Oaxaca Radio and Television Corporation | |
Native Name: | Spanish; Castilian: Corporación Oaxaqueña de Radio y Televisión |
Chief1 Name: | Alejandro Leyva Aguilar |
Chief1 Position: | Director |
The Corporación Oaxaqueña de Radio y Televisión (CORTV, "Oaxacan Radio and Television Corporation") is a government agency of the Mexican state of Oaxaca charged with the operation of radio and television stations in the state.
CORTV operates a television network of the same name, with 16 transmitters, and it owns a 32-station FM radio network with an additional station in Oaxaca. The television network has shed 30 transmitters in recent years and also dropped six additional transmitters by failing to convert them to digital.
Public broadcasting in Oaxaca began in the early 1980s under Governor Pedro Vásquez Colmenares, with the insertion of local opt-outs into the programming of the Canal 7 network of Imevisión. Original output consisted entirely of plays staged for television by the Compañía Teatral Palo Bravo, as the state lacked production resources. In 1988, the Instituto Oaxaqueño de Radio y Televisión (IORTV) was established.
On March 21, 1989, under the direction of Virgilio Caballero Pedraza, IORTV was reorganized as Radio y Televisión de Oaxaca (RTO). It adopted its present name in 1993.[1]
The CORTV facilities were seized on August 1, 2006, during protests in the state after CORTV officials refused a women's group air time to make social demands.[2] The takeover was ended on August 20 when the transmitters on Cerro del Fortín were shot at, damaging them and taking CORTV radio and television off the air.[3]
In 2022, its concessions for television service were consolidated into one: XHCPBR-TDT (primary RF channel 36), which can have transmitters throughout the state. However, the existing transmitters were not moved to channel 36.
CORTV moved from virtual channel 9 to 19 in January 2024.[4]
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In March 2018, in order to facilitate the repacking of TV services out of the 600 MHz band (channels 38-51), the transmitters for Juchitán de Zaragoza and Pinotepa Nacional were assigned new channels for continued digital operations.
Note that XHOAX-FM "Global 96.9" broadcasts different programming from the other 32 stations in the network. XHCRR on Cerro Corral de Piedra is receivable in the city of Oaxaca.
The CORTV transmitters serving Oaxaca (XHOAX and XHCRR) broadcast in HD Radio.
Callsign | Frequency | City | ERP | |
---|---|---|---|---|
XHCHT-FM | 90.1 | .245 kW | ||
XHHPL-FM | 91.9 | 3 kW | ||
XHUAU-FM | 97.3 | 3 kW | ||
XHLAB-FM | 100.9 | Lagunas/Barrio de la Soledad (Palma Sola) | 20 kW | |
XHMAJ-FM | 100.9 | 3 kW | ||
XHMPD-FM | 90.9 | .6 kW | ||
XHCMA-FM | 91.5 | .245 kW | ||
XHOAX-FM | 96.9 | 18 kW | ||
XHPLH-FM | 91.7 | 3 kW | ||
XHPES-FM | 105.9 | .5 kW | ||
XHPUV-FM | 92.1 | 3 kW | ||
XHSLC-FM | 92.9 | .5 kW | ||
XHSFJ-FM | 103.9 | .245 kW | ||
XHJBC-FM | 89.3 | .245 kW | ||
XHSBC-FM | 88.9 | .245 kW | ||
XHJBT-FM | 102.7 | .245 kW | ||
XHSJB-FM | 95.3 | 3 kW | ||
XHSPH-FM | 96.7 | .245 kW | ||
XHPED-FM | 107.9 | .245 kW | ||
XHSAJ-FM | 99.3 | 3 kW | ||
XHSMJ-FM | 89.7 | .245 kW | ||
XHSMT-FM | 99.5 | .245 kW | ||
XHSTH-FM | 94.5 | 3 kW | ||
XHSTC-FM | 107.5 | .245 kW | ||
XHSJO-FM | 101.1 | .245 kW | ||
XHSPN-FM | 97.3 | 3 kW | ||
XHCRR-FM | 92.9 | 3 kW | ||
XHTFO-FM | 94.3 | .245 kW | ||
XHPEP-FM | 104.1 | 3 kW | ||
XHTLJ-FM | 88.9 | 3 kW | ||
XHVTM-FM | 102.5 | 3 kW | ||
XHVSE-FM | 93.3 | .380 kW[5] | ||
XHRIG-FM | 107.9 | .245 kW |