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USTN shuts down radio business. Employees to lose jobs.

The United States Traffic Network, the traffic-information company in Malvern, announced that it would cease supplying traffic maps, personalities and information to Entercom Communications radio stations nationwide on Friday, effectively shutting down.

Traffic flows alongside two lanes closed for repair work in New Jersey last month.
Traffic flows alongside two lanes closed for repair work in New Jersey last month.Read moreJULIO CORTEZ / AP

The United States Traffic Network skidded off the road on Wednesday.

The troubled traffic-information company, based in Malvern and caught up in a business feud with Entercom Communications, announced that it would cease supplying traffic data and on-air traffic updates to radio stations on Friday, effectively shutting down the business.

The United States Traffic Network also recently told Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry that it would close its Malvern operations office on Oct. 20, with 118 people losing their jobs.

"All USTN radio employees have been released from all non-compete and non-solicitation agreements and every station and client will be given service for a limited wind-down period," USTN said on Wednesday in a statement, noting that it has hired liquidation agent Gavin/Solmonese LLC to coordinate the shut down.

United States Traffic Network's demise had been expected for weeks after Entercom, of Bala Cynwyd, the nation's second-largest radio group, terminated its contract with the traffic information provider.

Entercom has said it would do its own traffic updates and sell its own advertising instead of contracting with the United States Traffic Network. USTN provided the traffic updates for Entercom stations such as KYW in Philadelphia, as well as radio stations in other big markets such as New York and Chicago, and sold the traffic advertising around those traffic updates, giving Entercom a cut of the revenue.

But Entercom said that USTN failed to pay millions of dollars of its advertising cut this year, leading to acrimony.

"We are relieved to no longer be mired by the difficult USTN situation that was inherited as part of the CBS Radio merger. We will move quickly to augment our strong internal sales organization to ensure that we realize the full value of this inventory," Entercom president and CEO David Field said in a statement earlier this summer.

USTN CEO Ivan Shulman could not be reached for comment on Wednesday.