Troy Community Radio began initially as a webcaster in September 2012 by Scott Hornberger in the spare bedroom of his home.
It briefly broadcast as a micropower radio service at 94.1 in the latter part of 2012 before a new "filing window" (the second of its kind) was announced by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to allow applications for new low power FM stations.
The window was opened in the fall of 2013 and the owner promptly applied for a low-power FM license.
Troy had had its own FM broadcasting station WTRJ at 96.9 MHz in 1991 but the station changed formats, ownerships and callsigns several times and eventually moving its local base and studio to Dayton as WRNB, a classic soul format before being sold to EMF Broadcasting becoming WOKL, a local affiliate of K-LOVE.
The former Troy Community Radio (TCR), now POWER 107.1, airs a mix of popular music from the 1960s to the present with local high school sports coverage.