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CKWV-FM

Coordinates:49°13′19″N124°00′12″W / 49.22194°N 124.00333°W /49.22194; -124.00333
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radio station in Nanaimo, British Columbia
CKWV-FM
Frequency102.3MHz
Branding102.3 The Wave
Programming
FormatHot adult contemporary
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
May 24, 1949 (1949-05-24)
Former call signs
CHUB (1949–1995)
Former frequencies
1570kHz (1949–1995)
Call sign meaning
WV for Wave
Technical information
ClassA
ERP1.3kWs
3 kW (maximum)
HAAT95 metres (312 ft)
Links
WebcastListen live
Website1023thewave.com

CKWV-FM (102.3 The Wave) is a Canadianradio station located inNanaimo,British Columbia. Itbroadcasts on 102.3FM and is owned by Island Radio, a division of theJim Pattison Group.

History

[edit]

CKWV first signed on-air on May 24, 1949 asCHUB, on its original frequency of 1570AM with a 250-watt transmitter, with its studio in the Malaspina Hotel on Front Street in downtown Nanaimo; its first program was a broadcast of the annual Empire Day Parade. CHUB (so named because of Nanaimo's nickname of the "Hub City") was initially owned by George Randall andVancouver Sun part-owner Donald Cromie, and its initial on-air staff included Gordon Theedom and program director Glen Kristjan.

To expand its coverage to surrounding areas, CHUB increased its power to 1,000 watts in 1951, with Sun employees Chuck Rudd and Sheila Hassel arriving to manage the station; among the later staff at the station were evening DJ Larry Thomas (who joined that year), morning host Lyall Feltham (in 1956), news director Pat O'Neill and sports announcerJim Robson (who arrived fromPort Alberni'sCJAV). In 1959, CHUB increased its power again to 10,000 watts and moved its transmitter from Nanaimo to neighboring Cedar. On October 1, 1960, the station covered the NanaimoChinatown fire which ended up destroying that historical area of the city.

In 1962, the Vancouver Sun sold CHUB to formerCKNW andCKWX news director Bob Giles, CKNW broadcaster Jack Kyle and Joe Lawlor (former sales manager ofCHAB inMoose Jaw, Saskatchewan), who formed the Nanaimo Broadcasting Co. Ltd. to run the station. By 1966, Joe Lawlor's brother George came from Moose Jaw to become station manager, with Ted Kelly becoming program director and Duane Bodeker taking over as morning show host.

CHUB relocated from the Malaspina Hotel to a new studio on Esplanade Street in downtown Nanaimo on April 15, 1968, with broadcasts ofNanaimo Clippershockey games going live that year. In 1973, Marc Chambers began his broadcasting career at CHUB (he would spend five years there before moving to CJAV), and on December 3 that year, parent company Nanaimo Broadcasting putCHPQ on the air inParksville as a semi-satellite of CHUB, with 1,000 watts of power on its original frequency of 1370 AM.

On June 6, 1986, theCRTC approved the purchase of CHUB and CHPQ from Nanaimo Broadcasting by Benchmark Ventures Inc. (headed by Gene Daniel, who became the general manager of both stations); the new owners began gearing CHUB toward community-oriented programming focusing on Nanaimo and the surrounding area. In 1994, Benchmark Ventures merged with Central Island Broadcasting Ltd. (now Island Radio), the owner of then-rival stationCKEG, with the CRTC approving the newly merged company's application to move CHUB from 1570 AM to 102.3 FM and recall it as CKWV, and to put a rebroadcaster of CKWV in Parksville at 99.9 FM (as CKWV-FM-1).[1] The switch took effect on January 2, 1995 (CKEG, by then CKWV's sister station, took over the 1570 frequency on the same day after moving from its original 1350 AM). As part of the merger, CKWV relocated from downtown to share CKEG's studios and offices at 4550 Wellington Road in north Nanaimo, and adopted aHot AC format. The CHUB call letters have belonged tothe former CKRD Radio in Red Deer, Alberta since 2000.

In 2005, Central Island Broadcasting, reflecting its expanded presence onVancouver Island with the establishment ofCourtenay stationCKLR-FM and the acquisition ofCJAV, changed its corporate name to Island Radio. On February 11 that year, Parksville's CKWV-FM-1 ceased rebroadcasting CKWV and became a separate station, assuming the callsignCHPQ-FM (not tied directly to the original CHPQ (AM), which moved to CKEG's old 1350 frequency and became CKCI on July 31, 1995, then moved to 88.5 FM and becameCIBH-FM on January 14, 2002).

On November 1, 2005, the Jim Pattison Broadcast Group and Island Radio Ltd. announced that Island Radio had agreed to sell its six radio stations (including CKWV, plus related assets) to the Jim Pattison Broadcast Group; following CRTC approval, Pattison assumed ownership of the Island Radio stations at midnight on June 30, 2006.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Decision CRTC 94-674

External links

[edit]
Victoria
AM
FM
Defunct
Central Vancouver Island
Duncan
Lake Cowichan
Nanaimo
Parksville
Salt Spring Island
People
Jim Pattison Media Group
Television stations
Radio stations
(bycall sign)
Outdoor signs
Pattison Food Group
Entertainment
Defunct

49°13′19″N124°00′12″W / 49.22194°N 124.00333°W /49.22194; -124.00333

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