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CKCL-FM

Coordinates:49°46′15″N97°30′37″W / 49.77083°N 97.51028°W /49.77083; -97.51028
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radio station in Winnipeg
For other stations that held the CKCL call sign, seeCKCL.
CKCL-FM
Broadcast areaWinnipeg Metropolitan Region
Frequency107.1MHz (FM)
BrandingClassic 107
Programming
FormatClassical/Jazz
Ownership
OwnerGolden West Broadcasting
CHVN-FM
History
First air date
October 21, 1999
Former call signs
CFEQ-FM (1999–2013)
Former frequencies
93.5MHz (1999–2000)
Call sign meaning
Sounds like "classical"
Technical information
ClassC1
ERP100,000watts
HAAT223 meters (732 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteclassic107.com

CKCL-FM (107.1MHz,Classic 107) is acommercialradio station inWinnipeg,Manitoba. Owned byGolden West Broadcasting, it broadcastsclassical andjazz music.

CKCL's studios and offices are located at 741 St. Mary's Road in St. Vital. Itstransmitter is on Provincial Trunk Highway 2 near Route 424 inSpringstein, Manitoba.[1] CKCL-FM is one of only a handful of commercially licensed Classical stations inNorth America.

History

[edit]

As FREQ 107

[edit]

In 1999, Christian Solutions Group Inc. receivedCanadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approval to operateCFEQ-FM, anEnglish-languageChristian rock station. It was a specialty low power radio station at 93.5 FM, broadcasting at 22watts.[2] In 2000, CFEQ moved from 93.5 to 107.1 FM.[3] The station branded asFREQ-FM. A year later, the station's licence was revoked by request of the owner of Christian Solutions Group.[4]

In 2002, HIS Broadcasting—a company led by the station's previous manager Tom Hibert, and later renamed Kesitah Inc.—received CRTC approval to launch aContemporary Christian music station, targeted towards youth and young adults, on the same frequency as the former CFEQ.[5] The new station retained the CFEQ-FM andFREQ branding, asFREQ 107,

The station initially broadcast a CCM format, but it later adopted asecular,modern rock-leaning presentation in an attempt to become more competitive with commercial stations in the market,[6] positioning itself as"Winnipeg's New Rock Alternative"[7] to downplay its status as a Christian station. As the station's CRTC license still required at least 95% of music played weekly to be "non-classic religious music", Kesitah relied on a broad interpretation of the category.[6]

The ploy was unsuccessful, as secular advertisers were not interested in advertising on what was still otherwise a Christian station, and faith-based advertisers objected to its "liberal" and "non-traditional" presentation.[6] Kesitah later sought a license amendment from the CRTC to reduce this quota to 31%. The company argued that there was limited listener interest in religious music, and that the station's small youth audience and difficulty attracting advertisers was making it unprofitable. It argued that a predominantly-secular format would allow CFEQ to be more competitive with other commercial stations in the market.[6]

The amendment was denied by the CRTC in 2006, citing that the station's original approval was on the basis that it would be a Christian music station, and that allowing it to compete directly with mainstream stations would undermine the CRTC's competitive licensing process.[6]

Acquisition by Golden West, flip to classical

[edit]
Logo asIgnite 107, used from 2008-2013.

In early 2008,Golden West Broadcasting acquired Kesitah, making CFEQ asister station to Winnipeg's other Christian music station,CHVN-FM.[8] On September 29, 2008, CFEQ-FM flipped toChristian CHR asIgnite 107. On February 14, 2011, Golden West applied for a major increase in CFEQ-FM'seffective radiated power, going from 920 watts to 100,000 watts. The CRTC granted approval on October 7, 2011.[9]

On April 8, 2013, the CRTC approved a request by Golden West to convert CFEQ to a specialty music format focusing onclassical music. Golden West stated that the station had continued to be unprofitable, and cited Winnipeg's position as a "cultural centre" of Canada, as well asCBC Radio 2's shift away from classical music, as providing a potential audience. The CRTC approved the application, ruling that the new format would increase the diversity of the market, and that CHVN would be able to supplant CFEQ's former role as a Christian station.[10] The new station, carrying theCKCL-FMcall sign and theClassic 107 name, launched at 10 a.m. on December 5, 2013.[11]

In late 2019, the station's studio moved from its former location at 20 St. Mary's Road in St. Boniface to 1-741 St. Mary's Road in St. Vital, co-locating with sister stationCHVN-FM.

References

[edit]
  1. ^FCCdata.org/CKCL-FM
  2. ^Decision CRTC 99-467
  3. ^Decision CRTC 2000-385
  4. ^Decision CRTC 2001-35
  5. ^Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) (2002-08-08)."ARCHIVED - Application for a youth-oriented Christian FM station to serve Winnipeg".crtc.gc.ca. Retrieved2022-05-12.
  6. ^abcde"CFEQ-FM Winnipeg - Licence amendment". CRTC. 2007-09-20. Retrieved2018-12-15.
  7. ^Music, Manitoba (12 April 2007)."Updated March 26".Manitoba Music. Retrieved2022-05-31.
  8. ^Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2008-134
  9. ^Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2011-644
  10. ^Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2013-180, April 8, 2013.
  11. ^Winnipeg Free Press: "New station to hit airwaves", November 29, 2013.

External links

[edit]
Radio stations inWinnipegSelkirk,Manitoba
Winnipeg
AM
FM
Defunct
Selkirk
FM
Specialty services

49°46′15″N97°30′37″W / 49.77083°N 97.51028°W /49.77083; -97.51028

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