CIRX-FM-1

CIRX-FM-1 (95.9 FM, "95.9 The Goat") is a Canadian radio station licensed to Vanderhoof, British Columbia. Owned by Vista Radio, it broadcasts an active rock format. The station formerly broadcast on AM as CIVH, but was forced to move permanently to FM in 2018 due to transmitter damage.

CIRX-FM-1
CityVanderhoof, British Columbia
Broadcast areaNechako Valley
Frequency95.9 MHz
Branding95.9 The Goat
SloganVanderhoof's World Class Rock
Programming
FormatActive rock
Ownership
OwnerVista Radio
(Vista Radio Ltd.)
History
First air dateNovember 1973
Technical information
ClassB
ERP1 kilowatt
horizontal polarization only
HAAT500 meters (1,600 ft)
Links
Websitehttp://www.mynechakovalleynow.com

History

Prince George Broadcasting Ltd. (owner of CJCI) received a licence for a new AM station at Vanderhoof, British Columbia in 1973. CIVH began broadcasting on 1340 kHz later that same year. A year later in 1974, CIVH was authorized to operate a rebroadcast transmitter at Fort St. James, on 1480 kHz with the call sign CIFJ. Also in 1974, CIFL was added to broadcast at 1450 kHz in Fraser Lake.

On October 19, 1993, the station had received CRTC approval to convert CIFJ operating at 1480 AM to 92.7 MHz on the FM dial, although the move did not take place.

The station previously operated retransmitters, CIFJ on 1480 in Fort St. James, and CIFL on 1450 in Fraser Lake, but they were discontinued in 2017 due to transmitter equipment issues

On March 6, 2018, the station's transmitter collapsed after one of its guy-wires were clipped by snow removal equipment contracted by the city of Vanderhoof. After the accident, CIVH moved its over-the-air feed to 95.9 CIRX-FM-1—the local repeater of sister station CIRX-FM—as a temporary measure. However, in August 2018, Vista Radio announced that CIVH's programming would remain on 95.9 permanently, citing that it would too costly to repair and replace the transmitter's equipment. As requested by Vista Radio, CIVH's license was returned to the CRTC on August 15, 2018.[1][2][3]

gollark: I've probably patched it now (hard to test, because one of my changes broke the exploit code but in a way which could be worked around), but at the cost of causing minor breakage in a mostly unused feature.
gollark: I'm having to reverse-engineer yet ANOTHER heavily obfuscated potatOS sandbox exploit.
gollark: https://pastebin.com/RM13UGFa line 1275.
gollark: Well, it prevents malicious programs (also users) from removing it or meddling with system files without doing a simple thing which ensures it can't be automatically removed.
gollark: > > > PotatOS is at least interesting. The sandboxing stuff it uses is pretty generalizable.> > It's a virusPeople often foolishly label potatOS a "virus" just because it conveniently copies itself to disks and has sandboxing.

See also

References

  1. "Accident silences radio station - Vanderhoof Omineca Express". Vanderhoof Omineca Express. 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  2. "CIVH Vanderhoof – Revocation of licence". CRTC. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
  3. "UPDATE: Vanderhoof Radio Station surrenders license". VanderhoofOnline.com. 2018-08-16. Archived from the original on 2018-08-23. Retrieved 2018-08-23.


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