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CIII-DT

CIII-DT (channel 41) is a television station in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, serving as the flagship station of the Global Television Network. Owned and operated by network parent Corus Entertainment, CIII-DT maintains studios at 81 Barber Greene Road (near Leslie Street) in the Don Mills district of Toronto, and its transmitter is located atop the CN Tower in downtown Toronto.

CIII-DT
Channels
BrandingGlobal Toronto or Global (general)
Global News (newscasts)
Programming
AffiliationsGlobal (1997–present)
Ownership
Owner
CFIQ, CFNY-FM, CILQ-FM
History
First air date
January 6, 1974 (49 years ago) (1974-01-06)
(in Paris, Ontario; licence moved to Toronto in 2009)
Former call signs
CKGN-TV (1974–1984)
CIII-TV (1984–2011)
Former channel number(s)
Analogue:
22 (UHF, 1974–1988)
41 (UHF, 1988–2011)
Digital:
65 (UHF, 2009–2011)
41 (UHF, 2011–2020)
Independent (1974–1997)
Call sign meaning
"III" = Roman numeral 3, a reference to Global being Canada's third television network, as well as the station's channel position on many Ontario cable systems)
Technical information
Licensing authority
CRTC
ERP59.8 kW
HAAT506 m (1,660 ft)
Transmitter coordinates43°38′33″N 79°23′14″W / 43.64250°N 79.38722°W / 43.64250; -79.38722 (CIII-TV-41)
Translator(s)See below
Links
WebsiteGlobal Toronto

The station reaches much of the population of Ontario through a network of 12 transmitters across primarily the southern and central portions of the province (as a result, it is the de facto Global outlet for the capital city of Ottawa through repeater CIII-DT-6). Since August 29, 2022, CIII-DT serves as the master control hub for all 15 Global owned-and-operated stations across Canada.

History Edit

Ken Soble, the founder of CHCH-TV in Hamilton, envisioned a national "superstation" of 96 satellite-fed transmitters with CHCH as its flagship. In 1966, he filed the first application with the Board of Broadcast Governors for a network to be branded as NTV — however, the application faced various regulatory hurdles and underwent numerous revisions over the next number of years. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) eventually decided to go ahead with the publicly owned Anik satellite system instead of relying on private communications companies to build Canada's satellite broadcasting infrastructure, placing the NTV application in jeopardy after Power Corporation of Canada, a key investor in the plan, backed out.[2]

In 1970, one of Soble's former employees, Al Bruner, teamed up with Peter Hill to revive the application under new ownership. Bruner and Hill's group, Global Communications, scaled back the original NTV proposal to a network of seven UHF transmitters in Southern Ontario, whose combined footprint would have provided at least secondary broadcast coverage from Montreal to Detroit. Global Communications still aspired to eventually build out Soble's original 97-station network, and viewed the seven-transmitter Ontario chain as an interim step. However, since CHCH was no longer involved in the application, Global's iteration of the plan also required the launch of a new station to serve as its flagship.

The station first signed on the air on January 6, 1974 as CKGN-TV (before its use by the station, the CKGN callsign had previously been used by what is now CTV owned-and-operated station CKNY-TV in North Bay from 1955 to 1962). It branded itself as the "Global Television Network," a name which reflected its then-unprecedented coverage of most of Southern Ontario from six transmitters (a seventh that would have reached Montreal was turned down) fed from a centralized studio. From its launch in 1974 until 2009, the station's main transmitter was licensed to Paris, a small town near Brantford, but Toronto became the station's primary city of licence following an amendment to the channel 41 licence in 2009.[3] Through its entire history, however, the station's main studio facility has been based in a converted factory (built 1954 for Barber Greene Canada Limited)[4] in the Don Mills area of North York (since 1998, located in Toronto).

It had hoped to be distinct from CBC and CTV by airing a number of its own Canadian-made programs. Three months later, however, many of these programs had been cancelled due to deep financial problems. It had made a serious blunder by signing on in the middle of the 1973–74 television season, and prospective advertisers did not have the money to spare for commercial spots. It barely registered as a blip in the ratings; in Toronto, for instance, it only drew a 2.5 share, just a fraction of those drawn by CBC and CTV. Its line of credit was yanked, and it was unable to meet daily expenses.

Amid losses of over a million dollars a month, the network was bailed out by two conglomerates in March 1974 – a Toronto-based group headed by Paul Morton and a Winnipeg-based group headed by Izzy Asper. By the fall, Global was forced to scrap its ambitious business model just to survive. Instead, it began airing as much non-Canadian content as allowed (at the time, Canadian content regulations required stations to broadcast domestically produced programs for 60% of its overall schedule, and 50% during prime time), becoming essentially a clone of CTV.

The Asper group bought controlling interest in 1985, making him the first western owner of a major Canadian broadcaster. In 1989, the two groups tried to buy out each other's shares, and the CRTC ended the contest by allowing Asper and his company, Canwest, to take full ownership.

 
First logo as "Global Ontario", used from August 1997 to February 2006.

The station's callsign was changed to CIII-TV in January 1984, in accordance with its 10th anniversary of broadcasting. The Windsor/Cottam transmitter would be an exception to the rebroadcasters that were also assigned the CIII calls that month for a few years as it continued to be identified in CRTC documents as CKGN-TV-1, perhaps because of licensing issues with nearby broadcasters in the Detroit market (the CKGN calls are now used by an FM radio station in Kapuskasing, Ontario).

 
Second logo as "Global Ontario", used from 2006 to 2009.

News operation Edit

CIII-DT presently broadcasts 30 hours, 55 minutes of locally produced newscasts each week (with 5 hours, 35 minutes each weekday and 1½ hours each on Saturdays and Sundays). In addition to its main news department in Toronto, the station also operates a news bureau at the National Press Centre in Ottawa. CIII does not employ its own entertainment or sports reporters. Entertainment news coverage is provided by Entertainment Tonight Canada and sports news content was formerly provided by sports specialty channel Sportsnet 360.

Early on, its flagship news program Global News was developed under the guidance of Bill Cunningham, a veteran of CBC News; in the beginning, the newscast was anchored by Peter Trueman in Toronto and Peter Desbarats in Ottawa. During the news department's early years, its newscasts were one of the most successful and important programs that CKGN/CIII had.[5] Trueman has noted in his memoir that the programme was groundbreaking: "Our newsroom-studio combination ... served as a model for the new CHAN-TV facilities in Vancouver, and it is currently [1979] the inspiration for Ted Turner's new Cablenews operation in Atlanta". The CBC also looked to it for inspiration when it changed its national news format in the early 1980s.[6] The programme also pioneered the use of "regional correspondents," usually print or radio journalists, who would regularly advise the station about stories in their part of Ontario. This allowed field producers and a Global crew to target key stories of the day. "This is the main reason that much of Global's ex-urban coverage has been so effective", Trueman wrote in 1979.[7]

During the 1980s, Global greatly expanded its news operation, with a 90-minute block of news starting at 5:30 p.m., as well as newscasts at noon and 11:00 p.m. By the end of the 1980s, the noon newscast was simply titled News at Noon, the 5:30 newscast was called First News, the 6:00 newscast was called The Six O'Clock Report, and the 11:00 newscast was titled The World Tonight. Trueman left CIII in 1988. Other anchors on the station over the years have included Mike Anscombe, Beverly Thomson, John Dawe, Jane Gilbert, Peter Kent, Loretta Sullivan, Bob McAdorey, Thalia Assuras and Anne-Marie Mediwake.

