Two of the four people voted into the new executive at Radio Blue Mountains [89.1FM] - vice president Frances Dutton and treasurer Colin Garland - were directly involved in controversial material that went to air, according to the retiring president.
Departing Radio Blue Mountains president Mark Horton said the material that was broadcast was "filthy".
"When I play it for any female, they ask me to turn it off," Mr Horton said.
"If I had stayed I would have weeded out those types of programs. They were quite filthy."
The information came to light in a resignation letter by RBM's programming manager Paul Cosgrave which was sent out to their 60 members which highlighted a string of incidents, including repeated references to genitalia, bodily functions, drug use, records playing at half speed and presenters' slurred speech.
Mr Horton, who pulled the station out of $20,000 debt when he took over about three years ago, also refurbished the studios with new equipment and left the station in a "sound financial decision".
"We were literally insolvent," he said.
Mr Horton was concerned that "as quickly as you are trying to lift the quality you get less than ideal broadcasters doing this".
"What this decision does, well it doesn't endear people to come and listen to the station for a start... I don't want to sound like a square but everybody who I would call a good person, who heard those shows, didn't have a good thing to say about those programs."
Mr Horton said he suspended Mr Garland, [who is also known as Colin Wilcox] for eight weeks after he presented a "sleazy" show about "squirting" or masturbation, which Mr Garland had defended because they had appeared as a medical report in The Sydney Morning Herald.
But an "alternative" Christmas show presented by Mr Dutton "was not dealt with".
"We got a complaint about [that show] two or three weeks before the AGM and I was in the process of resigning and I didn't want to have a big dust-up and leave it in their [the new executive's] hands.
But he added he was "confident under Hereward's [Dundas-Taylor] stewardship that that material won't be airing again".
Mr Horton, who has MS, resigned this month due to ongoing ill health and problems with accessing toilet and car parking.
Incoming president Hereward Dundas-Taylor said "there was a growing fraction in the membership over the last several months and my election to the position of president has united everyone" and his "vision for this new era is community engagement".
Mr Dundas-Taylor, who is also currently working as the station manager, told the Gazette "it was dealt with by the former board and management, there's no need for me to follow through on any further action".
Mr Dundas-Taylor told the AGM that he was three-quarters of the way through rewriting the constitution. Mr Horton said a new constitution would also look at ensuring board members could be sacked.
The Gazette made approaches to the two executive members and Mr Dutton responded saying it was a matter for Mr Dundas-Taylor.