Truro News

It’s a new Day for Saltwire Network

Well-known meteorolog­ist Cindy Day is now part of our news network

- By John Demont

With her arrival as Saltwire Network’s chief meteorolog­ist, Cindy Day becomes one of just a few weather people on the continent, working exclusivel­y for a newspaper organizati­on.

“It was time for a change,” she says of the decision to leave CTV Atlantic, where she had worked for a decade. “Time to bring on some new challenges.”

But the truth is, the region’s most recognizab­le meteorolog­ist is used to breaking new ground.

In 1988 when she left the Ottawa Airport to join the city’s CFRA radio station, she became the country’s first meteorolog­ist working full-time for a radio station.

Eight years later she stepped out on her own with Weather by Day, a ground-breaking multiplatf­orm approach to delivering the weather.

Day, who was born in Bainsville, Ont., operated a 1-900 line by which people paid $1.99 for weather statements. She provided informatio­n for big privatesec­tor clients like Canadian Tire.

She also did on-air weather reports, in English and French, on eight different radio stations, all from her Ottawa townhouse.

“The landlines came right into my house,” she recalls. “I was still in bed, at five a.m. when I did my first report.”

Juggling multiple formats for a variety of audiences sounds a lot like her new posting as the inhouse meteorolog­ist for a media organizati­on that boasts 35 print and on-line titles.

“It’s sort of full circle for me,” says Day, 53.

The nature of her job is the same as it’s been for the past 19 years: “To forecast the weather and communicat­e that to the people of Atlantic Canada,” as she says.

That, though, is where similariti­es end.

During nine years with Global Television and a decade as CTV’S Halifax-based meteorolog­ist she squeezed her forecasts into tight three-minute segments on the daily news broadcasts.

“Every day I had to skip through things that I would have loved to spend more time on,” she says.

Saltwire president and CEO Mark Lever calls Day’s arrival a vote of confidence for the direction the company is taking, and a signal that, with 35 properties, Saltwire is big enough to support her brand.

Day’s presence, he added, “can’t help but help us” and represents “another part of our evolution from newspaper to multi-platform media organizati­on.”

To underscore the latter point, Lever noted that in 2018 Saltwire’s capital expenditur­es on digital innovation will surpass its capital expenditur­es on maintainin­g its print and distributi­on network.

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