From 1994 to 2001, CIII also produced First National, which was anchored by Peter Kent and aired at 6:30 p.m. weeknights. In 2001, the program was replaced by Canada Tonight, which in turn was replaced that fall with Global National, anchored by Kevin Newman; it originated from CHAN's facility in Vancouver before moving to a dedicated studio in Ottawa in February 2008. In January 2009, CIII canceled its weekday morning newscast Global News Morning, along with the Noon News Hour, with the former being discontinued due to low ratings and both program being dropped due to cost-cutting measures at certain Global stations. From February to August 2009, CIII simulcast former Hamilton sister station CHCH-TV's Morning Live newscast each weekday from 7:00 to 9:00 a.m. The CHCH simulcast was later dropped after Canwest sold that station to Channel Zero, with CIII airing second-run lifestyle programming in the morning timeslot, as well as rebroadcasts of the previous night's News Hour Final.

On October 11, 2011, CIII-DT launched a three-hour weekday morning newscast titled The Morning Show, running from 6:00 to 9:00 a.m., which broadcasts from a storefront studio at Shaw Media's Bloor Street building in Downtown Toronto.[8] The station also moved its early evening newscast, News Hour, a half-hour earlier to 5:30 p.m. to coincide with a shift of Global National to the 6:30 p.m. slot, joining Montreal's CKMI-DT and Halifax's CIHF-DT as the only Global stations to carry the network's national newscast in that timeslot.[9]

On August 27, 2012, CIII restored a midday newscast to its schedule with the launch of a half-hour weekday noon newscast. Unlike the existing lunch hour newscasts carried on Global's sister stations, the newscast airs for 30 minutes instead of one hour. The expansions to CIII's news programming were part of a benefits package that was included as a condition of the sale of the Global Television Network to Shaw Communications.[10]

In June 2016, Global News announced that The Morning Show co-host Liza Fromer would not have her contract renewed after five years with the station. Fromer was the only original host of The Morning Show remaining from when the show launched in 2011. No replacement will be hired to fill her position. Another layoff was with Global News at Noon anchor Rosey Edeh. Neither anchor works with the station anymore.[11]

Former local news programs Edit

  • The Morning Show – airing from 6–9:30 a.m. ET weekdays. The show is hosted by Carolyn Mackenzie, Jeff McArthur and Liem Vu at a studio at Corus Quay. Carolyn Mackenzie anchored local news, Jeff McArthur anchored national news, and Liem Vu reported on social media news and weather. Jeff McArthur's national news segment is also aired on Global News Morning shows on Global Halifax, Montreal, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, and Regina. The 9–9:30 portion of the show is also aired nationally after local Global News Morning programs, however the run-time has since been extended to one hour. The national one-hour show kept The Morning Show branding, while it was dropped locally.

Notable former on-air staff Edit

  • Anne Mroczkowski – co-anchor of News Hour (2010–13)
  • Leslie RobertsThe Morning Show – National Edition (weekday mornings anchor) and News Hour (weeknights anchor)
  • Peter Trueman – evening news anchor (1974–88)
  • Peter Desbarats – anchor until 1980
  • Peter Kent – national anchor, (1992–2001); later news executive, business news host, and Canadian Member of Parliament
  • Jan Tennant – local anchor (1982–87)
  • Bob McAdorey – entertainment anchor (1980–2000), co-anchor of News at Noon for 14 years
  • Mike Anscombe – news and sports anchor (1974–97)
  • Gord Martineau – co-anchor during his brief stint in 1980s away from Citytv
  • Liza Fromer – co-host of The Morning Show (2011–2016)
  • Rosey Edeh – anchor of Global News at Noon (2012–2016), co-host of The Morning Show (2012–2015)
  • Robert Fisher – reporter, host of Focus Ontario

Technical information Edit

Subchannel Edit

Subchannel of CIII-DT[12]
Channel Video Aspect Short name Programming
41.1 1080i 16:9 CIII-HD Main CIII-DT programming / Global

Analogue-to-digital conversion Edit

CIII-TV-41 in Toronto began broadcasting its digital signal in July 2009. The station's analogue signal, over UHF channel 41, was shut down on August 31, 2011, the official date on which Canadian television stations in CRTC-designated mandatory markets transitioned from analogue to digital broadcasts. CIII's digital signal was relocated from its pre-transition UHF channel 65, as its original digital channel was among the high band UHF channels (52–69) that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition, to UHF channel 41.[13]

Global also transitioned CIII-TV in Paris, CIII-TV-6 in Ottawa and CIII-TV-7 in Midland (serving Barrie) to digital on August 31, 2011. CIII-TV-22 in Stevenson (serving Windsor and Chatham) converted to digital on August 8, 2011. The transmitter operates at a reduced power and its coverage area has been reduced.[citation needed] CIII-TV-55 in Fort Erie vacated its channel frequency on August 31, 2011, as Global decided to shut down that transmitter. Coverage to the areas in Canada served by the Fort Erie transmitter are provided by CIII-DT-41. Global plans on transitioning its remaining transmitters to digital by 2016,[14] though all of CIII-DT's transmitters except for its Bancroft transmitter are to be converted to digital by February 2013.

Shortly after the 2011 digital transition, an additional digital subchannel (41.2) was launched, carrying a standard definition feed of CIII-DT, which fully duplicates the existing programming on 41.1. However (unlike other Toronto-area stations) this SD feed is not simply a letterboxed or cropped version of the HD feed, instead having different placement for promotional graphics and a separate on-screen bug (without an "HD" annotation). It is therefore possible that the SD feed needs to be broadcast over-the-air in order to continue carriage of this dedicated feed on cable and satellite providers (however, it also serves as a benefit to some over-the-air viewers with 4:3 television sets and digital converters, insofar as it allows those viewers to avoid older 4:3 programs appearing both letterboxed and pillarboxed). In late spring 2018, CIII-DT ceased broadcasting digital subchannel 41.2.

On April 10, 2012, Shaw Media applied for permission to change CIII-DT-6's allocation from VHF channel 6 to UHF channel 14, switching from circular to elliptical polarization, citing the VHF-Low band's impulse noise (compared to the VHF-High and UHF bands) causing reception issues, which would be mostly resolved with a higher frequency.[15] The power would be increased substantially, from 3.3 kW, to 145 kW. The application states that it may be short-spaced to Buffalo, New York's WUTV, and Plattsburgh, New York's WPTZ, both of which may be subject to (and cause) some co-channel interference on the fringes of CIII-DT-6's service area. This application was approved by the CRTC on July 4, 2012. CIII-DT-6 officially moved to channel 14 in mid-August 2013.

