDGO-AM. The purchase of KDGO was a bit of a
homecoming, as in the early 1990s, KRTZ and KVFC were sister stations
with KDGO (which was owned by DeLane Broadcasting's sister corporation
Rampart Broadcasting). In Farmington, AGM purchased KENN-AM,
KRWN-FM (two stations started by the Kendrick Family of Farmington) and
KISZ-FM. This represented another homecoming, of sorts, as KISZ
and KVFC were once sister stations (and, in fact, simulcast programming
for a time). With the creation of this Four Corners regional
radio entity, the ownership of the radio stations became known as
Winton Road Broadcasting, LLC and part of the AGM family of stations.
After the acquisition of KISZ-FM (known as Kiss Country, after a recent
format change), the ownership saw little appeal in having two competing
country stations in one group. In 2000, KRTZ changed its format
to Adult Contemporary. Billed as "Today's Hits & Yesterday's
Favorites", the move would prove a popular one as, in 2007, KRTZ is the
top-rated AC station in the Four Corners region.
The saga has only begun, though, as KRTZ is going to take radio in the
Four Corners Region and beyond into the 21st Century...and beyond!