In Portland in about 1997, the local NPR station, KOPB, decided to abandon music altogether and go 24-hour news and talk. The trouble was, they didn't even have enough programming to fill 24 hours, and their proposed schedule included running Morning Edition and All Things Considered
twice. We had petitions and rallies like you wouldn't believe, and the station managers remained adamant that the all-talk format was "the wave of the future." In the end, their only concession was that the station agreed to run Performance Today on weekday mornings and keep its weekend schedule of Afropop Worldwide, The Thistle and the Shamrock, and a wonderful local eclectic program by an announcer named Steve Cantor.
There was another classical station in town, KBPS, which had just been cut loose from the Portland Public Schools, and the loss of classical programming on KOPB was the best thing that ever happened to KBPS. The first fund drive after the program change on KOPB, KBPS made in two days what it normally made in a week. (It's on the web at
http://www.allclassical.org.) I volunteered for KBPS for nearly ten years, and it was a great experience. The announcers have complete freedom to program whatever they want within the classical genre, and they do a wonderful job of promoting local musicians.
Moving back to Minneapolis in 2003, I found two classical stations, one run by Minnesota Public Radio (KSJN) and one run by St. Olaf College in Northfield (WCAL). Of the two, WCAL was the more individualistic and quirky, and it also carried wonderful national programs such as Performance Today and From the Top.
However, Minnesota Public Radio bought WCAL from St. Olaf and turned it into The Current, a venue for new and local rock and singer-songwriter music. It's not BAD, but for me, it doesn't replace the old WCAL. Ironically, the latest Arbitron ratings show that it has a smaller audience than KSJN, which still plays classical music but of a somewhat tame variety and doesn't carry Performance Today or From the Top.
The radio scene in the Twin Cities also includes KBEM, an all-jazz station run by the public schools, and KFAI, an independent Pacifica-type station that carries a mix of left-leaning news and talk, folk music, indie rock music, and programming for different ethnic groups, including the local Somali and Hmong communities.