CFWH-TV

CFWH-TV
City of license Whitehorse, Yukon
Branding CBC Television
Slogan Canada Lives Here
Channels Analog: Formerly 6 (VHF)
Translators Five rebroadcasters throughout the Yukon Territory
Affiliations CBC
Owner Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
First air date November 26, 1968
Last air date July 31, 2012
Call letters' meaning Canada's Finest WhiteHorse
Transmitter power 0.798 kW
Height 420.5 m
Transmitter coordinates 60°39′34″N 134°53′4″W / 60.65944°N 134.88444°W / 60.65944; -134.88444 (CFWH)

CFWH-TV was the television call sign for the CBC's television station in Whitehorse, Yukon. Commencing transmissions on 26 November 1968, it was one of ultimately six Frontier Coverage Package stations in the Yukon; satellite delivery of colour television began on February 5, 1973. It was a part of the CBC North television system.

Building in Whitehorse

During its life, CFWH-TV was always licensed as a repeater. For most of its existence, this station was part of a "radiocommunication distribution undertaking" that included CFYK-TV in Yellowknife and CFFB-TV in Iqaluit. The CRTC did not license it as a television station, but merely as a transmitter to redistribute CBC North. In 2011, CFYK was licensed as a full television station, with CFWH and CFFB as repeaters.[1]

CFWH was licensed as a rebroadcaster of CFYK, even though it operated as a semi-satellite with its own network of rebroadcasters. As a result, CFWH-TV and its network of rebroadcasters was one of many CBC and Radio-Canada's remaining analogue transmitters closed on July 31, 2012, as part of several austerity measures announced in April 2012 to keep the corporation solvent and in operation.[2] As a result, this leaves almost the entirety of the Yukon without any aerial CBC television service, the only exception being a community owned broadcaster in Upper Liard, CH2986 channel 9.[3]

CFYK still operates a Yukon bureau at the CBC's studio in Whitehorse.

Transmitters

CFWH had five over the air rebroadcasters throughout the territory of Yukon before they were decommissioned on July 31, 2012.

See also

References

External links


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