Category A services
Category A services were a class of Canadian specialty television channel which, as defined by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, must be offered by all digital cable and direct broadcast satellite providers that have the capability to do so.
Category A services were an amalgamation of the former analog pay and specialty services licensed prior to digital television (with the exception of general interest national news and sports specialty services which are designated as Category C services) and the former category 1 digital specialty channels. In a policy decision released on October 30, 2008, the CRTC decided that all Category 1 digital services as well as all analog pay and specialty channels would be renamed Category A services, effective September 1, 2011.[1]
Category A services share a number of similar regulations, including that they must be offered by all television providers in Canada, and have higher Canadian content quota levels than Category B services. They were also previously protected by "genre protection" rules forbidding other specialty channels from directly competing with them, but the CRTC phased out this rule by reclassifying the majority of specialty channels as discretionary services with standardized conditions of license.
Category A specialty services
English
Former analog services
- BNN Bloomberg
- CMT
- CP24
- CPAC
- CTV Comedy Channel
- CTV Drama Channel
- CTV Life Channel
- CTV Sci-Fi Channel
- Discovery Channel
- DTour
- E!
- Food Network Canada
- HGTV Canada
- History
- MTV
- Much
- OLN
- OWN Canada
- Showcase
- Slice
- Sportsnet 360
- Teletoon
- Treehouse
- VisionTV
- W Network
- The Weather Network
- YTV
Former Category 1 digital services
French
Former analog services
- Canal D
- Canal Vie
- CPAC
- Elle Fictions
- Évasion
- Historia
- Ici ARTV
- Max
- MétéoMédia
- SériesPlus
- Télétoon
- TV5
- Unis
- Vrak
- Z
Former Category 1 digital services
Multicultural
Former analog services
Category A pay services
English
Former analog services
- Family Channel (two multiplex channels)
- The Movie Network (four multiplex channels)
- HBO Canada (East)
- TMN2
- TMN3
- The Movie Network Encore (two multiplex channels)
- The Movie Network Encore 2
Former digital services
- Super Channel (four multiplex channels)
- Super Channel 2
- Super Channel 3
- Super Channel 4
French
Former analog services
- Super Écran (four multiplex channels)
- Super Écran 2
- Super Écran 3
- Super Écran 4
Defunct services
See also
- List of television stations in Canada by call sign
- List of Canadian television networks (table)
- List of Canadian television channels
- List of Canadian specialty channels
- Category B services
- Category C services
- List of foreign television channels available in Canada
- List of United States stations available in Canada
- Digital television in Canada
- Multichannel television in Canada
- List of Canadian stations available in the United States
- List of television stations in North America by media market
References
- ^ Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) (2008-10-30). "Regulatory policy - Regulatory frameworks for broadcasting distribution undertakings (BDUs) and discretionary programming services". crtc.gc.ca. Retrieved 2021-05-05.