CKHA-FM

CKHA-FM is a Canadian radio station, which airs at 100.9 FM in Haliburton, Ontario. The station operates a community radio format branded as Canoe FM.

Canoe FM CKHA
CityHaliburton, Ontario
Broadcast areaHaliburton County, Ontario
Frequency100.9 MHz
BrandingCanoe FM
SloganThe Voice of the Haliburton Highlands
Programming
Formatcommunity radio
History
First air date2003
Technical information
ClassA
ERP3,400 watts
horizontal polarization only
HAAT133.2 meters (437 ft)
Links
Websitewww.canoefm.com

History

On February 10, 2003, the Haliburton County Community Radio Association received Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approval to operate a new english-language FM community radio station at 100.9 MHz in Haliburton, Ontario, which signed on in July 2013.[1] The station is operated by volunteers as a not-for-profit station, with programming designed for full-time, part-time and seasonal residents of Haliburton County.

Canoe FM is a Not-For-Profit, Community Radio Station servicing the beautiful Haliburton Highlands of Ontario Canada. Operated by the Haliburton County Community Radio Association CKHA. We have over 110 Volunteers who run the station.

As the “Voice of the Haliburton Highlands” our product is radio entertainment and our service is supporting our community and its members by contributing to the culture of the community, providing educational and volunteer opportunities, sharing information and supporting the hundreds of events that happen in Haliburton County every year.

Canoe FM's programming is designed for full time, part-time and seasonal residents of Haliburton Highlands. Our CRTC mandate requires we have content that spans a vast majority of the music genres (jazz, classical, blues, folk, pop, country, gospel, rock) balancing music with talk and information exchange while at the same time providing a stage for Canadian artists and their music.

gollark: You can... buy SIM cards, though?
gollark: I don't know. You haven't described the mechanisms in any useful detail.
gollark: For example, if the battery fails, you have to get keys reloaded, and they can't be repaired by users.
gollark: I mean, they make it work a bit for credit card terminals, apparently, but those are not that user-friendly.
gollark: If you want it to be some magic untamperable hardware, that's maybe *possible* for some amount of "untamperable", but really hard and user-hostile.

References

  1. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2003-42, English-language FM community radio station in Haliburton, CRTC, February 10, 2003


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