In October 1974, shortly after the Círio de Nazaré, Linomar Bahia received a phone call and informed Romulo that the society they had formed beat the competition.
On November 13, President Ernesto Geisel grants the channel to the Liberal Group, and the following day decree nº 74,879 is published in the Official Gazette of the Union.
Added to this, TV Guajará was also linked to one of his political opponents, senator Jarbas Passarinho, who was married to the cousin of the station's owner, Lopo de Castro.
A selection of cartoons was shown, and after a moment, presenters Vera Cascaes and Francisco César greeted viewers and informed them that the station was on air to test its equipment.
Reporters Ubiratan d'Aguiar and Joaquim Antunes interviewed the guests, and after Bastos concluded his text, speeches by Maiorana, Quandt and Aloysio Chaves followed.
Few Globo programs were shown via satellite at the time, which is why the broadcaster received packages coming by plane from Rio de Janeiro and passing through other affiliates before arriving in Belém.
Ossian Brito, programming director, was replaced by Fernando Nascimento, who had been hired by Maiorana to take care of Rádio Liberal, and had his functions extended to television, even without experience in the area.
The broadcaster arrived in the 1990s, establishing its position as an audience leader in Greater Belém, and promoting events of local interest that brought viewers and the broadcaster even closer together, such as the Copa Liberal de Futsal and the Intercollegial Volleyball Tournament, in addition to the Race do Círio, which had been promoted since 1983, and at the beginning of the following decade it had already become the biggest athletics event in the North of Brazil.
The project began in 1993, with the creation of TV Liberal Altamira, and over the course of the decade, 7 more stations were installed in the municipalities of Castanhal, Itaituba, Marabá, Parauapebas, Redenção, Tucuruí and Paragominas.
In February 2007, after assuming command of the state government, the new management of FUNTELPA suspended the agreement signed with TV Liberal for the use of the 78 retransmitters of Rede Cultura do Pará under the administration of governor Almir Gabriel in 1997, and also the monthly transfer that FUNTELPA made to the broadcaster for the maintenance of the retransmitters, which already totaled more than 37 million reais in around ten years,[3] ORM went to court with a request for compensation of R$3,400,000.00 due to maintenance carried out on the equipment between January and May 2007, however, the case was never judged.
[4] On April 1, 2015, Centrais Elétricas do Pará (CELPA) began to interrupt the energy supply of 15 companies belonging to Organizações Romulo Maiorana, due to delays in payments.