At long last, Comcast customers in Chicago can put away their antennae to watch the Chicago Sports Network (CHSN).

After an eight-month carriage dispute that overshadowed the first year of the new channel, the two sides have reportedly agreed to a deal where CHSN will be available to Comcast subscribers for the first time on Xfinity’s Ultimate tier. Customers who want CHSN will have to pay an additional $20 a month by upgrading to the Ultimate tier.

The Chicago Sun-Times was the first to report the agreement. CHSN declined a request for comment.

Across the country, Comcast has pushed to move regional sports channels out of its basic cable packages, believing that doing so would lower cable bills for subscribers who did not watch them with regularity. Comcast had already done so with the FanDuel Sports Network channels (formerly Bally Sports) after a lengthy dispute, one made more difficult because of Diamond Sports Group’s bankruptcy proceedings.

Comcast has even booted its own RSNs in California—NBC Sports Bay Area and NBC Sports California—to the Ultimate tier.

The strategy has been a headache for RSN owners already challenged by declines in subscribers to cable and satellite services like Comcast. In the case of the YES Network, the cable home to the New York Yankees and Brooklyn Nets, the two sides have kicked the can down the road with several extensions of their current agreement.

Though it technically airs on broadcast TV, CHSN must make retransmission agreements with cable operators, satellite companies and similar video distributors to be carried on their systems. When it launched in October, CHSN had distribution agreements with DirecTV, AT&T U-Verse and Astound (formerly RCN).

Yet for Comcast subscribers who never had access to the channel in the first place, their options were to either switch to other cable providers or purchase a digital TV antenna to receive CHSN. The network also promoted its over-the-top streaming service, priced at $349.99 per year or $29.99 per month.

CHSN was formed to distribute Blackhawks, Bulls and White Sox games after those teams chose not to renew their deals with regional carrier NBC Sports Chicago last fall. CHSN is a joint venture between the three teams and Standard Media, a privately held company in Nashville that owns local television stations in Rhode Island, Nebraska, Missouri and Kentucky.

While White Sox fans have renewed access, the agreement came a bit too late for those following the Bulls’ late push for the playoffs. Despite a sub-.500 record, the Bulls secured the 10th seed of the NBA’s Play-In Tournament, losing to the Miami Heat. The Blackhawks were never in playoff contention despite a solid sophomore campaign from former No. 1 draft pick Connor Bedard.

However, CHSN’s arrival to Comcast was the start of a huge news day for White Sox fans. Justin Ishbia, who already co-owns a share of the team with his brother Mat, reached an agreement to buy control of the team from owner and CHSN founder Jerry Reinsdorf as early as 2029.

(This story has been updated after news of the White Sox control sale.)