TFO
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provincewide Ontario | |
---|---|
City of license | Hawkesbury, Ontario |
Branding | TFO |
Channels | Analog: see below |
Owner | Government of Ontario (Ontario French-Language Educational Communications Authority) |
First air date | January 1, 1987 |
Call letters' meaning | CHaîne Langue Française |
Website | TFO (French) |
TFO is a Canadian French language educational and cultural public television station in the province of Ontario, with a focus on programming for children, and on documentaries and repertory films for adults. TFO also produces and distributes supporting content for the Web and mobile devices. It is the only French-language multimedia network in Canada that is headquartered outside of Quebec.
Formerly owned and operated by TVOntario, TFO became an independent agency of the provincial government of Ontario in 2007.
TFO is available on cable throughout Ontario, and all cable companies in the province are required to carry it. However, the network does also broadcast over the air in some communities in Eastern and Northern Ontario with significant Franco-Ontarian populations. TFO is also carried via satellite on Bell TV channel 137. It was also seen on Star Choice channel 763 until August 28, 2008, when the service dropped the station.[1]
Contents |
[edit] Mandate
TFO contributes to the civic and cultural enrichment of the Franco-Ontarian community by stimulating French life in Ontario and elsewhere with quality French-language educational and cultural media content and services.
[edit] History
In 1985, the Ontario Ministry of Municipal and Cultural Affairs, together with Communications Canada, approved the creation of an Ontario-based French-language educational television network. In 1986, the French-language network that had previously been part of TVOntario received its broadcast licence from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). On January 1, 1987, this network was officially launched under the name La Chaîne Française (primarily known on-air as La Chaîne). In 1995, La Chaîne was renamed TFO (short for Télé-Française d'Ontario). In October 1997, TFO began broadcasting its signal in a second province: New Brunswick.
Prior to the launch of La Chaîne, TVOntario broadcast French programming on Sundays from noon until sign-off. For the first several years of La Chaîne's operations, this continued and La Chaîne broadcast in English during the same time block, because La Chaîne was only available on cable and the government wanted to ensure that Franco-Ontarian viewers without cable still had access to a block of French-language programming. As transmitters were added in a number of French-speaking communities, the practice was eventually discontinued.
In addition to being carried throughout Ontario on cable and via over-the-air transmitters in some communities, in 1997 TFO began broadcasting in New Brunswick via select cable companies in that province. New Brunswick, with a large Francophone population and the only officially bilingual province in the country, was the first jurisdiction other than Ontario to begin receiving TFO. Consequently, all program announcements on TFO provide airtimes in both Eastern and Atlantic Time for viewers in both Ontario and New Brunswick. In 1998, the station began broadcasting nationally via both national satellite companies, Bell ExpressVu and Star Choice, now known as Bell TV and Shaw Direct, respectfully. In August 2008, Star Choice removed TFO from its lineup.[2] In 1999, TFO's parent company at the time, The Ontario Educational Communications Authority, applied to the CRTC for mandatory carriage of TFO in the province of Quebec, in addition to a carriage fee, which other over-the-air services do not receive. However, the CRTC denied its application in March 2000.[3] Since the stations' denial by the CRTC for mandatory carriage in Quebec, the station has since been added to cable and IPTV distributors lineups in that province. For example, Vidéotron, the province's largest cable television provider, added TFO to their lineup in September 2004.
As part of a restructuring of TVOntario announced by the McGuinty government on June 29, 2006,[4] TFO was taken over by a new, separate provincial Crown corporation, the Ontario French-Language Educational Communications Authority (Office des télécommunications éducatives de langue française de l’Ontario or OTÉLFO)[5] in 2007, with separate management and its own budget.[6]
Although the licence transfer was not officially approved by the CRTC until June 28, 2007, TFO nonetheless announced its autonomy from TVOntario effective April 1.[7]
[edit] TFO HD
On March 31, 2009, TFO launched an HD simulcast of TFO called TFO HD. TFO HD currently only broadcasts as a cable and satellite only feed and does not broadcast over-the-air.[citation needed]
[edit] Budget
GroupeMédia TFO is funded mainly by the Government of Ontario, through the Ministry of Education, with an annual budget of $31 million.[8]
[edit] Organization and Management
The members of the GroupeMédia TFO management team are as follows:
Glenn O’Farrell, President and Chief Executive Officer
Christiane Scher, Vice-President and Chief Operating Officer
Marie Masse, Managing Director, Web/TV Content
Pascal Arseneau, Managing Director, Marketing
Christine Larouche, Managing Director, TFO Education
Éric Minoli, Managing Director, Information and Technology Systems
Johanne Joly, Managing Director, Financial and Legal Services
[edit] Distribution
TFO is distributed by cable throughout Ontario as well as over the air in eastern and northern Ontario, where the province’s largest French-speaking communities are located. All cable distributors in Ontario are required to carry TFO.
