CKIN-FM


CKIN-FM, branded on-air as Radio CINA, is an FM commercial radio station which operates at 106.3 MHz in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Its studios are located on Avenue du Parc in Montreal, with its transmitter located atop Mount Royal. The station's multiethnic programming is primarily in Arabic, with evening blocks in Spanish, and hour-long blocks with other third languages including Assyrian, Berber, Cantonese, Italian, Hindi and Urdu.

History

On August 20, 2009, Canadian Hellenic Cable Radio Ltd. received Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission approval to operate a new multilingual specialty radio station at Montreal. The station would serve as a sister to CKDG-FM, and use a similar format; peak drive time programming was broadcast in French, and the station aired programming in Arabic, Armenian, Romanian, and Spanish among others throughout the day.
On May 20, 2015, Canadian Hellenic Cable Radio announced that they intend to sell CKIN-FM to Neeti P. Ray, who owns similarly-formatted stations CINA in Mississauga, Ontario, and CINA-FM in Windsor, Ontario. Ray previously sought licenses for a new station in Montreal twice, but was turned down in both instances. CHCR intended to use the sale to fund improvements to CKDG.
Following the closure of the acquisition, CKIN was rebranded as CINA Radio, and launched a revamped schedule with a larger focus on Arabic and Spanish-language programming. Arabic programming constitutes the majority of its schedule on weekdays and weekends, while Spanish-language programming is aired during the evening hours on weekdays. Hour-long blocks with programming in other languages are carried on weekend mornings to comply with the requirement that CKIN air programming in at least eight languages other than English and French.
The change resulted in a complaint to the CRTC by the owners of competing Arabic station CHOU, who demanded that the station be restricted in how much Arabic programming it can air in a broadcast week. CHOU complained that the shift contradicted Ray's stated plan for the station in his CRTC application, in which CKIN would maintain the existing mix of multicultural programming, but increase its production of local South Asian programming. CHOU stated that it would have filed an objection during the approval process had Ray mentioned the plan to switch primarily to Arabic programming in the application. Ray defended the complaints, pointing out that CKIN's license contained no such restriction on the exact mix of minority languages it must broadcast. He also stated that the changes were meant to improve the viability of the station, as the Arabian and Hispanic communities are among the largest ethnic groups in Montreal, and that its Arabic programming was aimed towards a younger audience than that of CHOU.
The CRTC dismissed the complaint on October 14, 2016, stating that CKIN-FM's license did not contain any requirement for the station to serve specific cultural groups, nor was such a condition imposed after the acquisition. The CRTC affirmed that the only specific requirement in the station's license was that it must broadcast programming targeting "a minimum of six different cultural groups in a minimum of eight distinct languages". Its license has since been renewed through August 31, 2024.