CITS-DT

CITS-DT, virtual and UHF digital channel 14, is a religious television station licensed to Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, serving as the flagship station of Yes TV. The station is owned by Crossroads Christian Communications. CITS-DT's studios are located on North Service Road (adjacent to Highway 403) in Burlington, and its transmitter is located on the CHCH Television Tower at 481 First Road West in Stoney Creek.

CITS-DT
Hamilton, Ontario
Canada
ChannelsDigital: 14 (UHF)
Virtual: 14 (PSIP)
BrandingYes TV Ontario
Programming
Affiliations14.1: Yes TV (O&O; 2007–present)
Ownership
OwnerCrossroads Christian Communications
(Crossroads Television System)
History
First air dateSeptember 30, 1998 (1998-09-30)
Former call signsCITS-TV (1998–2011)
Former channel number(s)Analog:
36 (UHF, 1998–2011)
Digital:
35 (UHF, 2008–2011)
36 (UHF, 2011–2019)
Former affiliationsIndependent (1998–2007)
Call sign meaningCrossroads Independent Television System
Technical information
Licensing authorityCRTC
ERP221 kW
HAAT335.0 m (1,099 ft)
Transmitter coordinates43°12′27″N 79°46′31″W
Translator(s)See below
Links
Websitewww.yestv.com

On cable, the station is available on Rogers Cable channel 9 and digital channel 235 in the Greater Toronto Area and Cogeco Cable channel 17 in Hamilton. There is a high definition feed offered on Cogeco Cable digital channel 762 in Hamilton. The station also operates rebroadcasters in Ottawa and London, extending the station's coverage to almost all of Southern Ontario as well as portions of Western New York.

History

Crossroads Centre located in Burlington, home of CTS studios

On December 4, 1996, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) denied Crossroads Christian Communications a licence to operate a religious television station in Burlington. Two years later on April 2, 1998, the company became successful in obtaining a licence for Hamilton, beating out Trinity Television Inc. for the licence. CITS-TV first signed on the air on September 30 of that year, as a religious independent station. It had planned to launch two weeks earlier on September 14, but the sign-on date was pushed back to allow cable providers to make changes to some of their channel designations.

Throughout the years, CITS-TV expanded its coverage across southern Ontario by adding rebroadcast transmitters in London and Ottawa and by securing carriage on various cable providers across Ontario and Canada and on satellite.

CTS was rebranded as "Yes TV" on September 1, 2014. The rebranding coincides with the introduction of several secular programs into the schedule such as American Idol, Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy!.[1]

Programming

Yes TV airs programming intended for family viewing, mostly based on Christian values, including dramas, comedies, mini-series and reality, game, and talk shows; although Yes TV also features shows on political commentary and other religions, including Judaism, Islam and Sikhism. Yes TV also airs secular mainstream programs during prime time hours. It is governed by the CRTC's Religious Broadcast Regulations and follows a policy of not airing shows containing "coarse language, gratuitous violence or explicit sexual scenes."

First-run syndicated programming on CITS, some of which is shared with other Yes TV stations, includes Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy!, Hot Bench and Judge Judy. Most of these are timed to air on CITS for maximum simultaneous substitution benefits to coincide with the timing of the airings in the nearest American market, Buffalo, New York: Hot Bench on WKBW-TV, Judge Judy on WUTV and Wheel and Jeopardy on WIVB-TV.

Transmitters

Station City of licence Channel
(RF / VC)
ERP HAAT Transmitter coordinates
CITS-DT-1 Ottawa 15 (UHF)
15.1 (PSIP)
20.6 kW 203.6 m (668 ft) 45°13′1″N 75°33′50″W
CITS-DT-2 London 19 (UHF)
19.1 (PSIP)
4 kW 266.0 m (873 ft) 42°57′16″N 81°21′17″W

Digital television

Digital channel

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[2]
14.11080i16:9CITS-HDMain CITS-DT programming / Yes TV

Analogue-to-digital conversion

CITS-TV began broadcasting its digital signal on UHF channel 35 in January 2008. CITS shut down is analogue signal, over UHF channel 36, on August 31, 2011, the official date in which Canadian television stations in CRTC-designated mandatory markets transitioned from analogue to digital broadcasts;[3][4] The station relocated its digital signal from its pre-transition UHF channel 35 to its former analogue-era UHF channel 36 for post-transition operations. CITS and its digital rebroadcast transmitters switched to digital as follows: Ottawa repeater CITS-DT-1's digital signal remained on its pre-transition UHF channel 42, remapping to virtual channel 42.1 via PSIP; while London repeater CITS-DT-2's digital signal remained on UHF channel 14, remapping to virtual channel 14.1 via PSIP.

Spectrum reallocation

As part of the joint effort between the United States and Canada to repurpose the 600 MHz band, CITS-DT was required to change its broadcast frequencies in all three markets that it serves. On July 29, 2019, the Hamilton transmitter (CITS-DT) moved from UHF 36 to UHF 14, while the London transmitter (CITS-DT-2) moved from UHF 14 to UHF 19.[5] On May 25, 2020, the Ottawa transmitter (CITS-DT-1) moved from UHF 42 to UHF 15.[6] In all three cases, the PSIP virtual channel is identical to the physical channel, appended with the .1 decimal.

gollark: This is also "behavior".
gollark: What?
gollark: We're pretty general intelligences, but there are some things we can't really do or are extremely bad at.
gollark: Would you accept something as "truly thinking" if it appeared entirely identical to a human over a text chat?
gollark: That seems somewhat silly. It takes humans a lot of training to control complex real-world machinery, and that's with lots of intuition about the physical world in general already extant.

References

  1. "Say "Yes" to YES TV - YES TV Set to Launch This Fall". CTSTV.com. Crossroads Christian Communications. Archived from the original on August 12, 2014. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
  2. RabbitEars TV Query for CITS-DT
  3. "Digital Television - Office of Consumer Affairs (OCA)". Archived from the original on 2013-11-20. Retrieved 2013-06-29.
  4. Industry Canada: "DTV Post-Transition Allotment Plan", December 2008
  5. "Find a YES TV Channel". YES TV. July 29, 2019. Archived from the original on February 16, 2020.
  6. YES TV (May 22, 2020). "Tweet". Twitter. Retrieved May 26, 2020. YES TV's OTA channel in Ottawa is changing from 42 to 15 as of the week of May 25th. Please rescan to find our new channel. For the following 3 weeks, engineers will be performing some testing so there may be periodic signal interruptions. We apologize for any inconvenience. pic.twitter.com/akvOTbw0gl
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.