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CILK-FM

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Radio station in Kelowna, British Columbia
CILK-FM
Broadcast areaOkanagan Valley
Frequency101.5 MHz
BrandingMove 101.5
Programming
FormatAdult contemporary
Ownership
Owner
Sister stationsCKFR, CHSU-FM
History
First air dateJune 21, 1985 (1985-06-21)
Call sign meaningSounds like "silk" (former branding)
Technical information
ClassC
ERP11,000 watts average
33,300 watts peak
horizontal polarization only
HAAT114 metres (374 ft)
Links
WebcastListen Live
Websiteiheartradio.ca/move/kelowna

CILK-FM is a Canadian radio station located in Kelowna, British Columbia. Broadcasting at 101.5 FM, the station airs an adult contemporary format branded as Move 101.5. The station is owned by Bell Media.

History

The station traces its origins to December 21, 1984 when the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission awarded a new FM license for the Kelowna market to Silk FM Broadcasting, a company two-thirds controlled by veteran radio broadcaster Nick Frost.

CILK signed on for the first time at 101.5 MHz with a soft adult contemporary format at 10 a.m. on June 21, 1985, with an average effective radiated power of 11,000 watts. The transmitter had a northward-directed pattern from the 3,200 foot level of Okanagan Mountain, 7 kilometres south of Kelowna city centre.

On May 7, 1993, Silk FM Broadcasting applied to amend its broadcasting licence by relocating the transmitter site on Okanagan Mountain approximately three kilometres to the south and by decreasing the effective radiated power from 11,000 to 10,300 watts. The applicant indicated these changes would improve service to the Central Okanagan area. On July 19 of the same year, the CRTC approved the application.

In 1995, Frost hired a single employee, David E. Fowler, whose mandate was to start up an internet service provider: Silk Internet. The workplace, and all the associated equipment, was set up in the lobby of the radio station. A systems administrator, Stephen Hawtree, was hired soon afterwards to assist with the technical operations. By the end of the first week of operation there were five brand new Internet subscribers and within two years it became Kelowna's largest internet providers. Within five years the subscriber list was up to about 6,000. In 2000, the Silk Internet was sold to Pacific Coast Net, which itself was subsequently sold to Uniserve Communications. That same year, Silk FM Broadcasting launched an online news and local information web portal Castanet.net.

CILK's former logo, used until December 2010.

In 2004, the station adopted an adult hits format. On October 5, the CRTC announced that Silk FM Broadcasting had applied to add rebroadcast transmitters in the nearby Okanagan cities of Vernon and Penticton, in addition to its owned and operated rebroadcast transmitters at Big White Mountain and Magna Bay. On February 28, 2005, the CRTC denied the application to add the transmitters into Vernon and Penticton on the grounds that it would result in a significant increase to the coverage of CILK into the adjacent radio markets.

On May 3, 2006, several years after Frost bought out minority shareholders of Silk FM Broadcasting and became sole owner of the company, he announced the sale of CILK-FM and its two broadcast transmitters to Standard Radio for a total purchase price of $9.25 million CAD. The sale was approved unconditionally by the CRTC in December 2006.

In the summer of 2007, CILK modified its format to adult contemporary, playing contemporary and modern hits. In October 2007, Astral Media acquired Standard's terrestrial radio and television assets, including CILK. By January 2011, the station became 101.5 EZ Rock, keeping the AC format. By March 2011, the station was added at the Canadian hot AC panel per Mediabase status, joining sister CHR/Top 40 station CHSU-FM, but later moved to the Canadian AC panel the following week.

Logo as "EZ Rock", 2011-2020

On December 27, 2020, as part of a mass format reorganization by Bell Media, CILK rebranded as Move 101.5. While the station would run jockless for the first week of the format, on-air staff would return on January 4, 2021.

On February 8, 2024, Bell announced a restructuring that included the sale of 45 of its 103 radio stations to seven buyers, subject to approval by the CRTC, including CILK, which is to be sold to Vista Radio.

Rebroadcasters

Rebroadcasters of CILK-FM
City of license Identifier Frequency Power Class RECNet CRTC Decision
Big White Mountain VF2329 103.9 FM 30 watts LP Query 98-525
Celista CILC-FM 94.7 FM 50 watts LP Query 2001-266

References

  1. Decision CRTC 84-1050
  2. Bell Media Moves Ten Stations to New Branding
  3. Hudes, Sammy (8 February 2024). "'Not a viable business anymore': Bell Media selling 45 radio stations amid layoffs". Toronto Star. The Canadian Press. Retrieved 8 February 2024.

External links

Radio stations in the Okanagan Valley-Shuswap Country, British Columbia
Kelowna
Penticton
Vernon
Revelstoke
Cranbrook
Golden
Nelson
Grand Forks
Invermere
Other communities
Osoyoos
CJOR 1240
CBUB-FM 95.3
Salmon Arm
CKXR-FM 91.5
CBUC-FM 96.9
Summerland
CHOR-FM 98.5
Castlegar
CJAT-FM-1 90.3
CKQR-FM 99.3
Trail
CBTA-FM 94.9
CJAT-FM 95.7
Sicamous
CBPM 1260
Lillooet
CHLS-FM 100.5
British Columbia radio markets
Okanagan
Prince George / Northern Interior
Thompson-Cariboo
Northern & Western Vancouver Island
Southwest BC Mainland
Greater Vancouver
Victoria & Mid Island
See also
List of radio stations in British Columbia
Bell Media (and other broadcasting properties of BCE Inc.)
Terrestrial TV
and free streaming
CTV (O&O)
Stations
CIVT-DT Vancouver
CFCN-DT Calgary
CFRN-DT Edmonton
CFQC-DT Saskatoon
CKCK-DT Regina
CICC-TV Yorkton
CIPA-TV Prince Albert
CKY-DT Winnipeg
CTV Northern Ontario
CHBX-TV Sault Ste. Marie
CICI-TV Greater Sudbury
CITO-TV Timmins
CKNY-DT North Bay
CKCO-DT Kitchener
CFTO-DT Toronto
CJOH-DT Ottawa
CFCF-DT Montreal
CTV Atlantic
CKLT-DT Saint John
CKCW-DT Moncton
CJCH-DT Halifax
CJCB-DT Sydney
CTV 2 (O&O)
Stations
CIVI-DT Victoria
CFTK-TV Terrace
CJDC-TV Dawson Creek
CHWI-DT Windsor
CFPL-DT London
CKVR-DT Barrie
CHRO-TV Ottawa
Noovo (O&O)
Stations
CFJP-DT Montreal
CFKS-DT Sherbrooke
CFKM-DT Trois-Rivières
CFAP-DT Quebec City
CFRS-DT Saguenay
Subscription TV
and streaming
CTV 2
CTV Entertainment
CTV News
CTV Specialty
Premium and PPV
Maple Leaf Sports
& Entertainment
Other English-language
Other French-language
iHeartRadio Canada
AM
FM
Networks
Broadcasting studios
Other BMI assets
Predecessors
Former/defunct
properties
NotesOwned (or part-owned) by BCE separately from its ownership of Bell Media.
Community channels operated as part of Bell Fibe TV and Bell Aliant Fibe TV; also not part of Bell Media.


*Currently being sold to other owners pending approval of the CRTC.

49°46′06″N 119°30′03″W / 49.76833°N 119.50083°W / 49.76833; -119.50083

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