Setting-up a radio station...
In Reykjavik, our nation has less 250,000 people (roughly 60% reside in & around Reykjavik). The setup and licensing costs would be prohibitive and we would not have a sufficient number of listeners in our community to establish a gothic / industrial / ebm radio station. In Iceland, it is a dream, but at least we have the internet to listen to gothic/industrial radio from abroad :)
In Vancouver, your population is 3,000,000+. Canadian laws, equipment availability, a larger audience, and licensing fees make it easier to set up a radio station. A) Vancouver has radio stations specific to various languistic & ethnic listeners or western musical genres, so a gothic / industrial / ebm / hardcore station should be viable. B) If you follow the CRTC application guidelines, the CRTC can grant you with a "public radio" (process takes several years) licence to transmit 50W (approx 3 to 5 kilometer radius) to 2500W (approx 10 to 20 kilometer radius). C) In the downtown area, you should be able to find a tall building where you can place your antenna for good coverage). D) You can buy used transmitter & amplification hardware on Ebay, find someone qualified to set it up and maintain it (speak to UBC campus radio). E) Keep the startup costs low by setting up a simple digital studio in a small secure commercial office, using a computer, good microphone, and high quality soundcard to start with. F) Gothic / industrial / ebm / hardcore music is not categorized as TOP 40 music, so it would comply with the CRTC "public radio licensing" guidelines ("public radio licensing" qualifications: must play >90% non-TOP40 music, check the regulations to be certain). G) While waiting approx 2 to 3 years for the CRTC to approve your broadcasting license, you can make the best of the time by fundraising locally as much as possible - you have a large number of DJs or musicians who can assist you with this. The BC Gothic Society may also want to be a motivating force to help maintain the momentum for this activity, or to be the owner of the radio station itself...
Vancouver is known internationally as being a major centre for gothic / industrial music, spawned many musical pioneers, and the Vancouver scene has been active for nearly three decades, so yor suggestion of a radio station seems like a logical next step.