Classicomm was a small cable provider inCanada serving communities in southernYork Region from its offices inRichmond Hill,Ontario.[1]
Classicomm, or Classic Communications Ltd, was founded in the late 1960s by John O. Graham[2] and Stewart H. Coxford,[3] who were granted a cable television (CATV) licence by the CRTC for Richmond Hill and several other small communities north ofToronto.
By the 1980s the cable system had acquired additional licences, and soon covered a geographic area taking in most of southern York Region. WithSteeles Avenue as its southerly service boundary, the cable system spanned the width of York Region fromMarkham in the east toWoodbridge in the west. Its coverage area stretched north to include communities such asStouffville,King City,Kleinburg andGormley.
Southern York Region experienced tremendous growth beginning around 1982. During the period of 1986–90 Classicomm was connecting up to 10,000 new subscribers each year, making it the fastest growing cable system of its day.[1]
In 1984, the company applied to theCanadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission for permission to launch aclassified advertising channel on the service, but the application was denied on the basis that cable companies were not permitted to compete with radio or television broadcasters for advertising revenue.[4] The regulation was changed in 1986 to permit advertising channels.[5] It was also one of the first cable companies in Canada to offerX*Press X*Change, an early foray into electronic news delivery.[6]
The company was sold in 1995 toShaw Communications ofCalgary, for a purchase price of $240 million.[7] When the transaction was first announced in 1994, Classicomm had 102,000 subscribers;[1] when it was finalized the following year, the company had 105,000 subscribers.[7] Along with Shaw's simultaneous acquisition ofTrillium Cable, the deal helped to make Shaw the second-largest cable company in Canada.[8]
A few years later,Rogers Cable of Toronto and Shaw Cable rationalized their cable holdings in Canada, with Shaw consolidating in western Canada and Rogers in central and eastern Canada. The Classicomm service area is now entirely part of Rogers Cable.