WQCP

[3] The original studios, a former bail bondsman's office in a converted house on Orange Avenue,[2] until the owners wished to use it for their business again, at which time WJFP relocated across Fort Pierce to a site on US 1.

[4] Translators were also built to expand the station's signal to key areas with large Black and Haitian populations.

In August 2021, Indian River State College announced it had reached a deal to purchase WJFP and its Clewiston satellite WJCB to provide a second frequency and split NPR news/talk and classical music programming in the Fort Pierce area.

Black Media Works owned two translators in Brevard County that previously rebroadcast this station.

The Mangonia Park translator, covering West Palm Beach, switched program sources to a subchannel of WLLY-FM in 2018 and became its own station, "Yo 107.1".