April 1, 2005
Cambridge Bay turns
on and tunes in
Just about everyone
listens as CFBI brings local radio to town
SARA
MINOGUE
CLICK
PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Station
Manager Caroline Robinson and her co-host Avalak Ehaloak have a laugh in the
CFBI studio in downtown Cambridge Bay. (PHOTOS BY SARA MINOGUE)
|
CAMBRIDGE BAY - It's Sunday
night at CFBI headquarters and Mathew Illassewicz is cuing up the next track
from his collection of alternative indie rock for his weekly radio show, Eclecticism.
The phone rings in the
makeshift studio in what used to be somebody's bedroom. A young fan is on the
other end, calling, like he did last week, to ask for a song by Nelly, a hip-hop
superstar. The request couldn't be further from Illassewicz's style and he doesn't
have it, but he's happy to have callers, and promises something good is coming
up next.
You hear it in the grocery
store, the gift shop, and office buildings all over town. After 15 years without
a local radio station, Cambridge Bay residents are showing massive support for
CFBI 97.7 FM.
The Cambridge Bay Communications
Society formed in 2001, and opened the radio station on August 20 of that year.
The hamlet donated space in a duplex, and offered $25,000 to buy equipment.
For two and a half years,
the station was run by volunteers, and funded mainly with bingos. Last June,
however, they got their first full-time staff member, thanks to wage subsidies
offered through a federal government program.
Colorful
graffiti covers the walls, cabinets and even the kitchen cupboards in the studio
building.
|
Thirty-year-old Caroline
Robinson is the station manager. She also hosts a show every day from 8:30 a.m.
to noon, manages seven volunteers who run their own shows, and comes up with
new ideas for the station.
"Before I started,
[the station] was on the air for four hours a day and for bingos," Robinson
says. "Now's we're on from 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m."
The station has a winning
formula - it's mainly upbeat music, chosen from the small catalogue of box set
CDs the station bought along with its start-up equipment. Hosts also make community
announcements, but only for groups or organizations that are members.
Individuals pay $10 a year
or $50 for a lifetime membership. Businesses or organizations pay $50 a year,
or $500 for a lifetime membership. And membership pays if you want to reach
an audience with your news.
The
Cambridge Bay hamlet donated space in this duplex for the studio, and a hang-out
lounge.
|
Robinson learned just how
big her audience is in December, after the tsunami struck in Southeast Asia.
She came into work immediately when she saw what happened, and started asking
for donations.
"I was only expecting
a thousand or two thousand dollars," Robinson says.
Instead, she raised $5,000
for the Red Cross.
The
station is on-air from 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m.
|
A recent survey confirms
that the station is a hit. Forty-six out of forty-seven people telephoned said
they listened to the station. If you count up all of the people in each of those
households, that's 290 at-home listeners, aged anywhere from five to 60.
The Northern Store plays
only CFBI. So does the Arctic Closet, a specialty gift and souvenir shop just
down the street. Offices all over town also tune in all day.
After Robinson's morning
show, Avalak Ehaloak takes over from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.. Tara Niptanatiak, 18,
hosts a dance music request show, "A Girl Thang," from 6 to 8 p.m.
Robinson also has several
projects in the works for new shows.
She's working with Rhonda
Vincent to put together a youth talk show, run by and for teenagers, aged 14
to 18. Tonight, they'll hold their first meeting at the youth centre, just behind
the CFBI building.
People
in town have donated cassettes and CDs to the station's music collection.
|
Some teenagers are already
interested in the station.
"After school we do
have kids come in to burn CDs or pick out music to play," Robinson says.
Elders will also find a
place at CFBI. Robinson has plans to record elders' stories and play them on
the air during her show.
"From the survey,
people want to hear Innuinaqtun on the radio," she says.
Only about two to five
per cent of people in Cambridge Bay are fluent in Innuinaqtun - "Our generation
just lost it," Ehaloak says, but several elders who do understand it tune
into the station. And both Robinson and Ehaloak want to preserve and promote
the language while they still can.
They have other goals too.
"I'd like to see it
open 24 hours," Robinson says. "I'd like to see more volunteers. I'd
like to see us get a full-time translator and eventually get a reporter."
The station also receives
funding from the department of culture, language, elders and youth.
TOP
|