For the most part, CHAN does not deviate much from the Global schedule. Some programs carried on Global's daytime schedule in other markets – primarily library programs from Corus Entertainment's specialty channels – are not cleared on CHAN in order to make room for the station's various local news programs. In February, the station broadcasts the annual
Variety Show of Hearts telethon.
Selected former non-network programs • Vancouver based
NWA All Star Wrestling (1962–1989) •
Late Show with David Letterman, aired weeknights at 12:37 a.m. from February 1994 to August 1995 •
280-JOCK followed
News Hour Final at 12:05 a.m. until it was cancelled in late 1994, which pushed back
Late Show to 12:37 a.m. for several months. •
The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, aired weeknights at 12:07 a.m. from August 1995 to August 2001 • As
CHUM Limited held the rights to this program throughout the rest of the country, when
CIVI-TV launched in nearby
Victoria, British Columbia, the broadcast rights transferred over to that station. •
The Oprah Winfrey Show (1986–2011) aired at 4 p.m. on CHAN because the station owned the provincial television rights to this show, dating back to its days as a CTV affiliate. In every other market in which CTV owned a station, that network owned the local rights to
Oprah.
News operation . CHAN-DT presently broadcasts hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with hours each weekday and five hours on Saturdays and Sundays); in regards to the number of hours devoted to news programming, it is the highest local newscast output among Global's television stations (either owned-and-operated or affiliated), as well as among all Canadian television stations (after the drastic reduction of
Hamilton, Ontario's
CHCH-DT total weekly news programming due to budget cuts in December 2015). The station's Burnaby studios also serve as the production facilities for Global's Vancouver-based English national evening newscast
Global National and the
Shaw Multicultural Channel Mandarin national evening newscast
Global National Mandarin (2012–2016). Unlike most Global stations that carry midday newscasts, CHAN airs its noon newscast seven days a week. The station's newscast schedule is very similar to that of an affiliate of the
Big Three television networks (
ABC,
CBS and
NBC) in the United States, although as Global lacks a national morning news program, CHAN's weekday morning newscast runs a length similar to that of many
Fox and other news-producing non-Big Three U.S. stations. CHAN's news operation is well respected in the industry. Ever since the station first aired an hour-long newscast in the 1960s, a major part of the station's cash flow has gone into its news department, and it has garnered high ratings and major awards since then. The station's 6 p.m.
News Hour broadcast has been the highest-rated local
newscast in the province for many years, as well as the most-watched in all of Canada. The station's on-air news style was even used as an inspiration for
Ted Turner's
CNN, as both use the newsroom as a backdrop during the broadcast. The current newsroom was constructed in 1975; it was rebuilt in the early 1990s, moving the studio out of the newsroom, but keeping it as a backdrop, and was later remodeled in 2001 and 2006. Starting in the early 1990s, CHAN harboured ambitions of producing an early evening national newscast from its studios. In fact, several newscast pilots were produced at CHAN, suggesting the network was seriously considering such a move. However, that newscast never materialized; instead, CHAN began producing
Canada Tonight, which aired on most WIC-owned stations beginning in 1993. Two versions were produced: one for British Columbia itself, hosted by CKNW radio commentator
Bill Good (who later went to CTV's current Vancouver O&O station, CIVT-TV, and retired in December 2010) and a national version, hosted by
Tony Parsons, who also anchored CHAN's nightly news program, the
News Hour. When Canwest purchased CHAN, the stories that were once sourced from CTV's other affiliates throughout the country were replaced by stories sourced from Global's affiliates. From 2001, when the station became "Global BC", the news department underwent a minor retitling as
BCTV News on Global. CHAN opted to keep the "BCTV" name for its newscasts, since that brand was still very well respected in the province; it also wanted to keep CIVT from using the name itself, as it contained the letters "CTV". In addition, CHAN became the headquarters for Global's national news centre and the production facility for a new national newscast,
Global National (which is currently anchored by former CTV and NBC correspondent
Dawna Friesen on weeknights and on weekends by Robin Gill; originally anchored beforehand by
Kevin Newman), thus fulfilling its longstanding dream of producing a national newscast. The program is broadcast live-to-tape from Vancouver at 5:30 p.m. (
Pacific Time Zone), airing locally prior to the 6 p.m.
