CFNV
Broadcast areaGreater Montreal
Frequency940 kHz (AM)
BrandingAM 940 La Superstation
Programming
Language(s)French
FormatExpected to be French health and wellness format; currently stunting with continuous music
Ownership
Owner
  • TTP Media
  • (7954689 Canada Inc.)
CFQR
History
First air date
2017
Technical information
ClassA
Power50,000 watts
Transmitter coordinates
45°23′34.08″N 73°41′53.16″W / 45.3928000°N 73.6981000°W / 45.3928000; -73.6981000
Links
Websiteam940.ca

CFNV (940 kHz) is a French language AM radio station in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is owned by TTP Media and was licensed in 2011. CRTC records indicated that the station was not in operation for the majority of the license term. CFNV began test broadcasting in 2016, with a full-time power of 50,000 watts as a clear channel (class A) station, and a Francophone talk radio format. Broadcasts started in 2017 with mainly music, rather than talk, using the branding AM 940 La Superstation.

In July 2018, it was announced that CFNV would offer a French health and wellness program format once the extended testing of the technical facilities was completed. The CRTC gave CFNV a short-term license renewal on August 21, 2018 to August 31, 2023.[1]

History

CINW, owned and operated by Corus Quebec as a clear channel Class A station, ceased operations at 7:00 p.m. ET on January 29, 2010.[2][3] At that time, CINW and its French-language sister station, CINF 690 AM, abruptly left the air and subsequently went dark.

For most of its history, CINW had broadcast an English-language all-news format, while CINF had aired all news in French. But in their later years, due to the expense of staffing and running all news around the clock, both stations had adjusted their formats. CINW began airing talk shows along with news, then switched to an oldies music format in its final months.

Reactivation

Six years later, in 2016, the 940 AM frequency resurfaced when a new station, under the call sign CFNV, launched with plans for a Francophone news/talk format.

Licensing

With the closure of Montreal station CINW, on July 29, 2011, the CRTC began taking other applications for the vacant 940 frequency.[4] On September 7, 2011, the CRTC announced the applicants for the 940 frequency; competing against earlier owner Cogeco was Paul Tietolman, the son of broadcaster Jack Tietolman, who planned to use 940 for an anglophone news-talk formatted station.[5]

On November 21, 2011, Tietolman was awarded the frequency, but this was Francophone news-talk instead, a format that he had originally applied for on 690.[6] A year later, he and his two partners were granted a licence for English talk to be broadcast on 600 kHz in the spring of 2013. However, by that point, none of the stations that the TTP group applied for had signed on.

On September 19, 2014, the CRTC gave the TTP group another year to commence broadcasting on 940 in French and 600 in English. This extension was the second and, originally, final one allowed for 940, giving the station until November 21, 2015 to commence broadcasting or face cancellation of its licence,[7] however, it was renewed for an additional year on October 30, 2015, with November 21, 2016 now set as the cut-off date.[8]

On October 26, 2016, a test tone began on AM 940. Call letters were also announced on that date as CFNV.[9] The station officially began on-air testing on November 16, 2016 with music and a recorded announcement promoting the launch of the new station with a phone number to report signal interference.[10][11]

Ownership

The radio station is owned by a numbered company, 7954689 Canada Inc. operating in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is equally controlled by:

  • 4158695 Canada Inc. (Paul Tietolman)
  • 9225-8318 Québec Inc. (Nicolas Tétrault)
  • 6556027 Canada Inc. (Rajiv Pancholy)

The group is collectively known as TTP Media, which reflects the names of the three owners, Tietolman, Tétrault and Pancholy.

References

  1. History of Canadian Broadcastng: CFNV AM
  2. "AM Info690 Montréal and AM940 Montreal's Greatest Hits to cease operation on January 29, 2010", Corus press release, January 29, 2010 (newswire.ca)
  3. "Two stations in Montreal going off the air Friday", CTV Montreal (montreal.ctvnews.ca)(Retrieved February 11, 2018)
  4. "Call for applications for AM radio stations to serve Montréal using the frequencies 690 kHz and 940 kHz", Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2011-453, July 29, 2011 (crtc.gc.ca)
  5. "Notice of hearing: 5. Montréal, Quebec (Application 2011-1237-5)", Broadcasting Notice of Consultation CRTC 2011-571, September 7, 2011 (crtc.gc.ca)
  6. "AM radio stations in Montréal", Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2011-721, November 21, 2011 (crtc.gc.ca)
  7. "TTP Media says news-talk stations are six to nine months until launch", Fagstein blog, October 4, 2014 (blog.fagstein.com)
  8. "CRTC changes its mind, gives TTP Media yet another extension on AM radio stations", Fagstein blog, November 3, 2015 (blog.fagstein.com)
  9. Steve Faguy [@fagstein] (October 26, 2016). "TTP Media's French news-talk station at 940 AM has a callsign: CFNV. Industry Canada confirms 'on-air testing' status" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  10. "TTP Media's CFNV 940 AM begins on-air testing", Fagstein blog, November 16, 2016 (blog.fagstein.com)
  11. CFNV 940: Super Station website
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