City of Toronto Mayor John Tory proclaimed Dec. 5 Roger Ashby Day. Wednesday marked Ashby’s retirement from CHUM Radio after five decades on Toronto airwaves. Watch highlights of Ashby’s retirement broadcast from Toronto’s Sheraton Grand Central Ballroom here. Bell Media president Randy Lennox announced that Ashby will return with his own curated stream on iHeartRadio Canada in the near future. Details are still to come.
Jon McComb celebrated 35 years with Corus NewsTalk station CKNW-AM Vancouver on Dec. 1. McComb landed at CKNW in 1983 after starting his career at age 17, spinning records at a station in Tucson, AZ where he attended high school. For the last five years, he’s been helming the CKNW morning show with co-host Niki Reitmayer. McComb’s former The World Today co-host Philip Till made a surprise visit to the NW studios to mark the occasion.
The moment that Philip Till surprised @jonmccomb980 on his 35th anniversary at @CKNW
“Are you sure he’s not here anymore, Jon?” pic.twitter.com/FOISC9CMWY
— Niki Reitmayer (@Niki_Reitmayer) December 3, 2018
The CRTC won’t renew the licence for French-language community station CHOC-FM St-Rémi, Quebec, since it ceased operation in August after filing for bankruptcy. The commission is inviting interested parties to submit applications for new radio stations to serve the community.
The CRTC has denied an application from LS telcom Limited, on behalf of Aujourd’hui l’Espoir, for a new French-language Christian music radio station in Lachute, Quebec that would have used the same frequency as Indigenous community station CKHQ-FM Kanesatake. While the proposed station was committed to devoting 80 per cent of its broadcast week to local programming, it would not have offered news.
CKWR 98.5 FM Kitchener has had its broadcast licence renewed until 2020. The community station, which has a history of noncompliance, was under scrutiny for late implementation of the National Public Alerting System; insufficient Canadian content; and failure to submit annual returns from 2013 to 2017.
JAZZ.FM91 (CJRT-FM) Toronto is facing a third lawsuit. Glenn Knight has filed suit against the non-profit station, claiming damages of $25,000 for breach of contract; aggravated mental distress, and/or punitive damages. Knight worked at the station for six years, most recently in a term position as program director, which ended in August. The suit follows a $420,000 wrongful-dismissal claim by former morning host Garvia Bailey, in addition to separate legal action led by a group set on overhauling the board of the registered charity. SaveJazz.FM is asking the courts to help it obtain the email addresses of approximately 2,200 donor-members so it can lobby them to have new appointees elected to the JAZZ.FM board of directors.
The annual Tree of Hope/l’Arbre de l’espoir radiothon on CBC/Radio-Canada Moncton raised more than $1.8 million on Nov. 30. Funds raised this year will support the the Dr. Léon-Richard Oncology Centre, which receives over 60,000 patient visits each year; satellite units in Edmundston, Campbellton, Bathurst and Caraquet; and the Mgr. Henri-Cormier Lodge, where over 1,800 patients stay for free each year, in addition to cancer research and healthy lifestyle promotion.
Evanov Toronto stations Z103.5 (CIDC-FM), Jewel 88.5 (CKDX-FM), 103.9 Proud FM (CIRR-FM), and AM530 Multicultural Radio (CIAO-AM) have launched a campaign to Feed The GTA’s Hungry This Christmas. The stations will be gathering donations, packing food and delivering Christmas meals to the doorsteps of over 500 families in need.
C100 (CIOO-FM) Halifax’s annual Toy Drive will broadcast live Dec. 6-7 from local Cineplex locations, collecting new, unwrapped toys and financial donations in support of The Salvation Army. The C100 Toy Drive is a 20-year tradition.
The Coast, Halifax’s independent alt-weekly, has wrapped its podcasting experiment, releasing the 25th episode of its 25 For 25 podcast celebrating the publication’s 25th anniversary. The year-by-year audio archive delves into the stories that shaped Halifax over the past quarter-century, hosted by editors Jacob Boon and Tara Thorne. Their final guest is CTV Atlantic veteran anchor Steve Murphy who explores topics from the value of local news to whether or not he once took a helicopter to a family reunion.
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