Shaw Media had begun applying for permission to convert its transmitters in Northern Ontario to digital, with CFGC-TV in Sudbury and CFGC-TV-2 in North Bay on June 14,[16] and CIII-TV-12 in Sault Ste. Marie on June 22. The application for CIII-TV-12 included switching its digital allotment from VHF channel 7 to UHF channel 15, for improved signal quality and a slightly increased population coverage.[17] The application for CFGC-DT-2 requested the use of UHF channel 15, instead of UHF channel 32, as CHCH-TV-6 currently uses that frequency. The digital channel for CFGC-TV has not yet been requested. All three transmitters are to be fed via satellite.

Following the shutdown of the Radio-Canada repeater in Kitchener (CBLFT-TV-8) which had been assigned the UHF channel 17 allocation, Shaw had applied on October 10, 2012 to move its CIII-DT digital transmitter in Paris from VHF channel 6 to UHF channel 17, to vastly improve its coverage to the Kitchener area.[18] Technical parameters included in the change would be a boost in power and slight decrease in height (4 kW at 311.3 meters on VHF channel 6, compared to 165 kW (average of 97 kW) at 272 meters on UHF channel 17). The UHF signal would have a slightly smaller range of broadcast coverage, but Shaw had admitted that areas on the fringes would still be able to receive Global programming via CIII-DT-29, CIII-DT-41 and CIII-TV-4. The application was approved by the CRTC on January 22, 2013. Prior to being shut down in 2022, CIII-DT-27 could on most days be seen from as far away as Rochester, New York, on channel 27.1.

In January 2020, the transmitter power of CIII-TV-2 (Bancroft) was temporarily reduced to prevent an overload caused by high VSWR at the site. On December 4, 2020, the CRTC approved a request from Corus Entertainment to shut down CIII-DT-27 and CIII-TV-2 (among other Global retransmitters) in favour of multiplexing CIII-DT-27 via CHEX-DT and CIII-TV-2 via CKWS-DT Kingston.[19] This decision saw the CRTC abandon a promise made in 2010 to have the owners of Global Television transition CIII-TV-2 to digital.[20] CIII-TV-2 continued to operate as an NTSC analogue retransmitter until August 31, 2022. The CIII-TV-2 transmitter that operated out of Vennachar for close to 50 years was possibly the last over the air analogue transmitter to rebroadcast Global in Ontario. It is unclear what Industry Canada will now use VHF channel 11, the spectrum that had been allocated for CIII-TV-2 digital, for.

Transmitters Edit

Station City of licence Channel
(RF / VC)
ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinates
CIII-DT Paris 23 (UHF)
6
97 kW 272 m (892 ft) 43°15′41″N 80°26′41″W / 43.26139°N 80.44472°W / 43.26139; -80.44472
CIII-DT-2 Kingston
(via CKWS-DT)
11 (VHF)
2
9.4 kW 312.5 m (1,025 ft) 44°9′59″N 76°25′28″W / 44.16639°N 76.42444°W / 44.16639; -76.42444 (CKWS-DT)
CIII-DT-4 Owen Sound 26 (UHF)
4
192 kW 132.0 m (433 ft) 44°26′45″N 80°59′59″W / 44.44583°N 80.99972°W / 44.44583; -80.99972 (CIII-DT-4)
CIII-DT-6 Ottawa 14 (UHF)
6
145 kW 261.3 m (857 ft) 45°30′9″N 75°50′59″W / 45.50250°N 75.84972°W / 45.50250; -75.84972 (CIII-DT-6)
CIII-DT-7 Midland 7 (VHF)
7
6.75 kW 346.7 m (1,137 ft) 44°58′14″N 79°46′57″W / 44.97056°N 79.78250°W / 44.97056; -79.78250 (CIII-DT-7)
CIII-DT-12 Sault Ste. Marie 15 (UHF)
12
6 kW 132 m (433 ft) 46°35′50″N 84°16′53″W / 46.59722°N 84.28139°W / 46.59722; -84.28139 (CIII-TV-12)
CIII-DT-13 Timmins 13 (VHF)
13
30 kW 175 m (574 ft) 48°28′12″N 81°17′49″W / 48.47000°N 81.29694°W / 48.47000; -81.29694 (CIII-TV-13)
CIII-DT-22 Stevenson 33 (UHF)
22
36 kW 110 m (361 ft) 42°3′41″N 82°29′5″W / 42.06139°N 82.48472°W / 42.06139; -82.48472 (CIII-DT-22)
CIII-DT-27 Peterborough 27 (UHF)
27
275 kW 276.6 m (907 ft) 44°4′14″N 78°8′35″W / 44.07056°N 78.14306°W / 44.07056; -78.14306 (CIII-DT-27)
CIII-DT-29 SarniaOil Springs 35 (UHF)
29
208 kW 194 m (636 ft) 42°43′21″N 82°9′59″W / 42.72250°N 82.16639°W / 42.72250; -82.16639 (CIII-DT-29)
CIII-DT-41 Toronto 17 (UHF)
41
59.8 kW 506 m (1,660 ft) 43°38′33″N 79°23′14″W / 43.64250°N 79.38722°W / 43.64250; -79.38722 (CIII-TV-41)
CFGC-DT Sudbury 11 (VHF)
11
11.7 kW 141.5 m (464 ft) 46°30′19″N 80°57′33″W / 46.50528°N 80.95917°W / 46.50528; -80.95917 (CFGC-DT)
CFGC-DT-2 North Bay 15 (UHF)
2
16.8 kW 92.8 m (304 ft) 46°18′10″N 79°24′39″W / 46.30278°N 79.41083°W / 46.30278; -79.41083 (CFGC-TV-2)

A series of rebroadcast transmitters relay the CIII signal to much of Ontario. Most of these use the CIII base callsign followed by a number to denote their status as rebroadcasters, except in Sudbury and North Bay where the CFGC callsign is assigned. The most likely explanation for using CFGC is that the close resemblance between the number 1 and the letter I would make CIII-TV-11 an undesirable call sign for Sudbury, while North Bay could not use CIII-TV-2 as that call sign is already in use in Bancroft.

These six transmitters formed the original 1974 service:

Original plans called for a seventh transmitter, CKGN-TV-36 from Maxville, near Cornwall. It would have primarily served Hawkesbury, but would have also provided a fairly strong grade B signal to Montreal. However, Global was forced to drop the Maxville transmitter from its proposal due to a CRTC moratorium on new stations in Montreal.

