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July 26, 2024 1:49 pm  #1


Radio News Taking a Back Seat

As a former ND in the 70's for a Toronto station it is difficult to understand why many of today's broadcast owners have relegated their "News Departments" as surplus.  Having given up on the tedious and routine CFRB months ago, Residing in Kitchener, Lite 92 Brantford is my current music target since 'RB.  Yet, today the co-host on Lite 92 read the 8:00 am news and said she read the news for two other stations as well.   Conclusion:  There are two other stations that appear to lack any news departments and any qualified news reporters/readers.  The part that radio news plays in today's broadcast content is failing the listener.  Gone are the days when radio was relied upon for up-to-the-minute information.  Only proves why the pseudo broadcast corporations should get the hell out of broadcasting.  I assumed that in order to retain your broadcast license certain perimeters were required such as a news department.  Where is the CRTC?

 

July 26, 2024 5:56 pm  #2


Re: Radio News Taking a Back Seat

I've kind of lost track of what the CRTC requires of radio stations as far as news goes these days.
But at one time a radio station had to sign an agreement about foreground programming, music etc.
The CRTC always required some sort of commitment to news.
But it seems to me that's all fallen by the wayside because radio is no longer a vital source of news for the communities it serves
Or at least the CRTC no longer requires radio stations to tell residents about the latest decisions made by city council.
As an old fuddy duddy I came up in radio at a time when it was unthinkable for a radio station to not have reporters at every city council meeting, if not school boards and police commissions too.
When I worked in Vancouver almost every city council in the region held their city council meetings on a certain day of the week, and it was suicide if a radio station didn't cover all of the meetings without fail.
Also it was required for radio to do hospital checks to see who had been released from hospital if they had been admitted from a car accident etc.
When I got to Toronto we had police and fire department scanners crackling in the newsroom 24/7.
Not to mention at least two or three news cruisers roaming the streets constantly.
But at least there are still some vestiges of that left, like an example this weekend with most radio stations covering the disappearance of a three year old boy.
And at least AM radio is still covering such issues as the terrible traffic problems in Toronto and even something silly like creating Taylor Swift Way to mark the mega star's Toronto concerts.



 

Last edited by newsguy1 (July 26, 2024 5:57 pm)

 

July 26, 2024 8:08 pm  #3


Re: Radio News Taking a Back Seat

The CRTC is a joke.  Rogers and Bell don't ask permission to do anything, they tell the commission what they're going to do.
 

 

July 26, 2024 8:12 pm  #4


Re: Radio News Taking a Back Seat

Didn't work too well for Corus' CHQR on 107 FM in Calgary. But yeah, Corus did it anyway, despite knowing they weren't supposed to. 

 

July 26, 2024 8:16 pm  #5


Re: Radio News Taking a Back Seat

Here in London, the only station we can rely on for news is CBC Radio I.

Last edited by turkeytop (July 26, 2024 8:53 pm)


After all is said and done, more is usually said than done.
 

July 26, 2024 9:19 pm  #6


Re: Radio News Taking a Back Seat

Well for years, broadcasters were yelling about the CRTC being too heavy handed, too inflexible about formats and telling stations they had to have x number of minutes of foreground programming, news, only 51% hits on FM even regulations on how many commercial minutes they could have in a day.

Other than cancon they did deregulate years ago.  The CRTC encourage stations to have news but there doesn't appear to be any guideline other than what the station says they will do at renewal or applying for a new station license.

Today it is easy to change music formats, no commercial limits for AM or FM, and no regulation regarding foreground programming and news.  It is up to the station, and that's what broadcasters asked for many years ago. 

So this isn't really on the CRTC.  Maybe this is why they have kept cancon.  The feeling might be that stations would stop playing any homegrown music other than the Billboard cancon and largely go back to ignoring domestic artists.  Sort of like what they have done for news. 

 

July 26, 2024 9:46 pm  #7


Re: Radio News Taking a Back Seat

Just thinking.
If Canadians want to make sure our Canadian home grown music is promoted and preserved maybe we should not rename our streets Taylor Swift Way when the American pop star comes to Toronto.
Maybe we should make her go to her concert venue by driving down a street called Rush Boulevard or maybe Guess Who Drive, and also explain to her why the streets in Toronto are called that way?
Just Sayin'


 

 

July 27, 2024 7:39 am  #8


Re: Radio News Taking a Back Seat

paterson1 wrote:

So this isn't really on the CRTC.  Maybe this is why they have kept cancon.  The feeling might be that stations would stop playing any homegrown music other than the Billboard cancon and largely go back to ignoring domestic artists.  Sort of like what they have done for news. 

This.

While program directors and jocks have whined for years about Cancon, the suits that run the business have been happy to let it stay in exchange for easing the rules on spoken word content and most importantly, previous regulations that limited the number of stations that a single entity could own in one market.