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CRTC and order
Many of these solutions have been established according to FCC, CRTC, and NENA i2 standards, in order to help enterprises and service providers reduce liability concerns and meet E911 regulations.
CTVgm initially intended to retain CHUM's Citytv system while divesting CHUM's A-Channel stations and Access Alberta in order for the CRTC to approve the acquisition.
In 1972, the CRTC said it was prepared to receive licence applications in order to authorize a third commercial television service in Quebec, although it was not until 1974 when the CRTC granted licences to Télé Inter-Cité Québec Ltée.
In 1960, the Board of Broadcast Governors, predecessor to the CRTC, granted licenses for commercial stations in order to provide an alternative to CBC.
The company initially intended to keep CHUM's Citytv system, while divesting the A-Channel and Access stations in order for the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) to approve the acquisition.
The deal still awaits regulatory approval from both the CRTC and the Competition Bureauas Bell and Astral may be required to divest radio stations in certain markets ( such as Toronto and Vancouver ) in order to comply with the CRTC's ownership limits.
Canadian cable operators were prohibited from distributing the signal, however, by an October 1986 CRTC decision in response to broadcaster concerns about the " potentially damaging effect of this station by providing Canadian advertisers with access to large amounts of commercial airtime at rates substantially lower than those they would be obliged to pay Canadian television licensees in order to reach the same potential audience.
As a condition of this approval, Rogers had to sell CIIT and CHNU in Vancouver, in order to comply with CRTC restrictions on owning multiple stations in the same language in the same market.
In November 2000, Learning and Skills Television of Alberta, a company majority owned by CHUM Limited ( 60 %), was granted permission from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) to launch a television channel called The Law & Order Channel, described as " a national English-language Category 2 specialty television service that will feature entertainment programming about police, law, the courts, emergency and medical response teams, disaster and relief operations featuring people and organizations that uphold law and order in our society.
The CRTC places responsibilities upon campus radio stations in Canada through the use of conditions of license that radio stations must follow in order to keep broadcasting.
Calling the decision " premature, disproportionate and inequitable ", CRTC Commissioner Louise Poirier issued a dissenting opinion stating that she was “ firmly opposed ” to the decision and that licence revocation “ should not have been used as a first step for this station ”; according to Poirier, " the Commission has never revoked a licence without first issuing a mandatory order or reducing the licence term.
In 1982, CANCOM proposed adding four additional television stations and additional radio signals, originating in the United States, in order to bring the American " three-plus-one " package to all Canadians that the CRTC had previously accepted the principle of allowing to southern cable companies that picked up signals from nearby United States cities.
On November 24, 2011, the CRTC determined that CKOI-FM had abusively used musical montages of English-language songs in order to get around the French-language music quotas, and imposed a condition of licence on the station limiting the broadcasting of montages to 10 percent of the broadcast week.
The process leading to SIP actually had its origins with an application on October 15, 1996 by Sprint Canada ( owned by Call-Net ) for an order by the CRTC to Northwestel to interconnect for long distance service.

CRTC and 2003
In 2003, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) rejected a Canadian Cable Telecommunications Association ( CCTA ) application to bring Fox News to Canada because Fox News U. S. and Global Television were planning to create Fox News Canada ( a combination of U. S. and Canadian news ).
In 2003, at the behest of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ), CPAC and its carriers started to allow television viewers to choose which language they hear the service in, putting the feed of one language on the service's main audio channel and the feed of the other language on its SAP channel.
In 2003, CHUM filed a complaint with the CRTC alleging that MTV Canada was airing more music videos and music programming than allowed by its licence and had subsequently become competitive with MuchMusic.
On April 17, 2003, La Coopérative radiophonique de Toronto inc. received CRTC approval for a new French-language community FM radio station at Toronto, to operate at 105. 1 MHz.
A first attempt failed when TVA ( Quebecor ) and RNC Media were refused permission by the CRTC in June 2003 to buy the stations, because of ownership concentration concerns.
On August 19, 2003, Canadian Satellite Radio Holdings Inc., the parent company of CSR, filed its initial application to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) for a broadcast licence to provide subscription based digital radio service in Canada.
In 2003 the CRTC approved an application by the station to move its transmitter from the SAIT tower at 1, 900 Watts to a CBC tower at 4, 000 Watts.
In 2003, however, at the company's request, the CRTC reviewed the issue of local access to the Internet, found that other Internet service providers had not expanded service to unserved communities, and authorized Northwestel to provide the service, under the SIP program, to any small community that did not already have a local provider.
She criticized hockey personality Don Cherry for appearing in a beer commercial in 2003, arguing that role models such as Cherry are forbidden from promoting alcoholic drinks by the provisions of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) ( Halifax Daily News, 8 May 2003 ).
In 2003, RAI pulled its content from TLN and petitioned the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) to allow it to broadcast RAI International in Canada.
In 2003 the CRTC awarded the vacant frequency license to Evanov.