The Cottam transmitter was beset by legal difficulties. Since it served Windsor, it was considered to be part of the Detroit market, in which Global did not hold the rights for all of its programming. While Global initially was able to supply alternate programming to the Cottam site, its initial financial difficulties prompted it to instead begin showing a slide during preempted shows, which often made up significant portions of the network's prime time lineup.[21] The network quoted the cost of continuing to provide alternate programming to Windsor at $800,000 a year.[22] At the same time, in an attempt to disclaim competition with American outlets, Global ceased sending listings to Detroit's newspapers.[21]

On August 29, 1977, the Cottam transmitter suffered an electrical fire that caused $300,000 in damage and took it out of commission.[23] After considering restoring service from Cottam and finding issues with securing an appropriate transmitter and its insurance claim, the network began to contemplate ways of improving its service to Windsor.[24] Further delays were incurred when concerns arose about potential polychlorinated biphenyl contamination of the site.[25] In 1981, Global sought permission to build a higher-power successor to the Cottam station for the Windsor–Detroit market;[26] the CRTC denied this application in December of that year.[27]

In 1986, the CRTC approved the relocation of the Cottam transmitter to Stevenson.[28] Some time after this, the CIII-TV-22 call letters from the now-defunct Uxbridge transmitter were reassigned to the Stevenson transmitter, which then was activated in November 1988. The transmitter is located southwest of Wheatley, between Wheatley and Leamington, but its signal is aimed northeast (towards Chatham–Kent), and barely reaches Windsor and Detroit – presumably to protect the Detroit stations. In the early 1990s, additional transmitters were added to expand Global's footprint in Ontario.[29]

The Uxbridge transmitter was Canada's most powerful UHF transmitter, operating at the maximum allowable power of 5 megawatts.[30][31] It shut down in 1988, replaced by CIII-TV-41, broadcasting from the CN Tower in Toronto.[32] For all intents and purposes, given that the station has always been based in Toronto, this was CIII's main transmitter and Global's flagship even before the station officially moved its licence to Toronto in 2009. This was the case with the Uxbridge transmitter as well. Starting in 2008, CIII began sending its signal to the Toronto transmitter first, since the Paris transmitter did not yet have digital capability.

Other transmitters were gradually introduced, including (launch dates in parenthesis):

On August 28, 1996, Global was given CRTC approval to add a new transmitter at Cornwall. Global had proposed to use VHF channel 11 at Cornwall[33] but instead channel 11 was awarded to Hamilton's CHCH-TV in Ottawa that same day.[34] Another option was to operate a Global transmitter on a UHF channel in Cornwall which was never launched.

CIII is not available in Thunder Bay but the market is served by independently owned affiliate CHFD-DT, owned by Dougall Media. CHFD's owners, the Dougall family, were concerned about Global threatening their local television monopoly (Dougall Media controls all of the local network television output for the Thunder Bay region[35] and had previously lobbied the CRTC to cease CHCH-TV's cable transmissions in the mid-1990s[36]) and pressured the CRTC to deny Global's application to build a transmitter there. However, in 2009, Dougall Media switched the affiliation of CHFD from CTV to Global. As a result, Global-branded programming is available in Thunder Bay, just not via CIII's province-wide network of repeaters. Similarly, in Kenora, former CTV affiliate, CJBN-TV (which was owned by Shaw), switched to full-time Global programming in late 2011 (the station would cease operations in January 2017).

Initial attempts to cover Peterborough and Kingston from the Bancroft transmitter had yielded poor to marginal results; this signal has since been largely supplanted (for Peterborough only) by the more-powerful CIII-TV-27. Despite CHEX-DT becoming Global's Peterborough station in 2018, CIII-DT-27 remains on the air.

CIII-TV-41, along with CHCH in Hamilton and CHAN-TV in Vancouver, began over-the-air high-definition broadcasts in 2008.[37]

Former transmitter Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Ownership Chart 32H - CORUS - TV & Discretionary Services
  2. ^ "Canadian Satellite Television". Archived from the original on 24 November 2015. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  3. ^ CRTC Decision 2009-409
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2015-01-18.
  5. ^ Peter Trueman, Smoke and Mirrors (McClelland and Stewart), 1980 p. 211. Trueman writes, "without its news service, Global would probably long before have gone under as a network. The news service has given us standing not just with the CRTC, but has generated prestige and credibility with viewers, advertisers, the banks, and the rest of the financial community"
  6. ^ Peter Trueman, Smoke and Mirrors (McClelland and Stewart), 1980 p. 216.
  7. ^ Peter Trueman, Smoke and Mirrors (McClelland and Stewart), 1980 p. 136
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-02. Retrieved 2011-06-01.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-03-19. Retrieved 2011-09-07.
  10. ^ Global News Boosts Local Programming Across the Country 2014-01-07 at the Wayback Machine, Broadcaster Magazine, May 30, 2012.
  11. ^ Staff. "16X9 cancelled, Liza Fromer contract not renewed amid changes at Global News". Retrieved 2016-06-29.
  12. ^ RabbitEars TV Query for CIII
  13. ^ Digital Television – Office of Consumer Affairs (OCA) 2013-11-20 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Conversion of Shaw Media’s non-mandatory market transmitters from analogue to digital – Progress Report, Shaw Communications (to CRTC), Sept 2014
  15. ^ "The Runtime Service cannot communicate with Entitlements Service".
  16. ^ "The Runtime Service cannot communicate with Entitlements Service".
  17. ^ "The Runtime Service cannot communicate with Entitlements Service".
  18. ^ "The Runtime Service cannot communicate with Entitlements Service".
  19. ^ "Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2020-391". Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. December 4, 2020. Retrieved October 7, 2021.
  20. ^ "Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2010-782". Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. October 22, 2010. Retrieved October 7, 2021.
  21. ^ a b Bennett, Ray (February 12, 1975). "Global draws a big blank here". Windsor Star. p. 31. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  22. ^ Bennett, Ray (November 6, 1975). "Detroit TV barrier said insurmountable". Windsor Star. p. 18. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  23. ^ "Global is in the dark about transmitter fire". Windsor Star. August 31, 1977. p. 5. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  24. ^ McMahon, Tom (April 21, 1978). "Global trying to be better". p. 18. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  25. ^ McMahon, Tom (January 30, 1979). "Global may return...in 1980". p. 15. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  26. ^ Coleman, John (May 28, 1981). "Global TV wants permission to enter Detroit market". Windsor Star. p. 14. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  27. ^ McMahon, Tom (March 2, 1982). "Global scratching its head over Windsor". Windsor Star. p. 11. Retrieved April 17, 2020.
  28. ^ Decision CRTC 86–678
  29. ^ Decision CRTC 92–220
  30. ^ CKGN-TV (now CIII-TV) sign-off, from 1979
  31. ^ CIII-TV sign-off, from 1984
  32. ^ Decision CRTC 86-1087
  33. ^ Decision CRTC 96-546
  34. ^ Decision CRTC 96-544
  35. ^ . www.dougallmedia.com. Archived from the original on 2006-06-13.
  36. ^ "ARCHIVED - Decision CRTC 96-544". 1996.
  37. ^ Global Television Network – Frequently Asked Questions 2008-03-19 at the Wayback Machine

