February 1, 2002
Commercial radio comes
to Iqaluit
Evaz Group brings coffee
talk and top rock to the airwaves
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
A city councillors
weather anxieties give Terri Chegwyn hope for commercial radio in Iqaluit.
Kirt Ejesiak told council
during a Jan. 22 meeting that faulty weather detection equipment might be behind
recent unfulfilled blizzard warnings. Were his concerns newsworthy? Not really,
Chegwyn admits. Local media never ran it. Were his observations worthy of commentary
about the citys priorities? Absolutely, she said.
Chegwyn sees Raven Radio
CHIQ 99.9 FM as a blend of coffee shop-talk and top-40 rock music. "You
know when you sit in the driveway and continue to listen to a story to have
a good laugh? My hope is to entertain people to the point they want to listen
that badly," said station manager Chegwyn.
The station is owned by
Evaz Group which has travel, office supply and construction interests in Iqaluit
and Rankin Inlet. The companys unconventional leap into media has not
been done hastily, Chegwyn said. Its backed by years of feasibility studies
and market research.
"This is definitely
a departure [for Evaz]," she said
The stations application
to the CRTC in the final stage, and 99.9 FM is expected to hit the airwaves
this fall. The last hurdle is gathering public input, which the CRTC is expected
to solicit in the coming month.
Chegwyns vision includes
current affairs call-in shows, swap and shop spots, public service announcements,
weather warnings and a slot for volunteer DJs. Music will range from the Beach
Boys to Beck. Broadcast News, a syndicated news service, will air in the place
of top-of-the hour local newscasts. Two hours of Inuktitut programming will
be aired during the day. Pre-recorded music will air from midnight to 6 a.m.
Chegwyn and three staff
members will host shows, select music and sell ads.
After 14 years as travel
agent, Chewgyn is learning about hooking up live feeds and avoiding dead air.
She wants 99.9 FM to reflect the community. Even so, she makes no bones about
the bottom line: making money.
CBC Radio in Iqaluit is
publicly funded and does not rely on advertising revenue. So is 99.9 potential
competition for a station with thousands of dedicated listeners?
Patrick Nagle, CBC area
manager hesitated to comment until he knew more. "CBC co-exists with commercial
radio stations in lots of markets across the country, including Yellowknife
and Whitehorse. Until Im better acquainted with what exactly their proposing
to do, its hard for me to say anything. I can tell you we are curious,"
Nagle said.
Chegwyn seems confident
theres enough business to go around. "Were a growing city and
a commercial radio station is just another step in our growth," Chegwyn
said.
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