Throughout Canada, TFO is carried by the Bell TV and Shaw Direct satellite services. In Quebec, TFO is distributed by Videotron’s cable service and by some 50 independent cable distributors. TFO is also distributed by cable in Manitoba and New Brunswick, since these provinces don't have the resources for a francophone educational network.
[edit] Web/TV Programming
GroupeMédia TFO broadcasts educational and cultural content for all of its audiences (children, youth, and adults). Programs that TFO produces include Mini TFO (for pre-school children), Mégallô (for children ages 9 to 12), Relief (a political, social, and cultural program aired live Monday through Thursday), and Ruby TFO, a Web/TV magazine for women. All TFO programs are supported by interactive Web sites that extend the reach of TFO’s products (the Web sites for children’s programs include educational games). TFO’s prime-time programming includes documentaries and dramatic series, along with unique French-language film programming, including feature-length art films and films from around the world.
[edit] Children's programming
A partial list of the children's programs includes:
- French versions of animated children’s series such as Arthur, Franklin (as Benjamin), Timothy Goes To School and The Magic School Bus.
- Bon appétit les enfants (the title means “Have a good meal, kids”) is a show about food and eating customs around the world.
- C’est pas sorcier (the title means “It’s not magic”) is a series about two children who travel the world to learn about science. Each show depicts simple activities and observations that enable children to learn about a major scientific theory.
- École est finie (L’) (the title means “School's Out”) shows what activities children around the world do after school, such as games, sports, chores, family activities, and individual activities.
- Coups de génies (the title means “Genius’ Ideas”) is about two students that have special superpowers that allow them to become scientific geniuses.
- Montre-moi ton école (the title means “Show me your school”) is a series that takes a world tour of different schools, with 26 children leading a tour of their local schools.
[edit] Documentary series
Documentary programs and series include:
- Sciences et nature (“Science and Nature”) is a documentary series that demystifies the world around us and presents new discoveries. Specific documentaries have featured topics such as wolves and bison.
- Sciences humaines (“Life sciences”) is a documentary series that looks at various aspects of human life and experience, such as laughter, pain, crying, sleep, breathing, death, etc.
[edit] Other programming
Other programs that have aired on TFO include:
[edit] TFO Education
TFO Education produces and distributes multimedia teaching resources in accordance with the curriculum documents of the Ontario Ministry of Education. Over 5 000 TFO multimedia teaching resources for kindergarten through Grade 12 are available for free to the schools of Ontario’s French-language boards and on a subscription basis to other schools.
GroupeMédia TFO also designs, produces, implements, and markets several web-based products that support the initiatives of the Ontario Ministry of Education.
[edit] TFO transmitters
All of the station's over-the-air transmitters have the call sign CHLF, followed by a number to denote their status as rebroadcasters. The network's first transmitter was added in Sudbury in 1989. The Sudbury transmitter is the network's most powerful, and is numbered as the primary transmitter, although the CRTC recognises the transmitter CHLF-2 in Hawkesbury as the primary station. This is presumably because this transmitter is located halfway between Montreal, Canada's primary francophone television market, and Ottawa, the national capital and also home to a large francophone population. However, the transmitter's signal is marginal at best in both of these cities.
Besides Sudbury, Hawkesbury, Temiskaming Shores and Pembroke, all other communities that receive TFO on the regular airwaves are isolated communities in Northern Ontario, many of which also receive the Ontario Parliament Network over the regular airwaves as well.
In addition to local cable services, TFO is available across Canada on Bell TV.
As part of the transfer of TFO to its own management, the former transmitters in Sultan, Oba and Jogues were taken out of service.[9]
[edit] References
- ^ canadian-tv.com: "SC removes TFO from channel lineup"
- ^ TFO n'est plus diffusé par Star Choice La Presse 2008-08-29 (French)
- ^ Decision CRTC 2000-72 CRTC 2000-03-01
- ^ TVOntario restructuring
- ^ TFO press release, April 23, 2007 (French)
- ^ "McGuinty Government Transforms TVOntario" (PDF). Ontario Ministry of Education. 2006-06-29. http://www.tvontario.org/pressrls/MinistryEd_Rel_Eng.pdf. Retrieved 2006-06-29.
- ^ TFO press release, March 23, 2007 (French)
- ^ http://www.fin.gov.on.ca/fr/budget/paccts/2011/11vol2afr.pdf
- ^ Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2007-208
[edit] External links
- TFO (French)
- Query the REC's Canadian station database for CHLF-TV (data for all TFO repeaters)
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