'CBC North' is the name for the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's radio and television service in the
Canadian Arctic. Originally known as the 'CBC Northern Service', its first operations began in 1958 with radio broadcasts including the establishment of
CFYK in
Yellowknife, Northwest Territories.
Radio
CBC North Radio carries daily aboriginal language programming in
Dene Suline,
Tlicho,
North Slavey,
South Slavey,
Gwich'in,
Inuvialuktun, and
Inuktitut. The shows include news, weather and entertainment, providing a vital service to the many people in Northern Canada for whom English is not their first language.
In the
Yukon, a conventional
CBC Radio One schedule in English is aired on
CFWH.
In the
Northwest Territories, afternoon programming such as ''
Freestyle'' is pre-empted; instead, CBC North airs special afternoon programming in
First Nations languages. On
CFYK in
Yellowknife and the southern part of the territory, the afternoon schedule is as follows:
★ 1:00 - 2:00 p.m. - ''Tide Godi'',
Dogrib
★ 2:00 - 3:00 p.m. - ''Le Got
'she deh'',
Slavey
★ 3:00 - 4:00 p.m. - ''Dene Dayalt
'i'',
Dene Suline
On
CHAK in
Inuvik and the northern Beaufort Delta area, afternoon programs include ''Nantaii'' in
Gwich'in from 1:00 to 2:00 p.m. and ''Tusaavik'' in
Inuvialuktun from 3:00 until 4 p.m. The Northwest Territories otherwise hears the conventional CBC Radio One schedule.
In
Nunavut, far greater differences occur on
CFFB. The Nunavut service is the only local/regional CBC Radio service which covers three time zones (Eastern, Central and Mountain). The local morning program, ''Qulliq'', broadcast in Inuktitut and English segments, airs from 6 a.m. until 10 a.m., and is followed by abbreviated broadcasts of ''
The Current'' and ''
Sounds Like Canada''. At noon, a bilingual program ''Nipivut'' airs in
Inuktitut and English. In the afternoons, programming is in
Inuktitut and includes ''Tausunni'' from
Iqaluit, ''Tuttavik'' from
Kuujjuaq and ''Tusaajaksat'' from
Rankin Inlet. These programs air in place of ''Freestyle''. Subsequently, in the evenings, ''Ullumi Tusaqsauqaujut'' presents highlights from the day's Inuktitut programs at 10 p.m. Eastern. At 10:30 p.m. Eastern ''Sinnaksautit'' features traditional Inuit storytelling; CBC Radio's ''
The Arts Tonight'' subsequently airs at 11 p.m., followed by ''
Northern Lights'' at midnight and ''
CBC Radio Overnight'' at 2 a.m.
In the
Nunavik region of northern
Quebec, the program service from
Nunavut is heard on a network of community-owned FM transmitters, with some program differences. Weekday mornings from 6 a.m. to 7 a.m. Quebec AM from Quebec City is heard. Some community access programs from the
Inuit broadcasting organization
Taqramiut Nipingat Inc. are heard in some timeslots.
Shortwave services
In northern
Quebec, more differences occur. ''CBC Radio Nord Québec'' operates a shortwave service, transmitted from the
RCI transmitter in
Sackville, New Brunswick on 9625 kHz, and programmed from the
CBC studios in Montreal.
Radio Nord Québec also airs a hybrid Radio One/
Première Chaîne schedule mixed with programming in
Cree and
Inuktitut to the
James Bay region.
Two CBC Radio One stations operate shortwave relay transmitters
★
CFGB in
Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Newfoundland and Labrador, with
call sign CKZN
★
CBU in
Vancouver, British Columbia, with call sign CKZU
★ but neither transmission site has the capabilities to reach the Arctic with usable signals year round
Reception issues
Both Radio One transmitters (and CBC Northern Quebec) broadcast 1 kW
ERP signals on a fixed frequency.
★ CBC Radio One and CBC Northern Quebec shortwave relays can be quite difficult to receive due to increased terrestrial noise from modern electrical and electronic systems.
Some have
suggested that CBC/Radio-Canada create a new high power shortwave
digital radio service for more effective coverage of isolated areas.
Shortwave coverage plans have been slowed by CBC/SRC's conversion to
ATSC HDTV, as well as costs associated with running a Eureka-147 transmitter network.

Proposed CBC Radio One shortwave relay site at http://CBC.am/cbc-src.htm
Television

CBC North ident, September 1998
The primary CBC North television production centre is in
Yellowknife (
CFYK), with smaller production centres in
Whitehorse (
CFWH) and
Iqaluit (
CFFB). The CBC North television service is seen through a network of both
CBC-owned and community-owned rebroadcasters in virtually all communities in the
Northwest Territories, the
Yukon, and
Nunavut.
CBC North airs largely the same programming as
CBC Television, with some exceptions. The station airs an hour long evening news program known as '', anchored by
Carol Morin.
A daily newscast in
Inuktitut, ''
Igalaaq'', is also aired at 6:00 p.m. Eastern Time and again at 7:30 p.m. Eastern Time in Nunavut; 4:00 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. in the Northwest Territories, with anchor
Rassi Nashalik. A weekly
Cree newsmagazine, ''
Maamuitaau'', also airs on CBC North TV.
Unlike the other owned-and-operated CBC stations, CBC North airs few local ads — during network programming, you're more likely to find promos for other CBC programs, while between shows, you're more likely to find public service announcements (mainly aimed at arctic Canadians), as well as community announcements, "Anik Info".
There are two CBC North television feeds — one for the NWT and Nunavut providing a Mountain Time schedule and another for the Yukon on Pacific Time. All local CBC North programs originate from Yellowknife and other Arctic locales. Viewers with C-Band dishes used to enjoy CBC North in the clear until around 2000, when the CBC switched to a proprietary digital system, requiring a $3000 receiver.
Prior to the switch to digital transmission, the two CBC North TV satellite feeds originated in St. John's, Newfoundland (which was seen in the Eastern Arctic) and Vancouver, British Columbia, (which was seen in the N.W.T. and Yukon). Those channels carried some regional programs originating from those areas to the North. With the new digital transmission system (now centralised at CBC Television's headquarters in
Toronto), the North no longer sees the regional east coast and west coast programs.
Some US communities offer CBC North on cable or low-powered TV; in
Alexandria, Minnesota, for example, a local TV association offers CBC North on one of their LPTV channels.
See also
★
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
★
Canadian Arctic
★
First Nations
★
Aboriginal peoples of Canada
★
Canada Now
★
CBC News at Six
External links
★
CBC North website
★
LyngSat Address - CBC North TV
★
CBC: 1950s history (including beginning of CBC Northern Service)