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CHTT-FM

CHTT-FM
CHTT KiSS103.1 logo.jpg
City Victoria, British Columbia
Branding KiSS 103.1
Slogan Victoria's #1 Hit Music Station
Frequency 103.1 MHz (FM)
First air date April 1, 1923
Format CHR
ERP 20,000 watts
HAAT 147.4 meters (484 ft)
Class B
Callsign meaning C HiT T
Former callsigns CFCL (1923-1925)
CFCT (1925-1941)
CJVI (1941-2000)
Owner Rogers Media
(Rogers Broacdcasting Ltd.)
Sister stations CIOC-FM
Webcast Listen Live
Website KiSS 103.1

CHTT-FM is a radio station in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, which airs at 103.1 FM. The station, owned by Rogers Communications, airs a CHR format, branded as KiSS 103.1.

CHTT began broadcasting on April 1, 1923 on the AM band as CFCL, airing on 410 meters (later on 910 kHz) with 500 watts of power, initially broadcasting a religious format under the ownership of the Centennial Methodist Church. In 1924, the CFCL studios relocated from the church to the Fletcher Brothers store on Douglas Street in downtown Victoria. CFCL dropped its religious programming in 1925 when George Deauville bought the station and acquired a new licence for it, changed its call letters to CFCT and moved its studios to the Bank of Toronto (now part of Toronto-Dominion Bank) building on Douglas Street.

CFCT moved around on the AM band several times during the next 16 years as it switched to 630 kHz in 1928, to 1430 (with a power reduction to 50 watts) in 1933, and then to 1450 in 1935. It increased power back to 500 watts in 1939 before settling at 1480 AM on March 29, 1941 (following the Havana Treaty). The Victoria Times-Colonist bought CFCT on October 1, 1941 and sold a half-interest in the station to Taylor, Pearson & Carson Ltd., with the two entities forming the Island Broadcasting Co. as CFCT's parent company and changing its calls to CJVI; it became a charter affiliate of CBC Radio's Dominion Network shortly after its formation in January 1944.

CJVI moved to 900 AM on May 15, 1945. Taylor, Pearson & Carson acquired majority ownership of CJVI in 1951, and its studios relocated to its present location at 817 Fort Street in downtown Victoria in 1952. CJVI increased its power to 5000 watts on July 28, 1954 at 2:26 PM to increase its coverage up Vancouver Island to north of Nanaimo, south to Seattle and east to the Lower Mainland as far as Chilliwack. Power was further increased to 10,000 watts in April 1957. Harold Carson, part of the Taylor, Pearson & Carson firm that owned CJVI, died in 1959, and his company became Selkirk Communications that year.


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