From 1974 to 1977, the
Ottawa–Hull area received TVA programming from
CFVO-TV (channel 30), which was the first
French-language commercial station in the
National Capital Region. CFVO was cooperatively owned and constantly struggled financially. After its March 1977 closure,
Radio-Québec bought the channel 30 physical plant directly from CFVO's creditors. The
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) then invited bids for a new French-language commercial station to be affiliated with TVA and operate on channel 40. Though as many as four bids were rumoured to be incoming for the TVA affiliate, the CRTC only received two, from Télé-Métropole (owner of TVA flagship station
CFTM in Montreal) and Radio-Nord. The CRTC selected the application from Radio-Nord in December; CHOT, known as "Télé-Outaouais", began operations on October 27, 1978. Pierre Thibault, who had been a temporary manager for CFVO late in the station's life, served as its first general manager. For a time until the late 1990s, CHOT was branded as "CHOT 40", referring to the station's channel number over the air. CHOT was one of the last television stations in Canada to use its over-the-air channel number in station branding. It is currently branded as "". ==Cable distribution==