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CBCS-FM is a Canadian radio station. It is the CBC Radio One station in Sudbury , Ontario , broadcasting at 99.9 FM , and serves all of Northeastern Ontario through its network of relay transmitters. The station's studio is located at the CBC/Radio-Canada facilities at 43 Elm Street in Sudbury.

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19-618: CBCC may refer to: CBCC-FM , a radio rebroadcaster (91.9 FM) licensed to Hearst, Ontario, Canada, rebroadcasting CBCS-FM CBCC-TV , a television retransmitter (channel 5) licensed to Hearst, Ontario, Canada, retransmitting CBLT See also [ edit ] [REDACTED] Search for "cbcc"  or "c-b-c-c" on Misplaced Pages. All pages with titles beginning with CBCC All pages with titles containing CBCC CBC (disambiguation) CBBC (disambiguation) CCBC (disambiguation) [REDACTED] Topics referred to by

38-499: A rally at the city's Tom Davies Square on April 5 to protest the cutbacks, with participants including federal MPs Glenn Thibeault , Claude Gravelle and Charlie Angus , and musicians Kevin Closs and Stéphane Paquette . In September 2014, the station announced that it would move in late 2015 from 15 Mackenzie Street, where it had been located since its launch in 1978, to a new leased studio and office space on Elm Street. The move

57-593: A three-song EP. After a three-year hiatus in which cinema, television and other projects took a lot of space, Paquette launched the single "Plus belle que toé" in September 2018. Paquette has started to move into the country/bluegrass genre, frequently in collaboration with the Sudbury band Murder Murder. Paquette is also known as an improv comedian and actor, whose television roles have included Météo+ , Les Bleus de Ramville and Hard Rock Medical . Paquette

76-583: Is a Franco-Ontarian singer-songwriter, actor, and politician. A founding member of the band Les Chaizes Muzikales in 1993, Paquette launched a solo career in 2002 with his first solo album, L'Homme exponentiel . His second solo album, Salut de l'arrière pays , was released in 2011 and won a number of awards, including the Prix Trille Or from the Association des professionels de la chanson et de la musique in 2013. In January 2014, he won five of

95-685: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages CBCC-FM On July 28, 1975, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation received approval from the CRTC to operate a new english-language FM station at Sudbury, Ontario. The proposed frequency was 97.1 MHz (later read 99.9 MHz when launched). The station was launched on May 5, 1978 on 99.9 MHz. Prior to its launch, CBC Radio programming aired on private affiliates CKSO and CKSO-FM . The CRTC decision authorizing

114-557: Is one of the three lead actors in the feature film Perspective . In addition, he was also an afternoon host on CHYC-FM in Sudbury , and performed at a rally in Sudbury on 5 April 2009, to protest staff cutbacks at CBCS-FM , the city's CBC Radio One station. In 2019, Paquette announced his candidacy in the New Democratic Party 's nomination contest for Nickel Belt in the 2019 Canadian federal election . He won

133-496: The CBC submitted an application to convert CBEU 1340 to the FM band, which received CRTC approval on November 4, 2014. Temagami's FM transmitter signed on at 106.1 MHz in late 2014 with its new callsign, CBCS-FM-1 . On February 26, 2016, the CBC submitted an application to convert CBEY 1340 to the FM band. Its proposed callsign will be CBEY-FM . On June 20, 2016, the CRTC approved

152-520: The CBC's application to operate an FM rebroadcasting transmitter in Moosonee to replace its existing low-power AM transmitter CBEY. The new transmitter will operate at 99.9 MHz with an effective radiated power of 135 watts (non-directional antenna with an effective height of antenna above average terrain of 8.97 metres). On March 9, 2016, the CBC received CRTC approval to change CBCG-FM's transmitter class from low power to regular power A1, increasing

171-482: The antenna above average terrain from 141.0 to 165.3 metres. Transmitters CBLF 1450 Foleyet and CBLO 1240 Mattawa are the last two CBC low power AM transmitters to rebroadcast CBCS-FM Sudbury. No plans have been announced to either convert them to the FM band or shut them down completely . St%C3%A9phane Paquette Stéphane " Stef " Paquette (born December 18, 1973., in Chelmsford, Ontario )

