CBKT signed on for the first time on December 21, 1962 as CHRE-TV, a semi-satellite of
CHAB-TV in
Moose Jaw and an affiliate of
CTV. CHRE signed on as part of a deal between CHAB-TV and Regina's original station,
CKCK-TV, which allowed CTV to come to Saskatchewan for the first time. On the same day CHRE signed on, CKCK-TV opened a rebroadcaster in Moose Jaw. During the latter half of the 1960s, the station generally branded itself as "Channel 9". On
May 30, 1968, controlling interest in CHAB Ltd., owner of CHAB-AM-TV and CHRE, was transferred to Moffat Broadcasting, owner of
Winnipeg's CTV affiliate,
CJAY (channel 7, now CKY-DT). The
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), however, told Moffat to sell CHAB-TV and CHRE to a new owner within one year. Moffat tried to sell CHAB and CHRE to Western Broadcast Management Ltd., owner of
CHAN-TV in
Vancouver. However, the CRTC denied this bid on July 18,
1969 in favour of a counteroffer from the CBC. On September 13, CBC officially assumed control of CHRE and CHAB and moved its programming there, while CKCK became the sole CTV outlet in southern Saskatchewan. CBC made the Regina station the main station, and changed the call letters of the stations to CBKRT and CBKMT respectively. After the switch to the CBC, the brand used was "9&4" or "CBC 9&4", to signify both the Regina and Moose Jaw channel numbers. The station received its current call letters on
July 31, 1978. On the same day, CBKMT's licence was merged with that of CBKT; its transmitter operated as a full-time rebroadcaster, CBKT-1. The CHRE calls are now used on a
radio station in
St. Catharines, Ontario, owned by
Bell Media. After a brief flirtation with "TV9 Regina", the station returned to the "9&4" brand in the 1980s, this time to signify the station's cable channel position. Today the station is branded just as "CBC" or "CBC Saskatchewan", as it has since the early 1990s, when the latter branding was introduced to signify the inclusion of not only the main station but also its rebroadcasters across the province, including Moose Jaw and Saskatoon. In
2002, CBC purchased former privately owned affiliates
CJFB-TV in
Swift Current and
CKOS-TV in
Yorkton, turning both into rebroadcasters of CBKT. ==Newscasts==