Analog CBC-TV fans eligible for free service
CBC News
Posted: Sep 13, 2012 2:14 PM AT
Last Updated: Sep 13, 2012 3:46 PM AT
There's a free solution for people who once received CBC-TV's over-the-air analog signal, which was shut down across the country on July 31.
"There is an excellent solution for the people who are affected by this and it's called the Local Television Satellite Solution. It's a program being offered by Shaw Direct," said Angus MacKinnon, director of communication services with CBC.
Shaw is providing satellite equipment and installation, plus a package of five local stations — all for free. It's part of an arrangement the company made with the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission when it acquired Global TV in 2011.
To qualify for the program, you have to prove you haven't been a cable or satellite customer in the past 90 days.
Myron Syms, who lives in Cheticamp, qualifies for the free satellite service — for years he's watched CBC-TV with his old rabbit ear setup.
"On Aug. 1, when I went to turn on Coronation Street for my wife on the TV, there was nothing there," he said.
Syms didn't want to pay for a satellite or cable package so he bought a digital translator box for his TV.
The trouble is there are no digital transmitter towers in Cape Breton, so those boxes don't work.
MacKinnon said the digital translator boxes may pick up other broadcasters, but not the CBC. He said about 1.7 per cent of Canadians are in Syms's situation.
The deadline to apply for Shaw's program is Nov. 30. The free service will only be available for the next five years.
After that time, people like Syms may have to start paying for their CBC-TV.
Share Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- More safety investigators urged after electrocution
- The head of the Nova Scotia Federation of Labour is renewing his call for specially trained safety investigators and prosecutors to deal with workplace safety after a 39-year-old worker was electrocuted on the job. more »
- Friends fundraising for boy with rare brain cancer
- Family and friends of a 20-month-old toddler from Eastern Passage are appealing for help to send the boy to Texas to treat a rare form of brain cancer. more »
- Children's mouths allegedly taped shut at N.S. school
- An assistant instructor at a school in Bedford, N.S., is under investigation by police after allegedly taping shut the mouths of several students. more »
- Judge scolds 'flabby, sad generation' for skipping jury duty
- The chief justice of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court is demanding to know why 95 people, or 40 per cent of prospective jurors, were not in court Tuesday for the start of a five-day trial. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Oklahoma residents begin to return home after deadly tornado
- Rescue workers raced to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of nine children.
more »
- Video forensics: How easy would it be to fake a Rob Ford video?
- Two media outlets reported last week that they had seen a cellphone video of Mayor Rob Ford allegedly smoking crack, a claim that has gone global. If a video does surface, how easy would it be to determine its authenticity? CBC News asked video forensic analyst David McKay. more »
- Tim Bosma memorial today in hall that hosted his wedding reception
- The widow of Tim Bosma, the Hamilton man killed after taking two strangers on a test drive in a truck he had listed for sale online, will say goodbye to her husband at a public memorial today in the same hall where they celebrated their marriage just three years ago. CBCNews.ca will livestream the event starting at 11 a.m. ET. more »
- Eritreans in Canada say consul still demands cash from them
- Evidence obtained by CBC News suggests Eritrea's top diplomat in Canada is again soliciting taxes from the Eritrean community despite a threat by Canada eight months ago not to renew his credentials if he kept at it. more »
- How the weather info that storm chasers use can keep you safe
- Radar imagery and a stream of weather information are readily available to the public when severe weather bears down. more »
- Children's mouths allegedly taped shut at N.S. school
- Judge scolds 'flabby, sad generation' for skipping jury duty
- Friends fundraising for boy with rare brain cancer
- Dartmouth man reports roofers not wearing safety gear
- Man electrocuted in Halifax industrial accident
- More safety investigators urged after electrocution
- Annapolis Valley apple orchard quarantined
- Sudden death of Digby man investigated
- Pink Shirt Day co-founder seeks Tory nomination

