Startup preparations for the station began in March 1959, at an estimated cost of $150,000 according to Community Radio Corporation partner Robert Lukkason. The station was initially expected to be a
semi-satellite of
KNOX-TV in
Grand Forks (now defunct), but would have its own studios. KCND's original construction permit was based on plans to operate from a tower with a power of 21,000 watts. However, this plan changed and one of the tallest broadcast towers in North America was constructed—— short of the height of the
Empire State Building in
New York City. The tower was located west of Pembina and less than a half-mile south of the Canada/U.S. border. The station initially operated at a power of 220,000 watts, later increasing power to 288,000 watts. According to the 1960 U.S. Census, the population of Pembina the year KCND went on the air was a mere 625 people, making Pembina one of the smallest non-suburban municipalities in the U.S. to have its own TV station. KCND operated as a
semi-independent station. It was affiliated with both
NBC and
ABC for periods, but was not compensated by the networks due to the station's insignificant U.S. audience and thus never showed all of either network's schedule. It carried NBC's
The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson until September 2, 1966, replacing it with the
Broadcast syndication version of "
The Merv Griffin Show" the following Monday. In 1962, KCND was acquired along with KNOX-TV Grand Forks and
KXGO-TV Fargo for $675,200 by the Pembina Broadcasting Company, a group led by Ferris Traylor, the part-owner of an Indiana TV station. In 1963, citing the three stations' weak financial condition, the FCC approved a plan that resulted in Pembina Broadcasting moving KXGO to a taller tower to serve both Fargo and Grand Forks under the new call letters KTHI-TV, closing down KNOX-TV, and effectively making KCND into a KTHI semi-satellite. In November 1963, KCND added an additional
microwave relay path to
Minneapolis via Fargo, to improve signal quality when the primary link was experiencing "network trouble". In addition to problems with the microwave relay system that forwarded network programming to the Pembina studio, KCND also suffered from spotty reception in Winnipeg, causing the station to struggle financially in its early years. At one point, prior to the establishment of a citywide cable TV system in Winnipeg in 1968, KCND resorted to giving away free rooftop aerials to Winnipeg residents. In 1966, the McLendon Corporation of Dallas, Tex. purchased KCND from the Pembina Broadcasting Company. McLendon would remain the station's owner until its assets were sold to Canwest Broadcasting in 1975. Around the time that WDAZ-TV went on air in February 1967, KCND lost its NBC affiliation. Thereafter, it carried about half of the ABC prime time lineup (which was in those days a distant third among the U.S. networks in the ratings) and showed low-budget syndicated programming (e.g., series like
Felony Squad that had run for one or two seasons years earlier) and movies the rest of the time. The station produced a modest amount of local programming out of its U.S. and Canadian studios, including a breakfast program called
Good Morning, a midday current affairs show called
Around the Country, and a weekly hunting and fishing series called
Fin and Feather. ==Relocation and rebranding as CKND Winnipeg==