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CIEL-FM

Coordinates: 47°34′56″N 69°22′17″W / 47.58222°N 69.37139°W / 47.58222; -69.37139
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from CJFP)
CIEL-FM
Broadcast areaRivière-du-Loup
Témiscouata-sur-le-Lac
Pohénégamook
Frequency103.7 MHz (FM)
BrandingCIEL
Programming
FormatAdult contemporary (French)
Ownership
Owner
CIBM-FM
History
First air date
April 13, 1947
Former call signs
CJFP (1947–2001)
Call sign meaning
from a French word meaning "sky"
Technical information
ClassC
ERP60,000 watts
HAAT320.5 meters (1,052 ft)
Links
Websiteciel103.com

CIEL-FM is a French-language Canadian radio station located in Rivière-du-Loup, Quebec.

Owned and operated by Radio CJFP (1986) ltée (part of the Groupe Radio Simard), it broadcasts on 103.7 MHz with an effective radiated power of 60,000 watts using an omnidirectional antenna (class C). The station has an adult contemporary format under the CIEL branding. However, the station has some oldies programming, during weekends.

The station was originally known as CJFP and went on the air on April 13, 1947 [1] as an AM station broadcasting on 1400 kHz. From 1984 until the station's move to FM in 1994, it was one of the few AM stations authorized to increase its power at night, due to NARBA amendments which authorized all stations on "graveyard" (class C) channels to quadruple their nighttime power. CJFP actually became the most powerful station in all of North America among those stations, as it was authorized to broadcast with 10,000 watts during the day and 20,000 watts (directional) at night;[2] however, this did not actually result in good coverage at night due to massive co-channel interference.[3] The FM signal went on the air on December 15, 1994[4] and the AM signal went off the air in June 1995.

Because the station already had an FM sister station, namely CIBM-FM (at the time, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) regulations generally forbade broadcasters to operate more than one AM station and one FM station per market), CJFP-FM originally operated under a condition of licence which required at least half of the programming to be "spoken-word programming" (i.e., talk).[3] As such, CJFP-FM became the first privately owned French-language FM station to broadcast mainly talk programming; most of that talk programming came from the Radiomédia network. The station abandoned most of its talk programming, adopting a full-time adult contemporary format, and changed its call sign to CIEL-FM, effective September 1, 2001.[1] That call sign was used, until August 2000, on a Montreal-area station now known as CHMP-FM, which coincidentally now has a talk format.

Transmitters

[edit]
Rebroadcasters of CIEL-FM
City of license Identifier Frequency Power Class RECNet CRTC Decision
Témiscouata-sur-le-Lac CIEL-FM-3 98.3 FM 50 watts LP Query
Rivière-du-Loup CIEL-FM-1 93.9 FM 50 watts LP Query 85-8
Pohénégamook CIEL-FM-5 93.5 FM 45 watts LP Query

CIEL-FM-1 went on the air when CJFP moved to FM.[3] CIEL-FM-3 replaced CJAF[5] in 1996,[6] and CIEL-FM-5 went on the air in 2001.[7] Another rebroadcaster, CHRT 1450 in Pohénégamook, was shut down when the station's main FM signal was implemented.[8]

There is a station in Trois-Pistoles which uses the call sign CIEL-FM-4 (formerly CJTF-FM), but since 1997 it is no longer a rebroadcaster of CIEL.[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Larouche, Marc. "CJFP devient CIEL-FM", Le Soleil, May 7, 2001, pg. A-4.
  2. ^ Decision CRTC 84-1031
  3. ^ a b c Decision CRTC 94-736
  4. ^ Former Canadian AM stations, by Kit Sage
  5. ^ CJAF history (defunct) Archived 2017-03-05 at the Wayback Machine - Canadian Communications Foundation
  6. ^ Decision CRTC 96-632
  7. ^ Decision CRTC 2001-192
  8. ^ CHRT history (defunct) Archived 2017-03-05 at the Wayback Machine - Canadian Communications Foundation
  9. ^ Decision CRTC 97-114, renewed under its new call sign in Decision CRTC 2001-406
[edit]

47°34′56″N 69°22′17″W / 47.58222°N 69.37139°W / 47.58222; -69.37139