As of 2009, all radio stations in Halifax broadcast on the FM dial. Halifax's last AM radio station 780 CFDR moved to the FM dial at 92.9 MHz in the summer of 2009, becoming CFLT-FM. CFDR had previously been licensed to move to 88.9 FM, however the subsequent purchase of CKUL by parent company Newcap Broadcasting made this conversion impossible due to concentration of media ownership rules. Sale to Rogers Communications was approved by the CRTC on November 24, 2008, and the station has moved to FM 92.9 and started up August 7, 2009 at 12:00 pm AST.[1]
On July 29, 2016, CJCH-FM was rebranded to "Virgin Radio" marking the first ever entry into the Atlantic Canadian market for that branding.
Several specialty digital television channel licenses have also been developed in HRM in recent years by Salter Street Films. Cable services are provided by Eastlink. IPTV provided by Bell Aliant.
Print
Newspapers
The Chronicle Herald is a daily broadsheet and the provincial newspaper of Nova Scotia with news bureaus across the province. The paper is independently owned, and usually has a moderate conservative editorial policy. It is considered Nova Scotia's newspaper of record.[2]
StarMetro Halifax was the city's other daily paper, which was launched as a free handout by Transcontinental Media on February 14, 2008. It replaced The Daily News, a daily tabloid paper, focusing primarily on Halifax, which published from 1974 until February 11, 2008.[3] Transcontinental had purchased The Daily News in 2002, and closed the publication saying the paper operated at a loss.
A Maritimes gossip tabloid Frank Magazine was established in Halifax and subsequently expanded into central Canada; it has since retracted to focusing on the Maritimes. It ceased production in 2022. [5]
Wayves, an LGBT outlet, produced print magazines from 1983 to 2012, and now publishes solely online. YGA was a magazine published for LGBT youth.
Online
In addition to the significant online presence of all traditional Halifax news outlets, the city is home to several online newspapers.
AllNovaScotia is a daily news website founded by David Bentley with a focus on business and political news throughout the province.[6] It has a reputation for investigative journalism and had a newsroom staff of 18 in February 2016.[7] The subscription-based service operates behind a paywall and has nearly 10,000 subscribers. It is popular among those in the business community and in government.[8]
The Halifax Examiner is another subscription-supported local news website run by investigative journalist Tim Bousquet, former news editor of The Coast. The outlet is a self-described "independent, adversarial news site devoted to holding the powerful accountable".[9]
Haligonia.ca is a free website with a more blog-like format that focuses on light local news.[10]
The Halifax Media Co-op was founded in February 2009. It published "grassroots news" that often aimed to amplify underrepresented voices. The outlet went on "indefinite hiatus" from June 2016 due to a limited budget and the fact that some of their core volunteers had moved on to other work.[11]
Halifax ReTales is a free website that focuses on retail-related news in the Halifax Metro region. The website publishes weekly, and each "Weekly Recap" is split into 6 segments. These segments include "Coming" (includes retail businesses coming to the Halifax region), "Open" (includes recently open retail businesses to the Halifax region), "Closing" (includes retail businesses closing in the Halifax region), "Closed" (includes recently closed retail businesses in the Halifax region), "Updates" (includes updates to retail businesses coming/leaving the Halifax region) and "HodgePodge". The "HodgePodge" segment is written at the end of the weekly newsletter and usually features stories or reviews of retail businesses.[12]