External links Edit

  • Global Toronto
  • CIII-DT history – Canadian Communications Foundation
  • CIII in the REC Canadian station database
  • CFGC in the REC Canadian station database (Callsign used in Sudbury and North Bay)

ciii, ciii, redirects, here, number, roman, numerals, number, cfgc, redirects, here, chinese, state, owned, film, studio, china, film, group, corporation, channel, television, station, toronto, ontario, canada, serving, flagship, station, global, television, n. CIII redirects here For the number in Roman numerals see 103 number CFGC redirects here For the Chinese state owned film studio see China Film Group Corporation CIII DT channel 41 is a television station in Toronto Ontario Canada serving as the flagship station of the Global Television Network Owned and operated by network parent Corus Entertainment CIII DT maintains studios at 81 Barber Greene Road near Leslie Street in the Don Mills district of Toronto and its transmitter is located atop the CN Tower in downtown Toronto CIII DTToronto OntarioCanadaChannelsDigital 17 UHF Virtual 41BrandingGlobal Toronto or Global general Global News newscasts ProgrammingAffiliationsGlobal 1997 present OwnershipOwnerCorus Entertainment Corus Television Limited Partnership 1 Sister stationsCFIQ CFNY FM CILQ FMHistoryFirst air dateJanuary 6 1974 49 years ago 1974 01 06 in Paris Ontario licence moved to Toronto in 2009 Former call signsCKGN TV 1974 1984 CIII TV 1984 2011 Former channel number s Analogue 22 UHF 1974 1988 41 UHF 1988 2011 Digital 65 UHF 2009 2011 41 UHF 2011 2020 Former affiliationsIndependent 1974 1997 Call sign meaning III Roman numeral 3 a reference to Global being Canada s third television network as well as the station s channel position on many Ontario cable systems Technical informationLicensing authorityCRTCERP59 8 kWHAAT506 m 1 660 ft Transmitter coordinates43 38 33 N 79 23 14 W 43 64250 N 79 38722 W 43 64250 79 38722 CIII TV 41 Translator s See belowLinksWebsiteGlobal TorontoThe station reaches much of the population of Ontario through a network of 12 transmitters across primarily the southern and central portions of the province as a result it is the de facto Global outlet for the capital city of Ottawa through repeater CIII DT 6 Since August 29 2022 CIII DT serves as the master control hub for all 15 Global owned and operated stations across Canada Contents 1 History 2 News operation 2 1 Former local news programs 2 2 Notable former on air staff 3 Technical information 3 1 Subchannel 3 2 Analogue to digital conversion 3 3 Transmitters 3 4 Former transmitter 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditKen Soble the founder of CHCH TV in Hamilton envisioned a national superstation of 96 satellite fed transmitters with CHCH as its flagship In 1966 he filed the first application with the Board of Broadcast Governors for a network to be branded as NTV however the application faced various regulatory hurdles and underwent numerous revisions over the next number of years The Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC eventually decided to go ahead with the publicly owned Anik satellite system instead of relying on private communications companies to build Canada s satellite broadcasting infrastructure placing the NTV application in jeopardy after Power Corporation of Canada a key investor in the plan backed out 2 In 1970 one of Soble s former employees Al Bruner teamed up with Peter Hill to revive the application under new ownership Bruner and Hill s group Global Communications scaled back the original NTV proposal to a network of seven UHF transmitters in Southern Ontario whose combined footprint would have provided at least secondary broadcast coverage from Montreal to Detroit Global Communications still aspired to eventually build out Soble s original 97 station network and viewed the seven transmitter Ontario chain as an interim step However since CHCH was no longer involved in the application Global s iteration of the plan also required the launch of a new station to serve as its flagship The station first signed on the air on January 6 1974 as CKGN TV before its use by the station the CKGN callsign had previously been used by what is now CTV owned and operated station CKNY TV in North Bay from 1955 to 1962 It branded itself as the Global Television Network a name which reflected its then unprecedented coverage of most of Southern Ontario from six transmitters a seventh that would have reached Montreal was turned down fed from a centralized studio From its launch in 1974 until 2009 the station s main transmitter was licensed to Paris a small town near Brantford but Toronto became the station s primary city of licence following an amendment to the channel 41 licence in 2009 3 Through its entire history however the station s main studio facility has been based in a converted factory built 1954 for Barber Greene Canada Limited 4 in the Don Mills area of North York since 1998 located in Toronto It had hoped to be distinct from CBC and CTV by airing a number of its own Canadian made programs Three months later however many of these programs had been cancelled due to deep financial problems It had made a serious blunder by signing on in the middle of the 1973 74 television season and prospective advertisers did not have the money to spare for commercial spots It barely registered as a blip in the ratings in Toronto for instance it only drew a 2 5 share just a fraction of those drawn by CBC and CTV Its line of credit was yanked and it was unable to meet daily expenses Amid losses of over a million dollars a month the network was bailed out by two conglomerates in March 1974 a Toronto based group headed by Paul Morton and a Winnipeg based group headed by Izzy Asper By the fall Global was forced to scrap its ambitious business model just to survive Instead it began airing as much non Canadian content as allowed at the time Canadian content regulations required stations to broadcast domestically produced programs for 60 of its overall schedule and 50 during prime time becoming essentially a clone of CTV The Asper group bought controlling interest in 1985 making him the first western owner of a major Canadian broadcaster In 1989 the two groups tried to buy out each other s shares and the CRTC ended the contest by allowing Asper and his company Canwest to take full ownership First logo as Global Ontario used from August 1997 to February 2006 The station s callsign was changed to CIII TV in January 1984 in accordance with its 10th anniversary of broadcasting The Windsor Cottam transmitter would be an exception to the rebroadcasters that were also assigned the CIII calls that month for a few years as it continued to be identified in CRTC documents as CKGN TV 1 perhaps because of licensing issues with nearby broadcasters in the Detroit market the CKGN calls are now used by an FM radio station in Kapuskasing Ontario Second logo as Global Ontario used from 2006 to 2009 News operation EditCIII DT presently broadcasts 30 hours 55 minutes of locally produced newscasts each week with 5 hours 35 minutes each weekday and 1 hours each on Saturdays and Sundays In addition to its main news department in Toronto the station also operates a news bureau at the National Press Centre in Ottawa CIII does not employ its own entertainment or sports reporters Entertainment news coverage is provided by Entertainment Tonight Canada and sports news content was formerly provided by sports specialty channel Sportsnet 360 Early on its flagship news program Global