Knowledge Network
| Name | Knowledge Network |
| Logo | |
| Logo Caption | Logo used since 2012 |
| Picture Format | 1080i HDTV (downscaled to 480i for the SDTV feed) |
| Language | English Audio described |
| Owner | Knowledge Network Corporation |
| Parent | Government of British Columbia |
| Country | Canada |
| Area | British Columbia |
| Headquarters | Vancouver, British Columbia |
| Website | https://www.knowledge.ca |
Knowledge Network, also branded as British Columbia's Knowledge Network and K:, is a Canadian publicly funded educational cable television network serving the province of British Columbia in the city of Vancouver. It is owned by the Knowledge Network Corporation, a Crown corporation of the Government of British Columbia, and began broadcasting on January 12, 1981. Michelle van Beusekom is the CEO.
Knowledge Network's broadcast licence is for satellite-to-cable programming. The network is available on the Bell Satellite TV satellite service, on channel 268, on Shaw Direct channel 354, and on TELUS Optik TV channel 117 (HD) and 9117 (SD). It has also been broadcast over-the-air in remote locations throughout British Columbia, with these repeater sites being operated by local volunteers in the few areas of the province where cable television is not available. The network used the call sign CKNO, although the transmitters were assigned numeric callsigns with the prefix "CH" due to being low-powered.
Knowledge receives funding both from the British Columbia government and from private donations. The station provides programming through its broadcast channel, websites and apps. Knowledge Network also invests in documentaries and children's programs produced by independent filmmakers and helps to develop skills within the independent production community.
Overview
Knowledge Network is British Columbia's public educational broadcaster and is required to be distributed on the basic cable tiers of all cable providers in British Columbia.
When Knowledge first signed on in 1981, its broadcast schedule originally ran from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. In later years, it broadcast from 7 a.m. to midnight. until July 2007, when programming hours were expanded to 6 a.m.–1 a.m. In late 2007, Knowledge Network began changing its logo from the green tree to its new wordmark logo, and as of June 2008 the green tree logo has been removed. The channel is currently a 24-hour broadcaster.
The network obtains an average of 1.5 million viewers, or over one-third of British Columbians per week. Currently, within the province, the station holds the number one position on weekday mornings for kids age two to six. Also, it has experienced an increase in viewers age 29 to 49 for its prime time programs.
In its programming, Knowledge Network covers a range of topics including politics, history and culture, arts and music, health, parenting, and science. It has a children's block, Knowledge Kids, that features characters Luna, Chip and Inkie.
With funding from the provincial government and over 40,000 individual donors, Knowledge Network acquires and commissions over 750 hours of original programming per year.
In 2011, Knowledge Network acquired Shaw Media's stake in the children's television service BBC Kids, and converted it into a commercial-free service.
Knowledge Network launched an HD feed on September 25, 2013. It became available to provincial customers of Shaw Cable and Shaw Direct on October 8, 2013.
Controversy
In February 2022, an internal audit of the Knowledge Network Corporation, conducted by the Castlemain Group, was released to the public. The audit revealed that under former President and CEO Rudy Buttignol's leadership, 98.3% of the Knowledge Network's $2.054 million pre-licence funding was awarded to production companies with "non-diverse" owners. The remaining 1.7% ($34,000) had been awarded to production companies owned by people of colour. Meanwhile, Indigenous filmmakers have received none of that funding.
The Racial Equity Screen Office, the Vancouver Asian Film Festival and the Documentary Organization of Canada had lobbied the broadcaster for more than a year to conduct the audit and release the results.
In response, Melanie Mark, British Columbia's minister of Culture, appointed three new members to the Network's board. In a statement she directed Buttignol and the board to make improvements. Buttignol meanwhile claimed he had "major reservations" with the audit.
Members of the IBPOC film community claimed that Buttignol's response "contributed to an increased distrust and lack of confidence from filmmakers of colour and other concerned British Columbians". A petition on Change.org was started calling for his replacement.
On June 17, 2022, the Knowledge Network's board released a statement that Buttignol's contract had been terminated.
Logos
See also
- List of programs broadcast by Knowledge Network
- PBS Appalachia Virginia, an educational broadcaster which uses a similar arrangement
- Citytv Saskatchewan, a partial educational broadcaster which uses a similar arrangement
References
- Knowledge.ca, www.knowledge.ca, en, March 2, 2018, March 3, 2018, live
- Michelle van Beusekom named new CEO of B.C.'s Knowledge Network, April 18, 2023, April 18, 2023, live
- Call for licence renewal applications, Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, (CRTC), crtc.gc.ca, November 17, 2018, November 16, 2018, live
- ARCHIVED - Decision CRTC 94-444, Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, (CRTC), crtc.gc.ca, November 17, 2018, November 17, 2018, live
- BRITISH COLUMBIA – TV Reception By Location, March 27, 2014, dead
- Knowledge Partners, dead, March 2, 2018, March 3, 2018
- Knowledge.ca, www.knowledge.ca, en, March 2, 2018, March 3, 2018, live
- dead, January 19, 2013, TV network rebrands and alters programming, September 17, 2008, October 29, 2009, Vancouver Sun
- About Us, kkadmin, November 4, 2015, Knowledge Kids, November 17, 2018, November 17, 2018, live
- BBC Worldwide and Knowledge Network Corporation Enter Joint-venture for BBC Kids Channel, January 17, 2011, Knowledge Network Corporation, May 22, 2012, dead, April 22, 2012
- Annual Report 2011–2012, Knowledge Network Corporation, October 20, 2012, dead, October 21, 2012
- K: HD starts Sept. 25. Will Shaw carry it?, Shaw Communications, September 23, 2013, September 28, 2013, live
- BC Knowledge Network Prelicenses 2014-2021 Independent Equity Audit Report, www.knowledge.ca, Knowledge Network Corporation, June 19, 2022, May 24, 2022, live
- Griffiths, Nathan, Audit shows deep racial inequities at B.C.'s Knowledge Network, June 19, 2022, Vancouver Sun, February 9, 2022, February 10, 2022, live
- Britten, Liam, Audit finds 'clear disparity' in Knowledge Network funding for filmmakers of colour, June 19, 2022, CBC, February 9, 2022, June 19, 2022, live
- Joella Cabalu, Kris Anderson, and Meghna Haldar: Sound of silence, June 19, 2022, The Georgia Straight, April 1, 2022, June 19, 2022, live
- A Message From The Board – June 17, 2022, www.knowledge.ca, Knowledge Network Corporation, June 19, 2022, June 20, 2022, live
- Schmunk, Rhianna, Knowledge Network drops longtime CEO, months after diversity audit, June 19, 2022, CBC, June 17, 2022, June 19, 2022, live
External links
- "Knowledge Network’s CEO weighs in on the importance of public broadcasting."
- Global Civic Policy Society
- Westland – A television series on environmental issues aired on the Knowledge Network from 1984 to 2007 - UBC Library Digital Collections
Category:Mass media in Vancouver
Category:Educational television networks in Canada
Category:Public television in Canada
Category:Television channels and stations established in 1981
Category:Television stations in British Columbia
Category:Crown corporations of British Columbia
Category:1981 establishments in British Columbia
Category:Education government agencies of Canada