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CHNM-DT (channel 42) is a multiculturalism in Canada, multicultural television station city of license, licensed to Vancouver, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, part of the Omni Television network. It is owned-and-operated station, owned and operated by Rogers Sports & Media alongside Citytv station CKVU-DT (channel 10). Both stations share studios at the corner of West 2nd Avenue and Columbia Street (near False Creek) in the Mount Pleasant, Vancouver, Mount Pleasant neighbourhood of Vancouver, while CHNM-DT's transmitter is located atop Mount Seymour in the district municipality of North Vancouver (district municipality), North Vancouver.


History

Rogers Communications had made several attempts to launch a Multicultural media in Canada, multicultural station in Vancouver similar to its successful CFMT-DT, CFMT in Toronto. Unsuccessful applications to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) were made in 1996 and again in 1999. Asked by the federal cabinet to pursue the matter further, in 2002, the commission asked for new applications for a Vancouver multicultural station and received two – from Rogers and Multivan Broadcast, a newly formed consortium of local investors. The licence went to Multivan, with the CRTC citing its local ownership as one of the reasons for the decision. The station first signed on the air on June 27, 2003; branded on-air as "channel m," CHNM originally operated from studio facilities located at the intersection of Pender and Columbia Streets in Vancouver's Chinatown, Vancouver, Chinatown. In the mid-2000s, CHNM previously produced several station IDs and program promos using a diversity theme to capitalize on the station's former slogan "Diversity Lives Here," these including spots featuring Chinese lion dancers that emerge from their lion costume with their faces painted in orange and white, the colours of the BC Lions franchise of the Canadian Football League, along with slogans supporting the team; a Indo-Canadian, South Asian dancer who performs her routine to the Channel M jingle, then breaks into a country and western dance; and a leather-clad Sikh motorcyclist who boards his bike to the Channel M jingle, arranged and performed in a style mixing ZZ Top-style blues rock with East Indian music. Following a failed 2007 bid for the multicultural licences in Calgary and Edmonton, which were awarded to Rogers, Multivan announced an agreement to sell CHNM to Rogers in July of that year. The sale was approved by the CRTC on March 31, 2008, and was finalized on April 30, 2008. With Rogers' recent acquisition of Citytv station CKVU-DT, CKVU-TV (channel 10) and the resulting sale of religious station CHNU-DT, CHNU-TV (channel 66, formerly branded as "Omni.10") to S-VOX, the Omni Television brand moved to CHNM on September 1, 2008. CHNM migrated its operations into sister station CKVU's studio facilities at 180 West 2nd Avenue (near the 2010 Olympic Village, Vancouver Olympic Village) on September 7, 2010. That same year, CHNM won its first-ever Jack Webster (journalist), Jack Webster Foundation Award for Excellence in Chinese Language Reporting, for a multi-part feature on the topic of earthquake preparedness.


Programming

Along with carrying local newscasts, CHNM broadcasts predominantly multicultural programming and documentaries, including several independently produced magazine and entertainment programs made in-house. Formerly, these programs included ''German Today'' (German), ''Hola Que Tal'' (Spanish), ''Chai Time'' (Punjabi), ''Mandarin Magazine'' (Mandarin Chinese) and ''World Beats'' (an English language world music video program). Until the beginning of the 2015–16 season, the station also aired a sizable amount of English-language American programming, including syndicated reruns of popular sitcom ''Two and a Half Men''.


News operation

CHNM-DT presently broadcasts 12½ hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 2½ hours each weekday); the station does not produce newscasts on weekends. The station airs daily newscasts in Cantonese, Mandarin Chinese, Mandarin and Punjabi language, Punjabi, and in the past, Korean and Tagalog language, Tagalog. CHNM's newscasts were known as ''Channel M News'' from 2003 to 2008. During those years, the station also had a reciprocal agreement with CIVT-DT, CTV Vancouver station, which allowed the two stations to share news resources. The station's newscasts were rebranded as ''Omni News'' in September 2008 following the approval of its sale to Rogers, and its news sharing agreement with CIVT was also terminated. The station also produced weekly phone-in programs in Cantonese, Mandarin, and Punjabi under Multivan ownership; these programs were cancelled after the station was rebranded as Omni. In September 2012, CHNM began operating a news bureau in Victoria; the team includes bureau chief and political expert Kim Emerson.


Technical information


Subchannel


Analogue-to-digital conversion

CHNM began broadcasting its digital signal on December 17, 2009, operating at reduced power. On February 12, 2010 in Canadian television, 2010, the CRTC approved an application to increase CHNM-DT's maximum effective power to 8.3 kilowatts. The station initially broadcast its digital signal in the 4:3 picture format (480p upconverted to 1080i), it was converted to the 16:9 format and 1080i resolution on April 26, 2011. CHNM shut down its analogue signal, over Ultra high frequency, UHF channel 42, on August 31, 2011, the official date in which Canadian television stations in CRTC-designated mandatory media market, markets Digital television in Canada, transitioned from analogue to digital broadcasts. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 20. Through the use of Program and System Information Protocol, PSIP, digital television receivers display CHNM-DT's virtual channel as its analogue-era UHF channel 42. The station flash cut its Victoria transmitter from analogue to digital signal prior to August 31, 2011.


See also

*2007 Canada broadcast TV realignment


Footnotes


External links

* * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Chnm-Dt Television stations in Vancouver, HNM-DT Omni Television stations, HNM-DT Television channels and stations established in 2003 2003 establishments in British Columbia