CHNO-FM is a Canadian radio station broadcasting at 103.9 FM in Sudbury , Ontario . Owned and operated by Stingray Radio , the station is branded on-air as Rewind 103.9 with a classic hits format.
31-429: CHNO may refer to: CHNO-FM , a Canadian radio station CHNO, the chemical formula of several compounds Cyanic acid Isocyanic acid Fulminic acid Isofulminic acid Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title CHNO . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
62-556: A few weeks, and on February 29, the AM signal was closed permanently. The station was originally licensed to broadcast at 100 kWs , but because of transmitter interference to the Greater Sudbury Airport the station's license was permanently amended to 11 kilowatts. As "Z103", the station recovered significantly in the local BBM ratings, jumping to a 22.1 per cent share of the local radio audience in 2000 from just 7.3 per cent in
93-470: The CRTC to move both CHNO and CHYC to FM, which was approved on August 31, 1999. In November 1999, CHNO dropped its oldies format and adopted its new CHR/Top 40 format and Z103 branding on the old AM frequency a few months before the station made its official move to FM. CHNO began testing its 103.9 FM signal just days before officially launching on February 3, 2000. The FM and AM signals aired simultaneously for
124-472: The francophone stations (CFBR, CFLK, CFLH and CFCL), and one for the anglophone stations (all others). In 1990, Northern Cable began divesting itself of its media properties. Pelmorex purchased Mid-Canada Radio, and Baton Broadcasting acquired MCTV. Baton also purchased Sault Ste. Marie 's Huron Broadcasting in 1990, and converted CHBX and CJIC to the MCTV branding as well. Under Baton's ownership,
155-479: The 1990 launch of CJRQ ended CHNO's dominance, and on July 6, 1992 at 6:00 AM, CHNO flipped to an oldies format as Oldies 55 . After struggling through a variety of formats, including classic rock as AM 55 The Crusher in 1994, country and talk in 1995 and 1996, the station reverted to oldies in 1997. Former program director Scott Jackson, now the manager of CJLF-FM in Barrie , has stated that CHNO and CJMX were
186-644: The 1999 ratings book. As a Top 40 station, Z103 hosted live-to-air programs from area nightclubs in the city, as well as syndicated shows such as the Rick Dees Weekly Top 40 , American Top 40 and Canadian Hit 30 Countdown . Positioning slogans during the Top 40 period included "Sudbury's Best Music", "Today's Best Music" and "Sudbury's #1 Hit Music Station." On November 9, 2001, Haliburton sold CHNO to Newcap Broadcasting . Despite no longer having common ownership, however, CHYC and CHNO continued to operate from
217-572: The RCA transmitter and two towers were situated in the McFarlane Lake district of Sudbury, along Burwash Road, on part of Lot 3, Concession 6, Broder Township. In 1952, the station was the subject of controversy when Ricard refused to permit Local 598 of the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers to purchase airtime on the station for a labour-oriented news program, on the grounds that
248-851: The Radio-Canada affiliation from CHNO, made Sudbury Broadcasting the first commercial broadcaster in Canada licensed to operate two AM radio stations in the same city. In 1962, the station became independent following the dissolution of the Dominion Network. On December 31, 1969, CFBR and CHNO swapped frequencies, CHNO moving to 550 and CFBR taking over the 900 slot. On May 14, 1976, the CRTC denied an application by Sudbury Broadcasting Co. Ltd. to change CHNO's frequency from 550 kHz to 570 kHz. In 1979, CHNO and CFBR moved out of their Elm Street building and moved to their new location at 295 Victoria Street in
279-464: The adult hits format, Newcap applied to the CRTC for a new contemporary hit radio station in the Sudbury market. In the application, Newcap stated that its market research found that a contemporary hit radio station could only be profitable in the market as one station within an ownership cluster, and not as a standalone entity. However, the application was denied by the CRTC on July 12, 2007. The denial of
310-428: The agreement was extending well beyond advertising sales and into both program production and news gathering, and thus constituted an illegal de facto local management agreement . On January 31, 2005, the CRTC disallowed the agreement, ruling in its license renewals for the four stations that the agreement must be terminated no later than May 31 of that year. At 12:00 AM on January 1, 2006, with little or no warning,