News was developed under the guidance of Bill Cunningham a veteran of CBC News in the beginning the newscast was anchored by Peter Trueman in Toronto and Peter Desbarats in Ottawa During the news department s early years its newscasts were one of the most successful and important programs that CKGN CIII had 5 Trueman has noted in his memoir that the programme was groundbreaking Our newsroom studio combination served as a model for the new CHAN TV facilities in Vancouver and it is currently 1979 the inspiration for Ted Turner s new Cablenews operation in Atlanta The CBC also looked to it for inspiration when it changed its national news format in the early 1980s 6 The programme also pioneered the use of regional correspondents usually print or radio journalists who would regularly advise the station about stories in their part of Ontario This allowed field producers and a Global crew to target key stories of the day This is the main reason that much of Global s ex urban coverage has been so effective Trueman wrote in 1979 7 During the 1980s Global greatly expanded its news operation with a 90 minute block of news starting at 5 30 p m as well as newscasts at noon and 11 00 p m By the end of the 1980s the noon newscast was simply titled News at Noon the 5 30 newscast was called First News the 6 00 newscast was called The Six O Clock Report and the 11 00 newscast was titled The World Tonight Trueman left CIII in 1988 Other anchors on the station over the years have included Mike Anscombe Beverly Thomson John Dawe Jane Gilbert Peter Kent Loretta Sullivan Bob McAdorey Thalia Assuras and Anne Marie Mediwake From 1994 to 2001 CIII also produced First National which was anchored by Peter Kent and aired at 6 30 p m weeknights In 2001 the program was replaced by Canada Tonight which in turn was replaced that fall with Global National anchored by Kevin Newman it originated from CHAN s facility in Vancouver before moving to a dedicated studio in Ottawa in February 2008 In January 2009 CIII canceled its weekday morning newscast Global News Morning along with the Noon News Hour with the former being discontinued due to low ratings and both program being dropped due to cost cutting measures at certain Global stations From February to August 2009 CIII simulcast former Hamilton sister station CHCH TV s Morning Live newscast each weekday from 7 00 to 9 00 a m The CHCH simulcast was later dropped after Canwest sold that station to Channel Zero with CIII airing second run lifestyle programming in the morning timeslot as well as rebroadcasts of the previous night s News Hour Final On October 11 2011 CIII DT launched a three hour weekday morning newscast titled The Morning Show running from 6 00 to 9 00 a m which broadcasts from a storefront studio at Shaw Media s Bloor Street building in Downtown Toronto 8 The station also moved its early evening newscast News Hour a half hour earlier to 5 30 p m to coincide with a shift of Global National to the 6 30 p m slot joining Montreal s CKMI DT and Halifax s CIHF DT as the only Global stations to carry the network s national newscast in that timeslot 9 On August 27 2012 CIII restored a midday newscast to its schedule with the launch of a half hour weekday noon newscast Unlike the existing lunch hour newscasts carried on Global s sister stations the newscast airs for 30 minutes instead of one hour The expansions to CIII s news programming were part of a benefits package that was included as a condition of the sale of the Global Television Network to Shaw Communications 10 In June 2016 Global News announced that The Morning Show co host Liza Fromer would not have her contract renewed after five years with the station Fromer was the only original host of The Morning Show remaining from when the show launched in 2011 No replacement will be hired to fill her position Another layoff was with Global News at Noon anchor Rosey Edeh Neither anchor works with the station anymore 11 Former local news programs Edit The Morning Show airing from 6 9 30 a m ET weekdays The show is hosted by Carolyn Mackenzie Jeff McArthur and Liem Vu at a studio at Corus Quay Carolyn Mackenzie anchored local news Jeff McArthur anchored national news and Liem Vu reported on social media news and weather Jeff McArthur s national news segment is also aired on Global News Morning shows on Global Halifax Montreal Winnipeg Saskatoon and Regina The 9 9 30 portion of the show is also aired nationally after local Global News Morning programs however the run time has since been extended to one hour The national one hour show kept The Morning Show branding while it was dropped locally Notable former on air staff Edit Anne Mroczkowski co anchor of News Hour 2010 13 Leslie Roberts The Morning Show National Edition weekday mornings anchor and News Hour weeknights anchor Peter Trueman evening news anchor 1974 88 Peter Desbarats anchor until 1980 Peter Kent national anchor 1992 2001 later news executive business news host and Canadian Member of Parliament Jan Tennant local anchor 1982 87 Bob McAdorey entertainment anchor 1980 2000 co anchor of News at Noon for 14 years Mike Anscombe news and sports anchor 1974 97 Gord Martineau co anchor during his brief stint in 1980s away from Citytv Liza Fromer co host of The Morning Show 2011 2016 Rosey Edeh anchor of Global News at Noon 2012 2016 co host of The Morning Show 2012 2015 Robert Fisher reporter host of Focus OntarioTechnical information EditSubchannel Edit Subchannel of CIII DT 12 Channel Video Aspect Short name Programming41 1 1080i 16 9 CIII HD Main CIII DT programming GlobalAnalogue to digital conversion Edit CIII TV 41 in Toronto began broadcasting its digital signal in July 2009 The station s analogue signal over UHF channel 41 was shut down on August 31 2011 the official date on which Canadian television stations in CRTC designated mandatory markets transitioned from analogue to digital broadcasts CIII s digital signal was relocated from its pre transition UHF channel 65 as its original digital channel was among the high band UHF channels 52 69 that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition to UHF channel 41 13 Global also transitioned CIII TV in Paris CIII TV 6 in Ottawa and CIII TV 7 in Midland serving Barrie to digital on August 31 2011 CIII TV 22 in Stevenson serving Windsor and Chatham converted to digital on August 8 2011 The transmitter operates at a reduced power and its coverage area has been reduced citation needed CIII TV 55 in Fort Erie vacated its channel frequency on August 31 2011 as Global decided to shut down that transmitter Coverage to the areas in Canada served by the Fort Erie transmitter are provided by CIII DT 41 Global plans on transitioning its remaining transmitters to digital by 2016 14 though all of CIII DT s transmitters except for its Bancroft transmitter are to be converted to digital by February 2013 Shortly after the 2011 digital transition an additional digital subchannel 41 2 was launched carrying a standard definition feed of CIII DT which fully duplicates the existing programming on 41 1 However unlike other Toronto area stations this SD feed is not simply a letterboxed or cropped version of the HD feed instead having different placement for promotional graphics and a separate on screen bug without an HD annotation It is therefore possible that the SD feed needs to be broadcast over the air in order to continue carriage of this dedicated feed on cable and satellite providers however it also serves as a benefit to some over the air viewers with 4 3 television