CJMT was aradio station which operated at 1420kHz on theAM band inChicoutimi, Quebec, Canada.
In 1953, the station's founder, J. O. Masse, submitted his initial application, for a 250-watt French-language AM station on 1450 kHz in Chicoutimi. However, the application was rejected by theCanadian Broadcasting Corporation, which at the time regulated all broadcasting in Canada. Later that year, Masse, along with his partners G. Demers and L. Lagace, each submitted its own application for a new station, each having suggested their own frequency. However, the CBC rejected all applications, but at a later meeting, the CBC granted Masse a license for the submitted parameters, while rejecting applications from the other parties.
The station signed on as CJMT on February 28, 1954, carrying no network programming.
In 1958, CJMT relocated its frequency from 1450 kHz to 1420 kHz and increased power from 250 watts to 1,000 watts, using a single directional antenna pattern for day and night operation.
CJMT later[when?] received approval to operate a standby transmitter.[citation needed]
Over the years, the station went through different formats, owners and technical upgrades.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
On August 23, 1994, CJMT had its licence renewed from September 1, 1994 to August 31, 1996.[7]
On September 30, 1994,Telemedia andRadiomutuel merged their AM operations because they could no longer afford to compete with each other. As a result, they closed CJMT, along withCJMSMontreal,CJRPQuebec City,CJRSSherbrooke,CJTRTrois-Rivières andCKCHHull. All six stations left the air on this date and the licenses were turned in to the CRTC, which revoked the licences on November 2, 1994.[8]
In 2002,Rogers Media launchedCJMT-TV in Toronto as part of theOmni Television brand, taking the call sign with them.