341-631: The call sign and the MCTV branding. Due to CTV's status at the time as a cooperative of its affiliated stations, MCTV itself held a 2.1 per cent share in the network. As well, MCTV owned CHRO in Pembroke , a CBC affiliate in a market with no other television stations. CHRO used the same logo and programming schedule as MCTV's other stations, but it used its own callsign, rather than MCTV, as its on-air identification. In 1985, Mid-Canada Communications acquired six radio stations in Sudbury, Elliot Lake , Blind River and Espanola , which were aligned with
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#1733085830010372-632: The company's existing radio holdings in Kapuskasing, Hearst, Timmins and Pembroke into the Mid-Canada Radio group. The system expanded in the latter half of the 1980s, with further acquisitions in Sault Ste. Marie , Wawa , North Bay and another station in Kapuskasing bringing the group to 15 stations by 1990. The stations shared some news and sales resources, but were programmed independently of each other except for two shared overnight programs: one for
403-422: The current owner already had the maximum permitted number of FM stations in the applicable market, whereas the acquirer only had a single FM station. Both companies applied to move the stations to FM as part of the trade. This deal was approved on November 24, 2008. On June 25, 2009, Newcap received approval from the CRTC to increase CHNO-FM's effected radiated power from 11,000 watts to 100,000 watts, to increase
434-548: The first time that the CRTC had ever approved direct ownership of a radio or television broadcast outlet by a cable distribution company, which is now commonplace in Canada but was explicitly forbidden by CRTC policy prior to the MCTV approval. In its decision, however, the CRTC explicitly stated that the merger was approved as a temporary arrangement, only until the CBC could afford to directly acquire MCTV's CBC affiliates. That "temporary" deal, however, would last 22 years; even after MCTV
465-466: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=CHNO&oldid=1163404272 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Broadcast call sign disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages CHNO-FM The station began broadcasting on June 24, 1947 on AM 1440. It
496-476: The most neglected stations in the entire Pelmorex corporate family during the time that he worked there, despite being the network's nominal flagships. Also in 1997, CHNO, CHYC and CJMX-FM moved out of their 295 Victoria Street building into a new location at 493-B Barrydowne Road, where CHNO still remains to this day. In 1998, Pelmorex sold CJMX to Telemedia . The following year, Pelmorex sold CHNO and CHYC to Haliburton Broadcasting Group . Haliburton applied to
527-540: The old King George School building to accommodate a new FM station. In 1980, Sudbury Broadcasting launched a new FM station CJMX . That same year, CHNO received approval to increase daytime power from 10,000 watts to 50,000 watts with the nighttime power to remain at 10,000 watts and would remain on 550 kHz. Also in 1980, Ricard also became a major shareholder in Mid-Canada Communications . Sudbury Broadcasting continued to operate independently, although it
558-436: The program represented " Communist propaganda". His objection had less to do with the program's spoken content and more to do with the host's choice of interstitial music between segments, including a song by Paul Robeson . On November 9, 1954, CHNO moved to AM 900. In 1957, Ricard opened CFBR on AM 550 as a full-time French-language station, and CHNO switched to full-time English. The licensing of CFBR, which took over
589-457: The proposed CHR/Top 40 station also became controversial, in part because the station that was licensed, CICS-FM , duplicated the format of an existing station in the market, Rogers' CIGM . In July 2008, however, Newcap announced a deal to acquire CIGM from Rogers in exchange for CFDR in Halifax . Both CIGM and CFDR were the sole remaining AM stations in their respective markets, and in both cases
620-426: The same studio facility at 493 Barrydowne Road in Sudbury until 2009. Newcap and Rogers Media soon entered into a joint sales agreement , under which Rogers held responsibility for advertising sales on CHNO as well as on its own CJRQ , CIGM and CJMX . In 2002, however, Friends of Canadian Broadcasting filed a brief with the CRTC opposing the station's license renewal — FCB took the position that in practice,
651-432: The slogan "70's, 80's and More!". Despite the different branding, the station is closely aligned with Stingray's Boom FM -branded stations, with similar logo designs and partial sharing of programs and personalities. [REDACTED] 46°30′27″N 80°56′42″W / 46.50737°N 80.94502°W / 46.50737; -80.94502 Mid-Canada Communications Mid-Canada Communications (Canada) Corp.
