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The 1958 Act created the Board of Broadcast Governors (BBG) to replace the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as the regulator for broadcasting in Canada. [2] In 1968, the Broadcasting Act would be updated yet again, this time creating the Canadian Radio and Television Commission (CRTC) to replace the BBG. [2] (The CRTC’s name was changed in ...
CBLT-DT currently broadcasts 10 hours, 40 minutes of locally produced newscasts each week (with two hours each weekday, a half-hour on Saturdays and ten minutes on Sundays); in regards to the number of hours devoted to news programming, it is the lowest local newscast output out of any English-language television station in the immediate Toronto market and the second lowest among the stations ...
Section 9.1(1)(h) of Canada's Broadcasting Act states: 9.1 (1) The Commission may, in furtherance of its objects, [...] (h) a requirement for a person carrying on a distribution undertaking to carry, on the terms and conditions that the Commission considers appropriate, programming services, specified by the Commission, that are provided by a broadcasting undertaking; [2]
airs four digital subchannels (Community Channel on 34.1, French and Spanish Community on 34.2, Caldwell First Nation programming on 34.3 and Local News on 34.4), the first station in Canada to offer multiple digital subchannels, and the first low-power broadcaster/community channel in Canada to convert to digital operations.
The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC; French: Conseil de la radiodiffusion et des télécommunications canadiennes) is a public organization in Canada tasked with the mandate as a regulatory agency tribunal for various electronic communications, covering broadcasting and telecommunications. [2]
CICI-TV (analogue channel 5) is a television station in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, part of the CTV Television Network. The station is owned and operated by network parent Bell Media , and has studios on Frood Road (near Lasalle Boulevard) in Sudbury; its transmitter is located near Huron Street.
The Broadcasting Act of 1932 created a national network for each electronic medium in Canada's two official languages, French and English. [10] When it was created, the Act referred mostly to radio broadcasting but it also included television once TV came to the country in 1952. [10]
The following television stations broadcast on digital [1] or analog channel 5 in Canada: CFCN-TV-4 in Burmis, Alberta; CFCN-TV-9 in Cranbrook, British Columbia; CFJC-TV-6 in 100 Mile House, British Columbia; CHAU-DT in Carleton, Quebec; CHRO-TV in Pembroke, Ontario; CICI-TV in Sudbury, Ontario; CIHC-TV in Hay River, Northwest Territories; CJDC ...