CRTC and transferred
In 1976, jurisdiction over telecommunications services, most of which were then delivered by monopoly common carriers ( for example, telephone companies ), was transferred to it from the Canadian Transport Commission although the abbreviation CRTC remained the same.
Even before CKLN resumed scheduled programming in late September 2009, the CRTC expressed concerns over the station's inability to comply with licence requirements during the dispute, such as playing the aforementioned loop for several months in 2009, its failure to properly submit on-air logger tapes, program logs and complete annual financial returns since 2007, and that the CRTC licence for CKLN had been transferred to a third party without authorization.
On December 1, 2009, the CRTC approved a corporate reorganization where ownership of Canal Indigo would be transferred from Groupe TVA to fellow Quebecor Media division and cable provider Vidéotron.

CRTC and small
This is an exemption granted by the CRTC to previously licensed companies that continue to meet certain conditions, and does not mean that anybody can simply set up their own small cable company without CRTC approval.
AM radio stations have the additional protection that cable companies which offer cable FM services are required by the CRTC to distribute all locally available AM stations through conversion to a cable FM signal, but cable FM only accounts for a small percentage of radio listeners in Canada.
These services, which were approved by the CRTC on June 16, 2005, were Canada's first official satellite radio services, although a small grey market already existed for American satellite radio receivers.
On April 7, 2005, the CRTC removed the condition mandating a 15 minute news cycle, substituting new but much more liberal conditions including the allowance of a small percentage of airtime devoted to long-form discussion programming.
However, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) would not allow CFCF to be twinsticked with CKMI because Montreal's Anglophone population was too small ( though it allowed CanWest to keep CJNT-TV, a multicultural station WIC had bought a year earlier ).
Classicomm, or Classic Communications Ltd, was founded in the late 1960s by John O. Graham and Stewart H. Coxford, who were granted a cable television ( CATV ) licence by the CRTC for Richmond Hill and several other small communities north of Toronto.
In 2001, the station received CRTC approval to move to the FM dial, retaining its legendary call letters as CKGB-FM but taking on the EZ Rock brand and adult contemporary format, giving the small Timmins radio market its first direct competition, as the Haliburton Broadcasting Group-owned CHMT-FM had launched as adult contemporary / CHR hybrid Mix 93 just a few months before.
Fort Fitzgerald residents initiated the process by appealing to the CRTC ; service was installed at the end of 2005, delayed as the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo demanded ongoing access payments for installing the telephone lines, initially at a rate far in excess of the revenue that would be generated by a very small number of customers.
The CRTC cut the program to $ 67 million, eliminating a plan for local dial-up Internet access in small communities, and also removing Caller ID as part of the basic service objective within the Northwestel operating area.

CRTC and section
: The proposed acquisitions outlined in the following section are all pending Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) approval.

CRTC and Alberta
On April 9, 2007, it was announced that Rogers Communications has filed with the CRTC to purchase all of the A-Channel stations, including CFPL, CKNX, CKX-TV, Access Alberta and several cable channels being put up for sale by CHUM Limited in the wake of CTVglobemedia's pending acquisition of the CHUM group.
On April 9, 2007, it was announced that Rogers Communications filed with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) to purchase all of the A-Channel stations, including CKNX, CKX-TV, Access Alberta and several cable channels being put up for sale in the wake of CTVglobemedia's pending acquisition of the CHUM group.
In November 2000, Learning and Skills Television of Alberta, a company majority owned by CHUM Limited ( 60 %), was awarded a category 1 television broadcasting licence by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) called BookTelevision-The Channel, described as " a national English-language Category 1 specialty television service that will feature magazines and talk shows, dramas and documentaries that are exclusively based upon printed and published works, and offered with additional programming that provides an educational context and promotes reading.
In September 1996, Learning and Skills Television of Alberta Ltd. ( LSTA ) ( controlled by CHUM Limited through a 60 % interest in the company ) was granted a television broadcasting licence by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission ( CRTC ) called Canadian Learning Television.
In August 1983, under station manager Grant Burns, CJSW incorporated as a non-profit society in the Province of Alberta ( as the University of Calgary Student Radio Society-UCSRS ), and on 1983-11-18 filed its application with the CRTC for a Class A FM license.

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