sets and digital converters insofar as it allows those viewers to avoid older 4 3 programs appearing both letterboxed and pillarboxed In late spring 2018 CIII DT ceased broadcasting digital subchannel 41 2 On April 10 2012 Shaw Media applied for permission to change CIII DT 6 s allocation from VHF channel 6 to UHF channel 14 switching from circular to elliptical polarization citing the VHF Low band s impulse noise compared to the VHF High and UHF bands causing reception issues which would be mostly resolved with a higher frequency 15 The power would be increased substantially from 3 3 kW to 145 kW The application states that it may be short spaced to Buffalo New York s WUTV and Plattsburgh New York s WPTZ both of which may be subject to and cause some co channel interference on the fringes of CIII DT 6 s service area This application was approved by the CRTC on July 4 2012 CIII DT 6 officially moved to channel 14 in mid August 2013 Shaw Media had begun applying for permission to convert its transmitters in Northern Ontario to digital with CFGC TV in Sudbury and CFGC TV 2 in North Bay on June 14 16 and CIII TV 12 in Sault Ste Marie on June 22 The application for CIII TV 12 included switching its digital allotment from VHF channel 7 to UHF channel 15 for improved signal quality and a slightly increased population coverage 17 The application for CFGC DT 2 requested the use of UHF channel 15 instead of UHF channel 32 as CHCH TV 6 currently uses that frequency The digital channel for CFGC TV has not yet been requested All three transmitters are to be fed via satellite Following the shutdown of the Radio Canada repeater in Kitchener CBLFT TV 8 which had been assigned the UHF channel 17 allocation Shaw had applied on October 10 2012 to move its CIII DT digital transmitter in Paris from VHF channel 6 to UHF channel 17 to vastly improve its coverage to the Kitchener area 18 Technical parameters included in the change would be a boost in power and slight decrease in height 4 kW at 311 3 meters on VHF channel 6 compared to 165 kW average of 97 kW at 272 meters on UHF channel 17 The UHF signal would have a slightly smaller range of broadcast coverage but Shaw had admitted that areas on the fringes would still be able to receive Global programming via CIII DT 29 CIII DT 41 and CIII TV 4 The application was approved by the CRTC on January 22 2013 Prior to being shut down in 2022 CIII DT 27 could on most days be seen from as far away as Rochester New York on channel 27 1 In January 2020 the transmitter power of CIII TV 2 Bancroft was temporarily reduced to prevent an overload caused by high VSWR at the site On December 4 2020 the CRTC approved a request from Corus Entertainment to shut down CIII DT 27 and CIII TV 2 among other Global retransmitters in favour of multiplexing CIII DT 27 via CHEX DT and CIII TV 2 via CKWS DT Kingston 19 This decision saw the CRTC abandon a promise made in 2010 to have the owners of Global Television transition CIII TV 2 to digital 20 CIII TV 2 continued to operate as an NTSC analogue retransmitter until August 31 2022 The CIII TV 2 transmitter that operated out of Vennachar for close to 50 years was possibly the last over the air analogue transmitter to rebroadcast Global in Ontario It is unclear what Industry Canada will now use VHF channel 11 the spectrum that had been allocated for CIII TV 2 digital for Transmitters Edit Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Station City of licence Channel RF VC ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinatesCIII DT Paris 23 UHF 6 97 kW 272 m 892 ft 43 15 41 N 80 26 41 W 43 26139 N 80 44472 W 43 26139 80 44472CIII DT 2 Kingston via CKWS DT 11 VHF 2 9 4 kW 312 5 m 1 025 ft 44 9 59 N 76 25 28 W 44 16639 N 76 42444 W 44 16639 76 42444 CKWS DT CIII DT 4 Owen Sound 26 UHF 4 192 kW 132 0 m 433 ft 44 26 45 N 80 59 59 W 44 44583 N 80 99972 W 44 44583 80 99972 CIII DT 4 CIII DT 6 Ottawa 14 UHF 6 145 kW 261 3 m 857 ft 45 30 9 N 75 50 59 W 45 50250 N 75 84972 W 45 50250 75 84972 CIII DT 6 CIII DT 7 Midland 7 VHF 7 6 75 kW 346 7 m 1 137 ft 44 58 14 N 79 46 57 W 44 97056 N 79 78250 W 44 97056 79 78250 CIII DT 7 CIII DT 12 Sault Ste Marie 15 UHF 12 6 kW 132 m 433 ft 46 35 50 N 84 16 53 W 46 59722 N 84 28139 W 46 59722 84 28139 CIII TV 12 CIII DT 13 Timmins 13 VHF 13 30 kW 175 m 574 ft 48 28 12 N 81 17 49 W 48 47000 N 81 29694 W 48 47000 81 29694 CIII TV 13 CIII DT 22 Stevenson 33 UHF 22 36 kW 110 m 361 ft 42 3 41 N 82 29 5 W 42 06139 N 82 48472 W 42 06139 82 48472 CIII DT 22 CIII DT 27 Peterborough 27 UHF 27 275 kW 276 6 m 907 ft 44 4 14 N 78 8 35 W 44 07056 N 78 14306 W 44 07056 78 14306 CIII DT 27 CIII DT 29 Sarnia Oil Springs 35 UHF 29 208 kW 194 m 636 ft 42 43 21 N 82 9 59 W 42 72250 N 82 16639 W 42 72250 82 16639 CIII DT 29 CIII DT 41 Toronto 17 UHF 41 59 8 kW 506 m 1 660 ft 43 38 33 N 79 23 14 W 43 64250 N 79 38722 W 43 64250 79 38722 CIII TV 41 CFGC DT Sudbury 11 VHF 11 11 7 kW 141 5 m 464 ft 46 30 19 N 80 57 33 W 46 50528 N 80 95917 W 46 50528 80 95917 CFGC DT CFGC DT 2 North Bay 15 UHF 2 16 8 kW 92 8 m 304 ft 46 18 10 N 79 24 39 W 46 30278 N 79 41083 W 46 30278 79 41083 CFGC TV 2 A series of rebroadcast transmitters relay the CIII signal to much of Ontario Most of these use the CIII base callsign followed by a number to denote their status as rebroadcasters except in Sudbury and North Bay where the CFGC callsign is assigned The most likely explanation for using CFGC is that the close resemblance between the number 1 and the letter I would make CIII TV 11 an undesirable call sign for Sudbury while North Bay could not use CIII TV 2 as that call sign is already in use in Bancroft These six transmitters formed the original 1974 service CKGN TV channel 6 from Paris serving Hamilton Brantford and Kitchener Waterloo CKGN TV 1 channel 22 from Cottam near Windsor also serving Detroit Michigan CKGN TV 2 channel 2 from Bancroft serving Belleville CKGN TV 6 channel 6 from Gatineau Quebec Camp Fortune site near Ottawa CKGN TV 22 channel 22 from Uxbridge near Toronto CKGN TV 29 channel 29 from Oil Springs near Sarnia Original plans called for a seventh transmitter CKGN TV 36 from Maxville near Cornwall It would have primarily served Hawkesbury but would have also provided a fairly strong grade B signal to Montreal However Global was forced to drop the Maxville transmitter from its proposal due to a CRTC moratorium on new stations in Montreal The Cottam transmitter was beset by legal difficulties Since it served Windsor it was considered to be part of the Detroit market in which Global did not hold the rights for all of its programming While Global initially was able to supply alternate programming to the Cottam site its initial financial difficulties prompted it to instead begin showing a slide during preempted shows which often made up significant portions of the network s prime time lineup 21 The network quoted the cost of continuing to provide alternate programming to Windsor at 800 000 a year 22 At the same time in an attempt to disclaim competition with American outlets Global ceased sending listings to Detroit s newspapers 21 On August 29 1977 the Cottam transmitter suffered an electrical fire that caused 300 000 in damage and took it out of commission 23 After considering restoring service from Cottam and finding issues with securing an appropriate transmitter and its insurance claim the network began to contemplate ways of improving its service to Windsor 24 Further delays were incurred when concerns arose about potential polychlorinated biphenyl contamination of the