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City | Bellingham, Washington |
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Branding |
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Programming | |
Affiliations |
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Ownership | |
Owner |
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KFFV | |
History | |
First air date | June 3, 1953 |
Former channel number(s) |
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Call sign meaning | Kessler's Voice of Seattle (from former sister radio station) |
Technical information[1] | |
Licensing authority | FCC |
Facility ID | 35862 |
ERP | 535 kW |
HAAT | 799 m (2,621 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 48°40′49.4″N 122°50′26.4″W / 48.680389°N 122.840667°W |
Links | |
Public license information | |
Website | www |
KVOS-TV (channel 12) is a television station in Bellingham, Washington, United States, serving the Seattle–Tacoma market as an affiliate of the Spanish-language network Univision. It is owned by Weigel Broadcasting alongside Seattle-licensed MeTV owned-and-operated station KFFV, channel 44 (which KVOS simulcasts on its third digital subchannel). Its other subchannels carry Weigel's other diginet concepts. Though it now functions as a conventional Seattle-market station, for much of its history it primarily served an audience in southwestern British Columbia, Canada, including Vancouver and Victoria.
KVOS-TV's transmitter is situated atop Mount Constitution on Orcas Island in the San Juan Islands, at an altitude of 2,621 feet (799 m) above the adjacent terrain. The station's signal is very well received throughout the British Columbia Lower Mainland, southern Vancouver Island, and much of northwest Washington. KVOS-TV original studios were located on Ellis Street in Bellingham. However, with the sale of KVOS-TV to OTA Broadcasting in 2010, the Bellingham facility was closed and the station currently shares studios with KFFV on Third Avenue South in Seattle.[2] KVOS-TV previously maintained offices in Burnaby, British Columbia; before that, its Vancouver offices were located on West 7th Avenue;[3] it now has no physical presence in the Vancouver area.
As KVOS serves both sides of the border, at one time the station decided to use both Canadian and American TV ratings at the start of each program, after they were established during the late 1990s— it was the only station on either side of the border to do so. Since early 2007, only U.S. ratings have been shown.[4]