CFTK-TV

CFTK-TV

Terrace/Kitimat, British Columbia
Canada
Branding CFTK-TV
CTV Two Terrace
Channels Analog: 3 (VHF)
Digital: allocated 35 (UHF)
Translators 6 CFTK-TV-1 Prince Rupert
Affiliations CTV Two (O&O; 2016-present)
Owner Bell Media
(Bell Media Radio G.P.)
First air date November 1, 1962
Call letters' meaning taken from its sister radio station
Sister station(s) CIVT-DT, CIVI-DT, CJDC-TV
Former affiliations CBC Television (1962-2016)
Transmitter power CFTK-TV: 13.8 kW
CFTK-TV-1: 2.44 kW
Height CFTK-TV: 453.5 m
CFTK-TV-1: 593.8 m
Transmitter coordinates CFTK-TV:
54°31′4″N 128°28′21″W / 54.51778°N 128.47250°W / 54.51778; -128.47250
CFTK-TV-1:
54°17′4″N 130°18′54″W / 54.28444°N 130.31500°W / 54.28444; -130.31500 (CFTK-TV-1)
Website CFTK-TV

CFTK-TV is a CTV Two owned-and-operated television station in Terrace, British Columbia, Canada. It broadcasts an analogue signal on VHF channel 3 from a transmitter on Thornhill Mountain near Terrace and also rebroadcasts in Prince Rupert on VHF channel 6.

Owned by Bell Media, it is part of the Great West Television system, and has its studios located on Lazelle Avenue in Terrace. This station can also be seen on Citywest Cable channel 7, Shaw Direct channel 324 and Bell TV channel 257.

History

CFTK went on the air for the first time on November 1, 1962. Standard Broadcasting acquired CFTK from Telemedia in 2002.[1] Telemedia had owned CFTK since 1999.

The station was originally part of a two-station "sub-network" called Northern Television (NTV) since the early 1990s, until 2002, when it was disbanded and re-launched as Great West Television (joined by CKPG-TV). NTV and GWTV's programming consisted of mainly American shows imported and aired on CHUM Limited's NewNet/A-Channel stations, mixed with CBC's own programming.

Great West Television largely ceased to exist in October 2006. With CBC Television going to a 24-hour schedule beginning in October 2006, CFTK-TV dropped all of its syndicated programming and increased the amount of CBC programming in its schedule outside of local news. This, in effect, made CFTK-TV a semi-satellite of Vancouver's CBUT for the remainder of its CBC affiliation.

Astral Media acquired CFTK in the fall of 2007 as part of its acquisition of most of Standard Broadcasting's assets.[2]

On March 16, 2012, it was announced Bell Canada would be acquiring Astral Media for $3.38 billion.[3] However, the deal was rejected by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) that fall.[4] Bell submitted a revised takeover proposal in 2013, in which it would sell off a number of assets but keep CFTK. Bell has committed to maintaining the station's current conditions of license, including CBC affiliation, until the end of its license term in 2017.[5] Bell owns two networks of its own, CTV and CTV Two, which compete with CBC. The deal was approved by the Competition Bureau in March 2013,[6] and by the CRTC in June 2013.[7][8]

On October 28, 2015, the CRTC made public an application by Bell to disaffiliate CFTK from CBC Television effective February 22, 2016, at which point the station is scheduled to begin airing programming from Bell's CTV Two system. Bell and the CBC agreed to an early termination of CFTK's affiliation agreement on October 5.[9] Any TV service providers serving the region and not already carrying a CBC Television owned-and-operated station on their basic services (in this case, CBUT) would have to add one by the disaffiliation date in order to comply with CRTC regulations. It is now available on cable and satellite effective the same day.[10]

Local programming

CFTK newscasts are one hour and air at 6 and 11 p.m. weekdays. A 30-minute news recap called Week in Review airs on weekends.

CFTK also produces Open Connection, a weekday talk show hosted by Robert Pictou, seen weeknights at 5:30 p.m. and repeated the following day at 9:30 a.m.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.