Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

CRTC Launches New Code To Make Tv Service Bills Clearer For Customers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 10:57 AM
  • CRTC Launches New Code To Make Tv Service Bills Clearer For Customers
Canada's broadcast regulator has laid out details for a new industry code that cable and satellite companies will have to follow when they're billing customers.
 
The CRTC says the new rules will require TV providers to give customers clearer details about the duration of promotional offers and the customers' price once those discounts end.
 
Companies will also have to outline taxes and additional charges, such as those linked to TV services and fees for cancelling a contract early.
 
The final version of the code — to go into effect in September 2017 — follows the CRTC's "Let's Talk TV'' hearings held in late 2014 and a draft version of the code released last March.
 
Canadian TV providers are about to embark on a year of billing changes that could be confusing for consumers.
 
Starting in March, the CRTC will require providers to offer a basic package of channels for no more than $25 per month, and also give customers the option of buying individual channels or small bundles. By December, both a la carte channels and the bundles must be offered as an option.
 
 
The variety of new options will create bills that could be more detailed than ever.
 
Among the other new rules, Canadians with disabilities will have a 30-day trial period for their TV services.
 
CRTC spokeswoman Patricia Valladao said the test period will allow disabled people to ensure their digital set-top box and remote control have the functions that meet their needs and if closed captioning or described audio content is plentiful enough to be worth the cost of the service.
 
The individual only has to self-identify as a person with a disability and no proof is required, she added.
 
Some TV providers resisted the new rules during the consultation process and wanted them to be made voluntary, the CRTC said.
 
After considering that as an option, the regulator decided to make the code mandatory effective Sept. 1, 2017.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Police Issue Extraordinary Public Warning About Man Who Targeted Girls And Gave Them Drugs

Vancouver Police Issue Extraordinary Public Warning About Man Who Targeted Girls And Gave Them Drugs
Police say 55-year-old Christopher Watts has been convicted for manslaughter, sexual touching and sexual assault.

Vancouver Police Issue Extraordinary Public Warning About Man Who Targeted Girls And Gave Them Drugs

Six Charges Against Coquitlam Man, 34, After Police Seize Drugs, Weapons, Cash From Home

Six Charges Against Coquitlam Man, 34, After Police Seize Drugs, Weapons, Cash From Home
RCMP say charges against Jared Davidson include possession of stolen property and possession of a dangerous weapon.

Six Charges Against Coquitlam Man, 34, After Police Seize Drugs, Weapons, Cash From Home

2 Vancouver Island Residents Injured By Explosive Device Left In Driveway

2 Vancouver Island Residents Injured By Explosive Device Left In Driveway
Mounties say a package containing unknown contents has exploded on central Vancouver Island, injuring a man and a woman.

2 Vancouver Island Residents Injured By Explosive Device Left In Driveway

BC Hydro Completes Merritt To Coquitlam Transmission Line

VICTORIA — Energy Minister Bill Bennett says a new hydro transmission line from Merritt to Coquitlam, B.C., improves power distribution to the Lower Mainland and Vancouver Island.

BC Hydro Completes Merritt To Coquitlam Transmission Line

Body Of John Gallagher, Who Was Killed Fighting Islamic State In Syria, Returns Home

Body Of John Gallagher, Who Was Killed Fighting Islamic State In Syria, Returns Home
Throngs of people lined bridges along Highway 401 in southwestern Ontario on Friday to pay their respects as a motorcade carrying the body of a man who died fighting ISIL made its way from Toronto to Blenheim, Ont.

Body Of John Gallagher, Who Was Killed Fighting Islamic State In Syria, Returns Home

Therapy Dog Helps Young Witness Testify In Prince George, B.C., Trial

Therapy Dog Helps Young Witness Testify In Prince George, B.C., Trial
Max, a nine-year-old Yellow Lab, provided support to a nine-year-old girl as she testified at the trial earlier this month, marking the therapy dog's first time in B.C. Supreme Court.

Therapy Dog Helps Young Witness Testify In Prince George, B.C., Trial