CHRO-TV

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CHRO-TV
Pembroke / Ottawa, Ontario
City of license Pembroke, Ontario
Branding A-Channel Ottawa
Slogan "Ottawa's News Hour"
Channels Analog: 5 (VHF, Pembroke)

Digital: 7 (not yet on air)

Translators CHRO-TV-43 43 (UHF, Ottawa)
CHRO-DT-43 17 (digital, Ottawa)
Affiliations A-Channel (1998-present, previously known as The New RO until 2005)
Owner CTVglobemedia
CTV Limited
Founded 1961
Former callsigns CHOV-TV (1961-1977)
Former affiliations CBC (1961-1991)
MCTV (Secondary, 1980-1991)
BBS/CTV (1991-1997)
Independent (1997-1998)
NewNet (1998-2005)
Website www.achannel.ca

CHRO-TV (A-Channel Ottawa; formerly known as The New RO) is a television station serving the National Capital and Ottawa Valley regions of Ontario, Canada. Owned by CTVglobemedia, it is part of the A-Channel system.

While the station is licensed to Pembroke, Ontario, its main studios are located in Ottawa. The station broadcasts on channel 5 in Pembroke and channel 43 in Ottawa, and airs on cable channel 6 in both cities. It has also been assigned the transitional digital channels 7 in Pembroke and 17 in Ottawa, although neither channel is currently on air as of May 2008.

Contents

[edit] History

The station went on air in 1961 as CHOV, a CBC Television affiliate owned by Ottawa Valley Broadcasting, the owner of AM radio station CHOV. After a labour dispute and financial crisis in 1976 in which the station went dark for six days in August of that year, Ottawa Valley sold the station to J. Conrad Lavigne in 1977. Lavigne adopted the CHRO callsign, and launched the station's sales office in Ottawa. Lavigne's company subsequently became part of the MCTV system in 1980. While most MCTV stations used MCTV, rather than their call letters, as their on-air branding, CHRO continued to use its call sign, although it used the same logo and programming schedule as the other MCTV stations.

CHRO-TV's logo under BBS affiliation
CHRO-TV's logo under BBS affiliation
CFTO's BBS logo, CHRO had a similar logo with the only difference being is the station's call letters.
CFTO's BBS logo, CHRO had a similar logo with the only difference being is the station's call letters.

In 1990, Baton Broadcasting acquired the MCTV stations. Because CHRO is carried by cable television companies in the Ottawa market, this was deemed an ownership conflict for Baton, who already owned Ottawa's CJOH, and would therefore have a twinstick in competition with the CBC's CBOT. However, the station's carriage in Ottawa was also deemed essential to its survival, since Pembroke was too small a market to support the station on its own. Thus, CHRO was disaffiliated from the CBC, becoming a CTV affiliate. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) also ordered strict controls on CHRO's programming, so that Baton could not gain unfair audience advantage in Ottawa by airing shows at different times on CHRO and CJOH. Baton eventually became the sole corporate proprietor of CTV.

[edit] The New RO

CHRO-TV's logo during its brief time as an independent station, 1997.
CHRO-TV's logo during its brief time as an independent station, 1997.

In 1997, CHRO was one of several stations transferred to CHUM in exchange for the ATV stations in the Maritime provinces. CHRO did not have an over-the-air transmitter in Ottawa until it became a CHUM station. After being acquired by CHUM, CHRO was re-branded to The New RO.

The New RO Logo
The New RO Logo

In February 2005, CHUM announced plans to consolidate the master control departments for CHRO, CKVR, CFPL, CHWI and CKNX in the CHUM-City Building in Toronto, and to consolidate the traffic and programming departments at CFPL in London, resulting in the loss of approximately 19 staff members from CHRO. On June 3, 2005, at approximately 10:30 a.m., the Pembroke master control signal came to an end, as the new consolidated master control took to air.

[edit] A-Channel

The station was renamed A-Channel on August 2, 2005, along with the rest of the NewNet system.

On July 12, 2006, CTV owner Bell Globemedia (now CTVglobemedia) announced plans to purchase CHUM Limited for $C1.7 billion, with plans to divest itself of the A-Channel and Access Alberta stations[1]. On the same date, CHRO cancelled its noon-hour lifestyles program and its 12:30 p.m. weekday newscast, citing low ratings and declining advertising revenues. A plan was announced to almost fully automate the station's news production system, which would see a few dozen staff members laid off by the start of the new year.

In January 2007, CHRO began producing its newscasts with a new system called "Ross Overdrive" - an automated production system that replaced the need for a switcher, VTR operator, graphics operator and many other staffers. Some 25 staffers were affected by the change, which had been announced some six months earlier.


On April 9, 2007, Rogers Media announced an agreement to purchase all of the A-Channel stations including CHRO, SexTV: The Channel, CLT, Access Alberta, and several CHUM owned over-the-air television stations. The deal was contingent on full approval by the CRTC of the CTVglobemedia takeover of CHUM.[2] With CRTC approval being contingent on the sale of the Citytv stations instead, Rogers will instead buy these stations and CTV will keep the A-Channel stations. The takeover transaction was completed on June 22.

