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Chau

CHAU-DT
TVA 2012 logo.svg
Carleton-sur-Mer, Quebec
Canada
Branding CHAU TVA
Channels Digital: 5 (VHF)
Virtual: 5.1 ()
Translators see below
Affiliations TVA (secondary c. 1980-1983, primary 1983-present)
Owner Télé Inter-Rives
(CHAU-TV Communications Ltée)
First air date October 17, 1959
Call letters' meaning La baie des CHAleUrs
Former callsigns CHAU-TV (1959-2011)
Former channel number(s) 5 (Analog, 1959-2011)
Former affiliations Radio-Canada (1959–1983)
CBC Television (secondary, 1959–1968)
Transmitter power 9.85 kW
Height 482.8 m
Transmitter coordinates 48°8′8″N 66°6′58″W / 48.13556°N 66.11611°W / 48.13556; -66.11611
Website CHAU TVA

CHAU-DT is a French language television station affiliated with TVA in Carleton-sur-Mer, Quebec, Canada. It broadcasts an analogue signal on VHF channel 5 from a transmitter near Rue de la Montagne in Carleton-sur-Mer.

Owned by Télé Inter-Rives, its studios are located on Boulevard Perron/Route 132 in Carleton-sur-Mer. This station can also be seen on Rogers Cable channel 4 and digital channel 610.

The original owner of CHAU was Dr. Charles Houde of La Télévision de la Baie des Chaleurs, who put the station on the air for the first time on October 17, 1959. Initially, like all other Quebec private TV stations, CHAU was a dual CBC/SRC affiliate airing both English and French shows. For CHAU, the ratio of English to French programs was 7:13. The station entered Radio-Canada's microwave network on March 24, 1960, and became an all-French station in 1968 when Montreal's CBMT opened a rebroadcaster in Carleton. In 1978, it became one of the last Canadian stations to air local programming in colour.

In 1979, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) gave CHAU a mandate to extend TVA service to northern New Brunswick and the Gaspé as part of an effort to improve French-language television service in those areas. Accordingly, around 1980, CHAU began carrying TVA programming in off-hours. It became an exclusive TVA affiliate on December 18, 1983, when Radio-Canada opened a rebroadcaster of CBGAT in the Carleton area.


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