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CKNC-TV

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CKNC-TV
CKNC-TV 9 logo from the 1970s with its former Frood Road studio address in Sudbury which is now the current home of CICI-TV/CTV Northern Ontario.
Channels
BrandingMCTV CBC
Programming
AffiliationsCBC
Ownership
Owner
CICI-TV
History
First air date
October 8, 1971
Last air date
  • October 27, 2002
  • (31 years, 19 days)
Call sign meaning
Nickel Capital
Technical information
ERP198.1 kW
HAAT221 m (725 ft)
Transmitter coordinates46°30′2″N 81°1′12″W / 46.50056°N 81.02000°W / 46.50056; -81.02000
Translator(s)see § Transmitters

CKNC-TV (channel 9) was a television station in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.[1] The station was in operation from 1971 to 2002 as a private affiliate of CBC Television, and then continued until 2012 as a network-owned rebroadcaster of CBLT in Toronto.

History

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CKNC was established on October 8, 1971 by J. Conrad Lavigne, the owner of CFCL in Timmins.[2] On the same day, the existing television station in Sudbury, CKSO, switched its affiliation to CTV.[2] A rebroadcaster with the call sign CKNC-TV-1 went to air in Elliot Lake on the same date. That transmitter was sold to the CBC in 1982 and changed its callsign to CBEC-TV, although it continued to air CKNC's signal for the remainder of the station's existence.

Until 1980, CICI and CKNC aggressively competed with each other for advertising dollars, leaving both in a precarious financial position due to the Sudbury market's relatively small size. In 1980, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission approved the merger of the two stations, along with their co-owned stations in North Bay and Timmins, into the MCTV twinstick.[3]

In 1990, the MCTV stations were acquired by Baton Broadcasting,[4] which became the sole corporate owner of CTV in 1997.

In the early 1990s, CKNC-TV decreased its effective radiated power from 168,000 to 115,500 watts; and changing the transmitter location to a new site located approximately 1.5 kilometres to the southwest of the present location. [5]

End of operations

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CTV subsequently sold its four CBC affiliates in Northern Ontario, CKNC, CHNB in North Bay, CJIC in Sault Ste. Marie and CFCL in Timmins directly to the CBC in 2002.[6] All four ceased to exist as separate stations on October 27, 2002, becoming rebroadcasters of Toronto's CBLT, with CKNC's call sign changing to CBLT-6. These transmitters would close on July 31, 2012, due to budget cuts affecting the CBC.[7][8]

Transmitters

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Station City of licence Channel ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinates Notes
CBCE-TV Little Current 16 (UHF) 59.2 kW 254 m

45°56′1″N 81°59′32″W / 45.93361°N 81.99222°W / 45.93361; -81.99222 (CBCE-TV)

Decision CRTC 82-303, (Page 5 and 6) April 8, 1982
CBEC-TV Elliot Lake 7 (VHF) 67.9 kW 173.5 m 46°23′16″N 82°37′16″W / 46.38778°N 82.62111°W / 46.38778; -82.62111 (CBEC-TV) 70-211, (Page 211 and 212) August 5, 1970.

Was CKNC-TV-1 until it became CBEC-TV in the 1980s

Other notes

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CKNC was also the original call sign, in the 1920s and 1930s, of a radio station in Toronto that is now known as CJBC. The CKNC call sign currently belongs to a radio station in Simcoe, Ontario, as CKNC-FM.

References

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  1. ^ "Sudbury's second English TV outlet begins operations on Monday". Sudbury Star, October 1, 1971.
  2. ^ a b "Rebroadcast programs: CRTC grants Sudbury licences". The Globe and Mail, August 6, 1970.
  3. ^ "CRTC approves amalgamation of Northern Ontario TV firms". The Globe and Mail, February 29, 1980.
  4. ^ "CRTC okays acquisitions, but at a price". Financial Post, October 23, 1990.
  5. ^ Public Notice CRTC 1991-88, CRTC, August 23, 1991
  6. ^ "CRTC Decision 2002-303". Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. October 10, 2002.
  7. ^ "Speaking notes for Hubert T. Lacroix regarding measures announced in the context of the Deficit Reduction Action Plan". CBC/Radio-Canada. April 4, 2012.
  8. ^ "Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2012-384". Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. July 17, 2012.
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