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#1733085830010682-621: The slogan "Sudbury's Greatest Hits". The first song after the change was Bob Seger 's " Old Time Rock and Roll ". In 2011, CHNO-FM aired syndicated programs such as the 1970s reruns of American Top 40 with Casey Kasem , the Classic Countdown with Dick Bartley and the Donny Osmond show . The syndicated daily radio show, Daily Dees , hosted by Rick Dees was heard each weeknight. The station, like most classic hits stations, has evolved to playing more 80's and 90's and currently uses
713-586: The station featured a stiff-voiced character representing "Big Daddy" himself. The stiff-voiced character was replaced by a new one around the middle of 2008. In the first quarter BBM ratings for 2006, CHNO's first ratings book under the Big Daddy format, the station regained the #1 status in the Sudbury market for the first time since 1990. However, the move was controversial with some of the station's prior listeners, and in July 2006, just seven months after flipping CHNO to
744-469: The station flipped to a variety hits format branded as Big Daddy 103.9 with slogan "Playing Anything" , ending another era of Top 40 music in the Sudbury market. The last song on "Z" was " Lose Yourself " by Eminem , while the first song on "Big Daddy" was " Start Me Up " by The Rolling Stones . General manager Darlene Palmer said the station wanted to offer Sudbury "music you can dance to, sing to, date to, divorce to." Some promotional bumpers for
775-409: The station's antenna height and to relocate the transmitter. On August 17, 2009, the station increased their power to 100,000 watts the same day CHNO-FM's sister station CIGM-FM began on-air tests at 93.5 FM. On May 21, 2010, at 12:00 AM without warning, the station dropped adult hits and switched to its current classic hits format as Rewind 103.9 , playing 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s music with
806-661: The system. In response to concentration of media ownership concerns, the merged company divested itself of its predecessor companies' radio holdings CKSO and CIGM-FM in Sudbury, although it retained ownership of a couple of smaller-market radio stations and would later reacquire other radio stations in the region (see Mid-Canada Radio below.) The MCTV stations were: All six stations were primarily referred to on air as MCTV rather than by their callsigns, and were distinguished from each other by use of their network affiliation (i.e. "MCTV-CTV" and "MCTV-CBC".) Less frequently, versions of its logo were sometimes seen which included both
837-589: Was a Canadian media company, which operated from 1980 to 1990. The company, a subsidiary of Northern Cable , had television and radio holdings in Northeastern Ontario . Mid-Canada Television , or MCTV , was created in 1980 when Cambrian Broadcasting, which owned the CTV affiliates in Sudbury , North Bay and Timmins , merged with J. Conrad Lavigne 's CBC affiliates in the same cities. This twinstick structure
868-429: Was a bilingual radio station, airing programming in both English and French , and was an affiliate of both CBC Radio 's Dominion Network and Radio-Canada . It was operated by Sudbury Broadcasting , a company owned by F. Baxter Ricard and his wife Alma Ricard , and was the first bilingual radio station in Canada outside of Quebec . CHNO's studios and offices were located at 166 Elm Street West in Sudbury, while
899-449: Was acquired by and folded into Baton Broadcasting in 1990, Baton still retained ownership of the CBC affiliates until the early 2000s. Mid-Canada Communications did offer ownership of its newly-redundant second microwave network to the CBC as an interim step toward the establishment of a CBC Television production facility in the region; the CBC, however, expressed interest in keeping the negotiations open but declined to immediately purchase
930-461: Was eventually merged into Mid-Canada Radio in 1985. In 1990, Mid-Canada sold the stations to Pelmorex . Following this sale, CFBR adopted the new call letters CHYC . In the 1970s and 1980s, CHNO was Northern Ontario 's most listened-to and most influential radio station, broadcasting a Top 40 format branded as 55 CHNO , Rock Radio CHNO 55 , "Sudbury's Best Rock", and "Sudbury's Hit Music Leader", NO55 (pronounced "N-oh fifty-five"). However,
961-580: Was permitted by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) because both companies were on the brink of bankruptcy due to their aggressive competition for limited advertising dollars in small markets. Notably, the companies' holdings included two parallel microwave transmission systems, both of which were among the largest such systems in the world at the time, and which were technically redundant since one system can in fact carry multiple channels. The deal represented