45°15′27.1″N 75°47′03.2″W / 45.257528°N 75.784222°W / 45.257528; -75.784222 (CIWW's transmitter location)

CIWW
Currently silent
Programming
FormatNone
History
First air date
1922
Last air date
October 26, 2023
Former call signs
CKCO (1922-1949)
CKOY (1949-1985)
Former frequencies
400 m (1922-1925)
690 kHz (1925-1929)
840 kHz (1927)
890 kHz (1929-1933)
1010 kHz (1933-1941)
1310 kHz (1941-2023)

CIWW (1310 AM) is a silent commercial radio station in Ottawa, Ontario, formerly owned by Rogers Radio, a division of Rogers Sports & Media. It most recently simulcast a news/talk radio format branded as CityNews Ottawa, along with co-owned 101.1 CJET-FM.

The station broadcast at 50,000 watts, the maximum for Canadian AM stations. The transmitter site is on McKenna Casey Drive, near Strandherd Drive and Ontario Highway 416 in Nepean.[1] To protect other stations on 1310 AM, it used a directional antenna. By day it employed a two-tower array and at night a five-tower array. The nighttime signal was beamed mainly into Canada.[2]

History

CKCO and CKOY

CIWW was Ottawa's oldest station and one of the first in Canada. Dr. George Geldert launched the station in 1922. Its original call sign was CKCO. The use of the CKCO call letters was not related to CKCO-TV in Kitchener, which signed on decades later.

In its early years, CKCO changed frequencies a number of times, as most early AM radio stations in North America did. With the adoption of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA), the station moved to its current 1310 AM frequency in 1941. In 1945, CKCO became Ottawa's affiliate of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's Dominion Network until the network dissolved in 1962.

In 1949, the station was purchased by Southam, a newspaper and broadcasting company. The call letters changed to CKOY.

Logo as "Oldies 1310", c. 1992–2010

CIWW Oldies

In 1972, sister station CKBY-FM was launched. In 1978, after two failed attempts to sell the stations to Moffat Communications, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approved their sale to Maclean-Hunter.

The station adopted the call sign CIWW in 1985, switching to an Oldies format. The playlist was mostly music of the late 1950s to early 1970s. The name used over the air was W1310, followed by Sunny 1310. In 1992, the station changed to the branding of Oldies 1310.

All-News Radio

In 1994, the stations became part of Rogers Radio when Rogers acquired Maclean-Hunter.

First logo as 1310 News
Second and final logo as 1310 News

On October 12, 2010, the station announced it would be adopting an all-news format, to be branded 1310 News, taking effect the following Monday, October 18, at 6:00 a.m.[3] CIWW is the fourth Rogers station to adopt a 24-hour all-news format after CFTR Toronto, CKWX Vancouver, and CFFR Calgary. The company also owns four other stations that combine the all-news format (during morning and afternoon drive) with talk programming.

The final song played on the station in its oldies format, at 5:55 a.m. on October 18, 2010, was "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)", a song which rapidly recounts radio from the 1950s, '60s & '70s. This was followed at 5:58 a.m. by an announcement that the format change was taking effect.

Adding sports

Rogers announced on November 5, 2013 that CIWW would begin carrying Sportsnet Radio programing from Toronto sister station CJCL for the bulk of its schedule. The station continues its all-news format during drive time hours. It also introduced a local late-morning general-interest talk show, Talk to the Hand, hosted by Ed Hand. The move was concurrent with layoffs at Rogers.[4][5]

On November 24, 2014, 1310 News made a slight change to their schedule, which included morning news beginning a half-hour earlier at 5:00 am, Talk to the Hand was renamed to The Ed Hand Show and began airing for three hours, from 10 – 1 pm. Afternoon news, hosted by Mark Day (actor) and Lisa Best, now began and ended an hour earlier, starting at 2 pm and ending at 7 pm. Prime Time Sports ran in the evening.

Adding more talk

On March 18, 2016, 1310NEWS named Mark Sutcliffe, a longtime Ottawa broadcaster and future mayor, as host of Ottawa Today, airing weekdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. It is repeated every weekend from 8 a.m.

On May 10, 2016, it was announced that former CTV Ottawa news anchor Carol Anne Meehan would be hosting The Carol Anne Meehan Show, which aired from 1 to 3 p.m. The show was later replaced by The Rick Gibbons Show in November 27, 2017.

On September 16, 2016, afternoon newscasts started beginning at 3 p.m.

FM Simulcast

logo after AM/FM simulcast

On December 3, 2020, at 10:00 a.m., CIWW rebranded itself as CityNews, and began simulcasting on sister station CJET-FM (101.1) while continuing to broadcast on 1310.[6]

The simulcast allowed listeners to hear the station on FM if they prefer. The FM signal was strongest to the south and west of Ottawa, while the AM signal continued to cover Ottawa's eastern suburbs that may not have picked up the FM station.

Closure and License Revocation

On October 26, 2023, Rogers discontinued the news/talk format on both CIWW and CJET-FM at 1:00 p.m., with CJET returning to a country music format. [7] CIWW 1310 was shutdown after more than 100 years. [8]

On November 28, 2023, the CRTC announced that it had revoked Rogers Media's broadcasting license for CIWW, at the media company's request. [9]

Former Programming

As CityNews, local all-news blocks were heard from 5 to 6 AM weekday mornings, and also during All News Afternoons drive times. The station's morning show, Wake Up With Rob Snow, featured talk programming from 6 to 9 AM hosted by Rob Snow and produced by David Smith and Noah Wachter. In mid-days, two local talk shows aired: The Talkback Hour with David Smith in late mornings and The Sam Laprade Show in early afternoons. The Sam Laprade Show was rebroadcast during evenings. Overnights featured syndicated sports content from CBS Sports shared with CFTR Toronto and CKWX Vancouver.

On weekends, all-news blocks were heard in the mornings and overnights, with Best Of talk show segments airing in the afternoons and CBS Sports Radio in the evenings. ABC News Radio supplies reports on world and U.S. news. Toronto Blue Jays baseball games are carried. The Blue Jays, CIWW and CKBY-FM were co-owned by Rogers Communications.[10]

Former broadcasters

References

  1. FCCdata.org/CIWW
  2. "CIWW-AM 1310 kHz - Ottawa, ON". radio-locator.com. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
  3. Tony Lofaro (2010-10-12). "No more Oldies 1310 as station switches to all-news format". ottawacitizen.com. Archived from the original on 2010-10-16. Retrieved 2010-10-12.
  4. Pilieci, Vito (November 5, 2013). "Ottawa's 1310 News revamps programming in wake of Rogers layoffs". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved November 6, 2013.
  5. Black, Alex (November 6, 2013). "Veteran broadcaster Ed Hand tackles local issues on 'Talk to the Hand'". 1310News. Retrieved November 6, 2013.
  6. "1310 NEWS becomes CityNews, serving Ottawa and the Valley". CityNews Ottawa. Retrieved 2020-12-03.
  7. Thiessen, Connie (October 26, 2023). "Rogers Sports & Media shuttering CityNews Ottawa radio operations". Broadcast Dialogue. Retrieved October 26, 2023.
  8. CIWW - AM 1310 KHz Ottawa - FINAL Sign Off Oct. 27th 2023 9am EDT
  9. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2023-392, CIWW Ottawa – Revocation of licence, CRTC, November 28, 2023
  10. "Blue Jays Radio Network".
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