Stereo 974 commenced broadcasting as 3WRB, initially covering a broader area; encompassing the Werribee and Melton areas now served by WYN FM and 979fm respectively. Previous committee members include the then-Member for Lalor, Barry JonesMP, who served as chairman between 1980 and 1982.[2]
In December 1990, the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal held a hearing to determine whether additional conditions should be placed on the 3WRB licence, or to suspend the station's licence entirely.[4] Consequently, Western Radio Broadcasters was restructured from a corporation structure to a membership committee, and in 1992 the Tribunal ruled 3WRB would retain its licence,[5] albeit with extra conditions including amendments to the licensee's constitution.[6]
Western Radio Broadcasters was also found to have breached the Broadcasting Services Act and the Community Broadcasting Association of Australia (CBAA) Code of Practice on several occasions. In February 1999, the ABA found the station had breached clauses 6.3 and 6.4 of the CBAA code for its handling of a dispute between a presenter and the committee of management.[8] The station was also found in breach of its community radio licence for broadcasting advertisements during episodes of its Vietnamese language program in April and May 2000 and July 2001.[9][10]
On 16 January 2020 the station ceased broadcasting. Management declined to comment to the Star Weekly, with the newspaper reporting that a lack of funding may have made the station financially nonviable.[14] Trade publication Radioinfo was told a general meeting of the station's members had been informed the station's site was to be redeveloped, and that the organisation "couldn't survive the costs of a relocation".[15]
Stereo 974 had won several awards from the Southern Community Media Association, which incorporates community broadcasters from regional and suburban Australia.
^"3WRB Melbourne denial of access and conflict resolution". ABA Update(PDF) (Report). Australian Broadcasting Authority. February 1999. p. 21. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
^"3WRB - Melbourne: Broadcasting advertisements and sponsorship influencing programming". ABA Update(PDF) (Report). Australian Broadcasting Authority. April 2001. pp. 20–21. Retrieved 11 January 2020.
^"3WRB - Melbourne: Sponsorship announcements in breach of licence conditions". ABA Update(PDF) (Report). Australian Broadcasting Authority. 2002. p. 18. Retrieved 11 January 2020.