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It's CHUO, the University of Ottawa's campus radio station. And after a student vote to cut its funding, those who run the outlet at 89.1 FM are wondering if it will survive.
"It's still really early to say definitively that it will end the radio station, but it's going to definitely be a different radio station," [station manager Grant Stein] said.
Stein said the station will have to look at relying even more on volunteers and may not be able to afford its existing space in the basement of a University of Ottawa building.
"It's going to have a major effect, not just on the staffing or the budget, but the potential of having to move," he said.
Students vote to end funding for campus radio station CHUO
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Is this situation unique to the U of Ottawa or do campus radio stations across Canada have similar funding issues?
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mace wrote:
Is this situation unique to the U of Ottawa or do campus radio stations across Canada have similar funding issues?
At least one, and probably more.
CJTR radio in dire straits under C18, pandemic hangover, manager says
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It's mostly in Ontario at the moment, as the current regime made changes to allow opt-out of certain student fees for just this purpose, though it's likely that other provinces would be quite happy to rid themselves of college/community radio.
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For the purposes of clarity, CJTR is not the University of Regina's campus radio station. It was set up as a non-profit community radio station back in 2001 and, apart from a show sponsored by the U of R, has no direct affiliation with the school.
On the Ottawa situation, it's another example of a campus radio station reaching out into the community but forgetting its roots as a university outlet. A glance at the schedule shows a heavy amount of shows celebrating hip-hop and club culture, with community based shows targeting the Asian and Francophone communities and other interest groups. If students feel that their tastes and interests aren't being reflected on the local campus station, many wonder why they should be required to pay for it. At the same time, it's worth noting that the turnout to vote for these student elections at U of O, which included a number of other resolutions, was a whopping 7.7%.
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But my old Uni station, CITR, UBC radio is still going strong.
Listen to it on Google.
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Here in the K/W area we have 4 university/college radio stations. Three OTA and one on line.
CKMS 102.7 University of Waterloo, says the station is independent and hasn't been fully funded by students since 2008. The station has been broadcasting since 1977.
CFRU 93.3 University of Guelph with a history that goes back to 1939. First licensed as an AM station in 1973 and moved to FM in 1980.
CJIQ 88.3 Conestoga College. The most commercial sounding of this group with an alternative/indie format. Part of the radio broadcast course and on air since January 2001. Station has local ads, even some national.
Radio Laurier- On line radio station at radiolaurier.com
All of the above also consider themselves to be community stations. CFRU Guelph solicits support from the general population.
Interesting that 98.5 CKWR which is the original community station in K/W has a pretty good AAA format during the day. Some really great music and on air talent. Most evenings and weekends they get into more specialized programming. This was the station that was teetering and almost closed down a few years ago. They have turned themselves around and have a decent variety of advertisers whenever I have tuned in.
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mace wrote:
Is this situation unique to the U of Ottawa or do campus radio stations across Canada have similar funding issues?
They will.
These referenda are a common occurrence and the results are getting closer every year. The more undergrads who enter the system who don't use radio, the more frequent it will become.
Also, these stations stopped becoming student-centric a long time ago. They may be valuable community resources, but the funding should not depend on students who'll never listen to or participate in them.
Last edited by RadioAaron (October 17, 2023 5:50 pm)
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Hamilton's CFMU 93.3 at McMaster University is funded by students AND the community at large (by way of on-air fund drive and usually an event in the community).
A lot of campus/community stations do on-air funding drives.
Even JazzFM 91.1 does so.
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paterson1 wrote:
Here in the K/W area we have 4 university/college radio stations.
Which one of those stations almost closed down because students voted for a free sandwich instead of funding the radio station? (this was a while ago)
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Radiowiz wrote:
paterson1 wrote:
Here in the K/W area we have 4 university/college radio stations.
Which one of those stations almost closed down because students voted for a free sandwich instead of funding the radio station? (this was a while ago)
That would have been CKMS.
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Another Ottawa-area campus station, CKCU-FM, is facing some "challenging" funding issues as well.
University radio stations in Ottawa face funding challenges