CITO
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CITO (CTV) | ||
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Missing image MCTV.jpg Image:MCTV.jpg | ||
Timmins, Ontario | ||
Channel 3 / Cable 4 | ||
Owner | Bell Globemedia | |
Founded | 1971 | |
Signal Radius | 100 kW | |
Callsign Meaning | C I Timmins Ontario | |
CTV | ||
CHFD (Thunder Bay) | MCTV (Northeastern Ontario) | CJOH (Ottawa) |
CITO is a Canadian television station, broadcasting in Timmins, Ontario. It is affiliated with CTV, through Northern Ontario's MCTV television system.
CITO was established in 1971 by Cambrian Broadcasting, the owner of CICI in Sudbury and CKNY in North Bay. Unlike those stations, which were established in the 1950s as CBC affiliates and then reaffiliated with CTV in 1971 when J. Conrad Lavigne established new CBC stations in those markets, in Timmins Lavigne's existing station CFCL retained its CBC affiliation and CITO, the new station, went to air that year as a CTV affiliate.
Until 1980, CITO and CFCL aggressively competed with each other for advertising dollars, leaving both in a precarious financial position due to the Timmins market's relatively small size. In 1980, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission approved the merger of Cambrian Broadcasting and Lavigne's Mid-Canada Communications into the MCTV twinstick.
In 1990, the stations were acquired by Baton Broadcasting. Baton subsequently became the sole corporate owner of CTV, and sold CFCL to the CBC in 2002.
CITO also broadcasts on channel 10 in Kapuskasing, channel 11 in Kirkland Lake, channel 4 in Hearst and channel 9 in Chapleau. Template:Canada-bcast-stub