MTN In August 1980, Western Manitoba Broadcasters Ltd., owner of
Brandon-based
CKX-TV, met with community and business leaders to reveal their plan to start a new Portage la Prairie-based television station, with transmitter in
Elie, Manitoba. The new station would employ about 20 people. There was no mention of what network it would connect to, but Craig hoped for ease of regulations that would allow him to pull in a network from the U.S. via satellite for programming. Originally some of the television programming would come from
CBC Television, as like CKX, but after the CBC said they would not allow another competitive CBC broadcaster in the region because it would duplicate and cannibalize ad revenue of CBWT, Western Manitoba Broadcasters withdrew this part of the application. An application was made in 1981 for a 287,000-watt station transmitting on VHF channel 13. Their application for a television license was denied by the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) in 1981 due to "vague" programming promises. When
CKND-TV applied to the CRTC for extension of their signal into the Westman area via a transmitter in
Minnedosa, CKX-TV filed an intervention opposing it, saying it would harm CKX's ad revenue. The regulatory body decided in CKX's favour. Despite this, CKND-TV-2 Minnedosa was granted a license and began broadcasting at 6 p.m. September 1, 1982. Western Manitoba Broadcasters Ltd. applied to the CRTC again in 1985, this time promising to create a larger news department, with news bureaus in Winnipeg, Portage, Brandon and
Dauphin. They intended on using call letters CPLP-TV, but later decided on CHMI-TV. The station would be seen on VHF channel 13, the last available clear channel in the region. Future licensed television stations would have to broadcast on UHF frequencies. The licensing hearing was held on December 3, 1985, in Winnipeg. The station was licensed by the CRTC on May 8, 1986, and owned by
Craig Media with a condition of licence that the station would not solicit advertising from businesses located in Winnipeg. This was to protect existing Winnipeg television stations. The station went on the air on October 17, 1986 where it was originally branded as the
Manitoba Television Network or
MTN. Although it has always been a Winnipeg station for all intents and purposes, for its first decade it was not allowed to sell advertising in Winnipeg. Mark Evans was initially MTN's news director, before being replaced a year later by Al Thorgeirson. MTN was well known for its
Prairie Pulse News (later retitled
MTN Pulse News, and then
MTN News),
MTN Kids Club, and
Prime Ticket Movies, the last of which would carry over to the
A-Channel system. The station's initial slogan was "Very independent, very Manitoba!"
A-Channel In the fall of 1999, Craig Media moved the station's production facilities to the refurbished former
Canadian National Railway Power House at
The Forks in Winnipeg and rebranded the station as A-Channel, joining
CKEM-TV in
Edmonton and
CKAL-TV in
Calgary—effectively uniting Craig's non-CBC affiliates under the A-Channel banner. Technical operations for the station remained in Portage la Prairie. At a CRTC hearing in
Saskatoon in November 1999, Craig Broadcast Systems applied to take over the IMTV transmitter located in Dauphin on VHF channel 6. The signal would extend CHMI's reach into the
Parkland region with a 44,000 watt signal. The former IMTV transmitter began broadcasting A-Channel in 2000.
Acquisition by CHUM On April 12, 2004,
CHUM Limited announced a deal to purchase Craig Media for $265 million. The move came more than a month after the CRTC denied CHUM's applications for new Calgary and Edmonton stations because the market did not have sufficient advertising revenue to support a new entrant. The sale was approved by the
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission on November 19, 2004. CHUM had to sell off Toronto 1 because it already owned stations in Toronto (
CITY) and nearby
Barrie (
CKVR); Toronto 1 was sold to
Quebecor Media, owners of the media units
TVA and
Sun Media. ==Citytv==