site 25 In 1981 Global sought permission to build a higher power successor to the Cottam station for the Windsor Detroit market 26 the CRTC denied this application in December of that year 27 In 1986 the CRTC approved the relocation of the Cottam transmitter to Stevenson 28 Some time after this the CIII TV 22 call letters from the now defunct Uxbridge transmitter were reassigned to the Stevenson transmitter which then was activated in November 1988 The transmitter is located southwest of Wheatley between Wheatley and Leamington but its signal is aimed northeast towards Chatham Kent and barely reaches Windsor and Detroit presumably to protect the Detroit stations In the early 1990s additional transmitters were added to expand Global s footprint in Ontario 29 The Uxbridge transmitter was Canada s most powerful UHF transmitter operating at the maximum allowable power of 5 megawatts 30 31 It shut down in 1988 replaced by CIII TV 41 broadcasting from the CN Tower in Toronto 32 For all intents and purposes given that the station has always been based in Toronto this was CIII s main transmitter and Global s flagship even before the station officially moved its licence to Toronto in 2009 This was the case with the Uxbridge transmitter as well Starting in 2008 CIII began sending its signal to the Toronto transmitter first since the Paris transmitter did not yet have digital capability Other transmitters were gradually introduced including launch dates in parenthesis CIII TV 7 channel 7 from Midland November 1987 serving Barrie CIII TV 4 channel 4 from Owen Sound June 1988 CIII TV 27 channel 27 from Peterborough October 1988 CFGC TV channel 11 from Sudbury December 1992 CFGC TV 2 channel 2 from North Bay December 1992 CIII TV 13 channel 13 from Timmins December 1992 CIII TV 12 channel 12 from Sault Ste Marie December 1992 CIII TV 55 channel 55 from Fort Erie early 1993 serving Niagara Falls and the southern Niagara Region signal also reaches Buffalo New York On August 28 1996 Global was given CRTC approval to add a new transmitter at Cornwall Global had proposed to use VHF channel 11 at Cornwall 33 but instead channel 11 was awarded to Hamilton s CHCH TV in Ottawa that same day 34 Another option was to operate a Global transmitter on a UHF channel in Cornwall which was never launched CIII is not available in Thunder Bay but the market is served by independently owned affiliate CHFD DT owned by Dougall Media CHFD s owners the Dougall family were concerned about Global threatening their local television monopoly Dougall Media controls all of the local network television output for the Thunder Bay region 35 and had previously lobbied the CRTC to cease CHCH TV s cable transmissions in the mid 1990s 36 and pressured the CRTC to deny Global s application to build a transmitter there However in 2009 Dougall Media switched the affiliation of CHFD from CTV to Global As a result Global branded programming is available in Thunder Bay just not via CIII s province wide network of repeaters Similarly in Kenora former CTV affiliate CJBN TV which was owned by Shaw switched to full time Global programming in late 2011 the station would cease operations in January 2017 Initial attempts to cover Peterborough and Kingston from the Bancroft transmitter had yielded poor to marginal results this signal has since been largely supplanted for Peterborough only by the more powerful CIII TV 27 Despite CHEX DT becoming Global s Peterborough station in 2018 CIII DT 27 remains on the air CIII TV 41 along with CHCH in Hamilton and CHAN TV in Vancouver began over the air high definition broadcasts in 2008 37 Former transmitter Edit Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Station City of licence Channel RF VC ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinatesCIII TV 2 Bancroft 2 VHF 100 kW 390 m 1 280 ft 45 3 34 N 77 11 59 W 45 05944 N 77 19972 W 45 05944 77 19972 CIII TV 2 References Edit Ownership Chart 32H CORUS TV amp Discretionary Services Canadian Satellite Television Archived from the original on 24 November 2015 Retrieved 12 July 2015 CRTC Decision 2009 409 TOBuilt Detailed Structure Information Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2015 01 18 Peter Trueman Smoke and Mirrors McClelland and Stewart 1980 p 211 Trueman writes without its news service Global would probably long before have gone under as a network The news service has given us standing not just with the CRTC but has generated prestige and credibility with viewers advertisers the banks and the rest of the financial community Peter Trueman Smoke and Mirrors McClelland and Stewart 1980 p 216 Peter Trueman Smoke and Mirrors McClelland and Stewart 1980 p 136 News Media Global News Redefines Morning Television in Toronto with the Morning Show Featuring the Return of Liza Fromer Archived from the original on 2011 07 02 Retrieved 2011 06 01 Global News Boosts Fall Schedule Archived from the original on 2012 03 19 Retrieved 2011 09 07 Global News Boosts Local Programming Across the Country Archived 2014 01 07 at the Wayback Machine Broadcaster Magazine May 30 2012 Staff 16X9 cancelled Liza Fromer contract not renewed amid changes at Global News Retrieved 2016 06 29 RabbitEars TV Query for CIII Digital Television Office of Consumer Affairs OCA Archived 2013 11 20 at the Wayback Machine Conversion of Shaw Media s non mandatory market transmitters from analogue to digital Progress Report Shaw Communications to CRTC Sept 2014 The Runtime Service cannot communicate with Entitlements Service The Runtime Service cannot communicate with Entitlements Service The Runtime Service cannot communicate with Entitlements Service The Runtime Service cannot communicate with Entitlements Service Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2020 391 Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission December 4 2020 Retrieved October 7 2021 Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2010 782 Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission October 22 2010 Retrieved October 7 2021 a b Bennett Ray February 12 1975 Global draws a big blank here Windsor Star p 31 Retrieved April 17 2020 Bennett Ray November 6 1975 Detroit TV barrier said insurmountable Windsor Star p 18 Retrieved April 17 2020 Global is in the dark about transmitter fire Windsor Star August 31 1977 p 5 Retrieved April 17 2020 McMahon Tom April 21 1978 Global trying to be better p 18 Retrieved April 17 2020 McMahon Tom January 30 1979 Global may return in 1980 p 15 Retrieved April 17 2020 Coleman John May 28 1981 Global TV wants permission to enter Detroit market Windsor Star p 14 Retrieved April 17 2020 McMahon Tom March 2 1982 Global scratching its head over Windsor Windsor Star p 11 Retrieved April 17 2020 Decision CRTC 86 678 Decision CRTC 92 220 CKGN TV now CIII TV sign off from 1979 CIII TV sign off from 1984 Decision CRTC 86 1087 Decision CRTC 96 546 Decision CRTC 96 544 Dougall Media www dougallmedia com Television www dougallmedia com Archived from the original on 2006 06 13 ARCHIVED Decision CRTC 96 544 1996 Global Television Network Frequently Asked Questions Archived 2008 03 19 at the Wayback MachineExternal links EditGlobal Toronto CIII DT history Canadian Communications Foundation CIII in the REC Canadian station database CFGC in the REC Canadian station database Callsign used in Sudbury and North Bay Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title CIII DT amp oldid 1166515926, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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