After a 2022 seizure attempt by federal officials, the university applied for and received a concession to legalize the station for the first time in its history.
The spark was one last rejection by the Secretariat of Communications and Transportation, which in a letter to the university claimed that their technical studies showed the band to be saturated.
In deciding to sidestep the federal government, which had shown itself to be frustrating to universities' attempts at launching radio stations, the Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero entered uncharted territory.
The next month, the station began to suffer serious interference, requiring the university to take drastic action to maintain a listenable signal.
[2] Another problem to the university radio station developed in 1984: a budget crisis spurred by a suspension of payments from the Secretariat of Public Education (SEP).
In the meantime, university students went as far as organizing a hunger strike in Mexico City in order to protest the SEP's demand to close the station.
A year later, Governor José Francisco Ruiz Massieu awarded a permit to the university, giving the station the ability to broadcast with 3,000 watts of power.
[5] On February 23, 2022, representatives of the IFT and the National Guard visited Radio UAGro and executed a seizure order against the unauthorized FM operation.
[3] The station is known for opening its microphones to dissident groups and has done so for such parties as Ayotzinapa Rural Normal School students and survivors of the Aguas Blancas massacre.