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City of licence Analog channel Digital channel Virtual channel Callsign Network Notes Boiestown: 7 CKLT-TV-2: CTV: Campbellton: 7 CKCD-TV: CTV: satellite of CKCW-DT Moncton: Chatham: 10 CKAM-TV: CTV satellite of CKCW-DT Moncton: Doaktown: 10 CKAM-TV-4: CTV: satellite of CKCW-DT Moncton: Edmundston: 42 42.1 CFTF-DT-1: V: satellite of CFTF-DT ...
Prior to the launch of the channel, New Brunswick legislative proceedings began broadcasting on television in 1988 via Fundy Cable Inc.'s community-access cable channel. The channel broadcast approximately two hours of taped coverage of the day's proceedings; while live broadcasting began in 1989.
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The 61st New Brunswick Legislative Assembly consists of the members elected in the 2024 New Brunswick general election. [1] The Liberals won a majority. [ 2 ] [ 3 ]
The station was launched on September 5, 1988, as CIHF-TV-2, owned by the Irving family's New Brunswick Broadcasting Company, which also owned CHSJ-TV, the CBC affiliate for all of New Brunswick. The station launched with three transmitters, namely those in Saint John, Fredericton, and Moncton. When MITV launched, the station took all prime ...
CHCO-TV (channel 26) is a community television station in Saint Andrews, New Brunswick, Canada, serving the Charlotte County area. [1] CHCO-TV's studios and transmitting antenna are located at the W. C. O'Neill Arena Complex on Reed Avenue in Saint Andrews. [2] The station also has production facilities in the village of Harvey, and in Grand Manan.
The eastern moose's range spans a broad swath of northeastern North America, which includes New Brunswick, Newfoundland and Labrador (while it is native to Labrador, it was introduced to Gander Bay, Newfoundland in 1878 and to Howley, NL in 1904), [2] Nova Scotia, Quebec, Eastern Ontario, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and northern New York.
New Brunswick, unlike most provinces, allows political party funding from non-residents. In January 2024, Liberal and Green leaders Holt and Coon both made a promise to forbid New Brunswick political party donations from out-of-province sources in response to Higgs going to Alberta and British Columbia on a fundraising trip for his party. [67]