The station's format is designed to attract and cater to the adult audience aged 35+ in South Western Ontario and is actively rated in both the Hamilton and Kitchener/Waterloo markets. The station is powered by a strong signal, reaching much of the population of Southern and Southwestern Ontario, although the Greater Toronto Area soft adult contemporary market was targeted by co-owned CKDX-FM until the latter's flip to country music in 2023. CKPC-FM provides relevant news, traffic reports and regional advertising.[2]
The station is available on-line via streaming, on services such as Streema, Online Radio Box, Radio Canada Online and iHeartRadio.[3][4][5][6]
1933 - Cyrus Dolph begins to operate an AM radio station in Preston (Cambridge), purchased from Wallace Russ, after it had operated as an amateur radio station since 1923[7]
1934 - CKPC moves to 930 kHz on the AM dial, moving to 1380 kHz in 1935
1936 - Power increases to 100 watts; now in Brantford, it operates as Telephone City Broadcast Ltd.
1947 - CKPC applies for an FM licence
1949 - CKPC-FM begins broadcasting at 94.7 FM at 250 watts, simulcasting CKPC.
1951 - Florence Dolph Buchanan, among the first women in broadcasting (and the first woman in Canada to own/operate a radio station), takes full control of the station, now with a 1,000–watt signal, from her father Cyrus
1955 - CKPC-FM changes frequency to 92.1 MHz; slogan for both AM and FM stations is "The Established Voice of Industrial Ontario"[8]
1959 - Signal increases to 10,000 watts
1962 - CKPC-FM introduces some original programming, independent of CKPC (AM)
1971 - CKPC-FM becomes completely independent, with all original programming
1972 - Richard Buchanan purchases Telephone City Broadcast Ltd. from his mother
2008 - Richard Buchanan July 29 loses battle with cancer[10]
2009 - Telephone City Broadcast Limited is purchased by Evanov Communications[11]
2009 - Station name changed from FM 92.1 to The New 92; format moves from hot adult contemporary to adult contemporary[12]
2010 - Station rebrands as The Jewel or Jewel 92, playing "the best current hits, recent favourites, and timeless classics".[13]
2021 - In June, CKPC-FM dropped its Jewel 92 branding and rebranded the station as Lite 92 - "Southern Ontario's Lite Favorites", previously "Lite Favourites".
Logo
CKPC-FM logo used 2010-2021
CKPC-FM logo used 2022-Present
HD Radio
On November 18, 2019, CKPC-FM launched HD Radio multi-casting services. The HD1 sub-channel carries the same programming as the standard analog frequency. As of September 4, 2020, the HD2 sub-channel carries a simulcast of sister station CFWC-FM, the HD3 sub-channel carried a simulcast of CKPC (AM) until the station was closed in August 2023.
^"CKPC". Hammond Museum of Radio. Hammond Museum of Radio. 10 February 2014. Retrieved 26 February 2017. CKPC first went on the air in 1923 in the town of Preston when Mr. Wallace Russ and two of his radio "ham" friends, Tom Mead of and Charles Bonner of Galt were experimenting with a low-powered radio transmitter. Suddenly the phone rang. It was a neighbour reporting that he could hear the three men talking through his radio receiver. The experimenters were unaware that their voices were being transmitted on the broadcast band, and so CKPC hit the airwaves for the first time, in an unscheduled entrance.
^"CKPC Brantford". Broadcasting History. Bill Dulmage & Mike Tennant. February 2014. Archived from the original on August 21, 2019. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
^Ibbotson, Heather (30 July 2008). "CKPC radio stations sold". Simcoe Reformer. Simcoe, Ontario. Archived from the original on 27 February 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
^Media, Sun (10 July 2009). "CKPC radio stations sold". Simcoe Reformer. Simcoe, Ontario. Archived from the original on 27 February 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2017.