The decade-long battle to bring French radio to Jasper is finally over.
The Jasper chapter of the Association Canadienne-Fran癟aise de lAlberta (ACFA) recently learned Radio-Canada, CBC Radio Ones French counterpart, will begin broadcasting in Jasper on July 1, 2017.
It may still be a year away, but if all goes according to plan it will be the first time French radio will be broadcast in the Canadian Rockies.
This thing has been ongoing for a number of years, but the French community in Jasper has been exceptionally patient and didnt get discouraged, said Pierre Gu矇rin, Radio-Canadas regional manager for Western Canada.
They kept the request alive and now its finally coming through.
To make it happen, CBC recently filed three applications to the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to install three new transmission towers. The first tower will be installed in Jasper, followed by Banff and Lake Louise.
There is all this technical work that has to happensurveys, the equipment, installation and testing. So it is a lengthy process, said Gu矇rin.
At this point, Gu矇rin is unsure where the radio transmitters will be installed, but said if there are already CBC transmitters set uplike in Jasperthen Radio-Canada may be able to piggyback off those transmitters.
The push to get French radio in Jasper started nearly two decades ago, but only gained traction in 2007, after Jaspers ACFA collected 300 names on a petition demanding access to the station.
During that time the AFCA and cole Desrochers were doing a lot of interviews with Radio-Canada, but we were unable to hear the interviews so it was a bit of a paradox, said Jaspers ACFA regional director Genevi癡ve Arcand. So thats why we did the petition.
Despite the associations best efforts, Arcand said the petition fell on deaf ears.
The association was told by the broadcasting company at the time that setting up transmitters in Jasper was not one of the companys priorities and would likely not become a priority in the future.
Instead the ACFA was told it had other options if Jaspers Francophone community really wanted to listen to Radio-Canada.
They said we could go online and listen to things two hours later or we could listen to it on Sirius Radio, but if you listen to Sirius then all you get is the Quebec channelso were here in Alberta but were hearing all about some traffic jam in Montreal, Arcand said.
The new transmitters will broadcast Radio-Canadas Alberta programming.
When youre living anywhere else you take the radio for grantedits there and you can listen to it if you want, but when you are here you just dont have that option, Arcand said.
What was most frustrating for the association, said Arcand, is that there are already CBC transmitters in Jasper that provide English programming.
Were not sure on the details that go into broadcasting a radio station, but for us it was just hard to understand why they could have the English channel but not the French, Arcand said.
Looking for more help, the ACFA contacted the Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages in 2009. The office told the association it had good grounds to file legal complaints against Radio-Canada for violating articles 24 and 41 of Canadas Official Languages Act.
Jaspers ACFA also started working with the ACFA in Edmonton to help push the issue further.
However, somewhere between switching staff, moving offices and working on numerous other projects, Jaspers ACFA lost its steam.
At some point we were just disappointed by the amount of energy we had to be putting into this, Arcand said. And then one month ago we got this news and we dont know why they changed their mind.
Gu矇rin partially attributed the lack of French programming in the region to $115-million worth of cuts the company faced in 2012 under the former Conservative government.
There are a number of requests we receive and we have a series of criteria we use to analyze them, but in a situation where we were looking at budget cuts...then all of a sudden those requests cant be a top priority, Gu矇rin said.
Earlier this year, the Liberal government committed $225-million over the next two years to CBC/Radio-Canada to help reverse those previous cuts.
It opens up the opportunity to look at those requests again and see what we are able to do with them, Gu矇rin said. When we look at the number of French people who live and travel through Jasper, Banff and Lake Louise then it makes perfect sense to finally set up transmitters in all three areas.
We are super happy that this is finally happening, Arcand said. But at the same time its disappointing we had to fight for something so basic.