CJOY
| City of license | Guelph, Ontario |
|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Guelph, Ontario |
| Branding | 1460 CJOY |
| Slogan | "The Royal City's Greatest Hits" |
| Frequency | 1460 kHz (AM) |
| First air date | June 14, 1948 |
| Format | Oldies |
| ERP | 10,000 watts |
| Class | B |
| Owner | Corus Entertainment |
| Website | 1460 CJOY |
CJOY is a Canadian radio station, broadcasting at 1460 AM in Guelph, Ontario. Its sister station is CIMJ-FM.
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[edit] History
Wally Slatter and Fred Metcalf opened Guelph's first radio station, CJOY, on June 14, 1948 on 1450 kHz with 250 watts power, non-directional with transmitter using one 150-foot (46 m) tower in Guelph Township, Wellington County.
On April 1, 1960, CJOY moved to 1460 kHz with 10,000 watts day and 5,000 watts night (full-time) from a new site on the south half of a Lot in Puslinch Township, Wellington County. They stated to use four 164 foot (overall height) towers. The station had originally proposed to move to 1430 kHz with 5,000 watts but it was decided that 1460 kHz would provide a better service.
On July 26, 1972 CJOY-AM and FM received approval to move to new studios and offices at 75 Speedvale Avenue E where it continues to broadcast from today. In 1981, the station increased its power to 10,000 watts full-time, using three 160-foot (49 m) and one 400-foot (120 m) towers at the same site of the 1972 towers. On April 28, 1987, Kawartha Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (which was indirectly controlled by Paul Desmarais) purchased CJOY Ltd. (CJOY and CKLA-FM) from Wally Slatter, Fred Metcalf, Neil Stilman, K.M. Metcalf, N. Slatter, W.D. Dawkins and Larry Smith; and The Galt Broadcasting Co. Ltd. (CIAM Cambridge) from Wally Slatter and Fred Metcalf.
The corporate name changed to Power Broadcasting Inc. in 1989.
Wally Slatter, co-founder of CJOY, died on June 2, 1995. As well Fred Metcalf, co-founder of CJOY died in February 1996. He was also the founder of the first cable TV system in Canada called 'Neighborhood TV' in Guelph (1952). He sold his twenty cable operations to Maclean Hunter Ltd. in 1967. He also ran that company between 1977 and 1984.
Well-known broadcasting alumni of CJOY include Norm Jary, former Mayor of Guelph and broadcaster of New York Ranger Hockey, Gordie Tapp, Lloyd Robertson, Al Shaver, Bob Bratina, and Bob McAdorey. Bratina was on the air March 23, 1965 when the huge black-out occurred in North-Eastern North America. The station interrupted programming to provide emergency information, but the station manager insisted the commercials for the regular Italian Language program run as scheduled during the emergency broadcast.
The current owner is Corus Entertainment, who purchased the stations in 1999 from Power Broadcasting. The CRTC approved the deal on March 24, 2000. CJOY underwent major studio renovations in the fall of 2006 and the studios are completely digital. (AES 44.1 standard) The studio to transmitter radio link and processing was replaced with a digital system in early 2009, leaving only the exciter and transmitter as analog.
From the very start of the station, CJOY has been a vital part of the community. It provides live coverage of charity fundraisers, and 'on the spot' reporting of breaking news, weather, and sports. The station also sends out its CJOY Jeep Compass to do on-site, on-air live event coverage.
[edit] AM to FM
On August 21, 2008, CJOY applied to move from the AM dial to the FM dial on 95.7 MHz.[1] This application to move from the AM dial to the FM dial on 95.7 MHz was denied on January 23, 2009.[2] On July 30, 2009, CJOY has yet again applied to convert to the FM dial, again at 95.7 MHz.[3] CJOY's AM to FM application was once again denied on January 28, 2010.[4]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- 1460 CJOY
- CJOY history at Canadian Communications Foundation
- Query the REC's Canadian station database for CJOY
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