With the CHUM acquisition, CTV will (once again) become the only English-language private TV broadcaster offering Ottawa news coverage; it will own both CHRO and CJOH-TV, which compete only with the CBC's CBOT in offering local news. This is ironic given the media-diversity rationale for the sale of the Citytv stations; however it has already been approved by the CRTC on the basis of CHRO's financial situation and the stations' prior common ownership (until 1997).[3][4].

On July 26, 2007, CTVglobemedia named Richard Gray the head of news for the A-Channel stations. Gray will report to the CTVgm corporate group, not CTV News, to preserve independent news presentation and management. Gray will now oversee the news departments for CHRO-TV, plus CKVR, CFPL, CKNX, CHWI, CIVI-TV

[edit] A

The projected new logo for "A"  In Fall 2008 the A-Channel stations will be rebranded as "A".
The projected new logo for "A" In Fall 2008 the A-Channel stations will be rebranded as "A".

In fall 2008, the A-Channel stations, including CHRO, will be rebranded as A. Atlantic Canada's ASN and Alberta's ACCESS stations will also become affiliates of A. The A name was officially revealed at CTV's fall upfronts presentation in Toronto on June 2, 2008.

Shortly after the transaction was finalized, media analysts began to speculate that the A-Channel stations would be rebranded in 2008.[6] Viewer surveys linked from the individual A-Channel station websites in 2007 and 2008 suggested that the names "Much TV"[7] and "CHUM TV" were under consideration.

[edit] Operations

The station's Pembroke building, which once housed its entire operation and produced a number of local shows, now employs only about 12 staff. A few sales representatives, four news staff, a commercial production department, and the station's payroll and accounting departments are all that remain in the Pembroke building, along with the station's main transmitter. At one point a few years ago, the Ottawa and Pembroke transmitters were licensed to air some separate advertising targeted to their specific communities; this server has since been removed and the Pembroke master control room is now largely unused.

[edit] Programming

Currently the station's locally produced programs include:

  • A-Channel Morning, 6 a.m.-9 a.m. weekdays - hosted by Kurt Stoodley, Karen Soloman, and Angie Poirier
  • A-Channel News at 6 (weekdays) - anchored by Sandra Blaikie, (Ken Evraire on sports, Bill Welychka on weather)
  • A-Channel News at 11 (weekdays) - anchored by Tony Grace (Ken Evraire on sports, Bill Welychka on weather)
  • A-Channel News weekend edition - (Saturday & Sunday, 6 p.m. & 11 p.m.) - anchored by Taz Boga
  • A-Channel News This Week (Sundays at 6:30 p.m. - a pre-recorded wrap of the week's top stories)
  • Ottawa Speaks! / Speakers' Corner - Saturdays at 6:30 p.m.
  • Ottawa Senators Hockey (20 regular-season games a year of the Canadian capital city's NHL team, usually but not always broadcast on Thursday evenings) - with Dean Brown as play-by-play announcer and Gord Wilson as commentator.
  • Senators Primetime (post-game show for CHRO's Ottawa Senators broadcasts, produced in the A-Channel studios and from various live locations) - hosted by Ken Evraire and Lianne Laing.
  • Election Coverage - live specials during local, provincial, or federal elections

See also list of programs broadcast by A-Channel.

[edit] News staff and reporters

  • Sandra Blaikie - News Anchor, A-Channel News at 6
  • Tony Grace - News Anchor, A-Channel News at 11 & Weekday reporter
  • Taz Boga - News Anchor, A-Channel News Weekends & Weekday reporter
  • Kurt Stoodley - Co-Host, A-Channel Morning
  • Angie Poirier - Co-Host, A-Channel Morning
  • Karen Solomon - Co-Host, A-Channel Morning
  • Jeff Hopper - Fill-in, A-Channel Morning
  • Doug Hempstead - News Reporter, Upper Ottawa Valley
  • Jennifer Madigan - News Reporter
  • Jennifer Hall - News Reporter
  • Annette Goerner - News Reporter
  • Laura Lowe - News Reporter, occasional fill-in for weather
  • Bill Welychka - Weather Presenter
  • Kevin Nelson - Weather Presenter (occasionally)
  • Ken Evraire - Sports
  • Lianne Laing - Sports
  • Lee Versage - Sports
  • Dash Read - Regular news and sports reporter
  • Alastair McAlastair - Host of A-Channel show BOB-TV
  • Dean Brown - Play-by-play for Ottawa Senators Games
  • Gord Wilson - Commentator for Ottawa Senators Games
  • Kent Manderville - Hockey Analyst (Senators Post-Game Show)

[edit] References

http://micro.newswire.ca/release.cgi?rkey=1507269890&view=39118-0&Start=0

[edit] External links