News Hour broadcast. The "BCTV" brand was finally discontinued when Global introduced its new logo and on-air identity on February 6, 2006; CHAN's newscasts were rebranded as
Global News (with its overall branding changing to "Global BC") at this point. In 2006, Global struck an agreement with the Canadian Traffic Network to supply the station with a
Robinson R44 news
helicopter with gyroscopic camera mounts. The helicopter is branded as "Global 1" – the same designation used for the news helicopters used by other Global stations – which is shared with CKNW, and is the second news helicopter in Vancouver (after that used by CIVT). On December 16, 2009, Tony Parsons anchored his final newscast at CHAN after 34 years as anchor of the
News Hour. It was expected that he would remain until after the
2010 Winter Olympics, but left much earlier than expected for unknown reasons. Parsons joined CHEK as anchor of its 10 p.m. newscast on March 15, 2010, and also began anchoring the evening newscasts at CBC Television O&O
CBUT (channel 2) on April 12, 2010, remaining at both stations until his retirement in 2013. CHAN began broadcasting its local newscasts in
high definition on September 20, 2010 (Dawna Friesen was named anchor of
Global National on that same date); the station debuted a new graphics package as well as an HD-ready virtual set two weeks later on October 4, which utilized the same set with minor changes to the desk. CHAN-DT uses
Betacam SP analog videotape for all of its local advertisements and for pre-recorded segments within its newscasts; however, the station is slowly moving to a digital format for video production.
MPEG-2 transmission is used on nearly all non-local broadcasts. On January 11, 2012, Shaw Media filed a license application with the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) – which was approved on July 20, 2012 – to launch a
Category B digital-only specialty service that would serve as a British Columbia-focused news channel operated by CHAN-DT and utilizing its news staff. The channel, which was given the name
Global News: BC 1, launched on March 14, 2013. It became the fourth regional news channel in Canada and the first outside of Ontario (joining Toronto-based 24-hour services
CP24 and the now-defunct
CityNews Channel, and Hamilton-based independent station – and former CHAN sister station under their prior Canwest ownership – CHCH-DT, which carries a heavy local newscast schedule along with some entertainment programming). On August 27, 2012, CHAN-DT expanded its weekday morning newscast to four hours, with the addition of a half-hour at 5 a.m. (making it only the second Canadian station with a pre-5:30 a.m. morning newscast, after CHCH-DT), the 5 to 6 a.m. hour of the newscast was re-titled as the
Early Morning News; in addition on September 2, 2012, the station also expanded its Sunday morning newscast to three hours with the addition of an hour at 7 a.m. The expansions of CHAN's morning newscasts were part of a benefits package that was included as a condition of the sale of the Global Television Network to Shaw Communications. Since August 19, 2024, due to cutbacks by Corus, the newscasts of Kelowna sister station
CHBC-DT have been hubbed from CHAN-DT. The newscasts feature contributions from local reporters.
Notable current on-air staff •
Dawna Friesen (2010–present); anchor of
Global National •
Chris Gailus (2006–present); Global News Hour at 6 co-anchor (weekdays)
Notable former on-air staff •
Jennifer Burke (1991–1998) •
Robin Gill – (Sunday 2008–2021 and Saturday 2011–2021) anchor of
Global National •
Bill Good Jr. (1993–2001) •
Frank Griffiths (1963–1994) •
Rena Heer (2005–2007) •
Deborra Hope (1981–2014) •
Jill Krop (1995–2020); former reporter/anchor from 1995 to 2015 and Global BC news director and station manager from 2015 to 2020 •
Mi-Jung Lee (1992–1998) •
Pamela Martin (1977–2001) •
Tara Nelson (2005–2008) •
Kevin Newman (2001–2008) •
Harvey Oberfeld (1979–2006) •
Tony Parsons –
News Hour anchor (1975–2009) •
Jack Webster (1978–1987) ==Technical information==