190-412: The effective radiated power from 8 to 115.7 watts and decreasing the effective height of antenna above average terrain from 71.5 to 54.3 metres. On August 19, 2021, the CRTC approved the CBC's application to increase the average effective radiated power (ERP) for CBEC-FM at 90.3 MHz Elliot Lake from 103 to 1,065 watts (maximum ERP from 264 to 2,725 watts), increasing the effective height of

209-413: The launch of CBCS in fact encouraged, but did not direct, the CBC to retain an AM frequency for CBC Radio , and to reserve CBCS for its CBC Stereo network. However, the station launched in 1978 as an affiliate of the talk network after the CBC was unable to negotiate an agreement with Cambrian Broadcasting to directly acquire CKSO. The CBC later applied for a second license for its Stereo network, which

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228-563: The program won the award for all of Canada. The CBC announced in August 2014 that Up North , which premiered on August 11, would replace the former afternoon program Points North . The new program extends its coverage to all of Northern Ontario , also replacing Voyage North on CBQT-FM in Thunder Bay . Former Points North host Dan Lessard retired from the program in June 2010. He

247-458: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about radio and/or television stations with the same/similar call signs or branding. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=CBCC&oldid=1017461803 " Category : Broadcast call sign disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

266-515: The seven prizes at the annual Contact ontarois music competition, with his prize package including an extensive series of music festival bookings across Canada. In 2009, he appeared on the debut album by Patricia Cano , as a duet vocalist on the track "Nada de nieve". In 2011, he participated as a supporting musician in a reunion tour by the rock band CANO . In 2012, Paquette released a full length album, Le Salut de l'arrière-pays that he composes with Normand Renaud. In 2015, he followed up with

285-706: Was completed in December 2015. The CBC had an open house in September 2016. The former studio on Mackenzie Street was then rented out to Siena Films as the police station in the 2017 drama series Cardinal . The station's local programs are Morning North , hosted by Markus Schwabe, and Up North , hosted by Jonathan Pinto, in the afternoon. In May 2009, Morning North won the Radio and Television News Directors Association's Peter Gzowski Award for Best Information Radio Program in Central Canada, and in June 2009,

304-462: Was granted in 1984. However, that station remain unlaunched throughout the 1980s, and the CBC was forced in 1991 to surrender all of its non-operating licenses. Consequently, CBC Radio 2 service was not available in the city until the launch of CBBS-FM in 2001. In the CBC's service reductions announced in March 2009, CBCS was slated to lose half of its existing staff. Several hundred people attended

323-542: Was never implemented, due to possible interference from CKGB Timmins, which had moved to 750 kHz in 1984. CBLQ remained on 1450 in Latchford until it moved to 102.3 MHz on the FM band in 1996 as CBCY-FM. On October 25, 2013, the CRTC approved the CBC's application to decrease the power of CBLJ-FM from 50,000 watts to 4,807 watts, combined with an increase in the effective height of antenna above average terrain (EHAAT) from 114.6 to 132.6 metres. On July 4, 2014,

342-518: Was replaced by Jason Turnbull, who served as host of Points North , and then of Up North , until leaving the station in 2018 to take a job in media relations with Health Sciences North . Turnbull, in turn, was succeeded by Waubgeshig Rice , who hosted the show until leaving the CBC in May 2020. Jonathan Pinto was named the new host of the program, effective September 2020. In the CBC's proposed new regional programming strategy released in 2005, North Bay

361-473: Was scheduled to receive its own local news bureau, although North Bay would continue to receive CBCS' local programming apart from news updates. As of 2024, however, no separate local news service has been launched in North Bay. On January 22, 1985, the CRTC approved the CBC's application to move CBLQ Latchford (Temiskaming Shores) from 1450 kHz to 750 kHz. The change to 750 kHz in Latchford

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