Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

CRTC Unveils Proposal To Make TV Service Contracts More Consumer Friendly

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Mar, 2015 11:43 AM

    OTTAWA — Canada's broadcast regulator has released yet another proposal aimed at positioning consumers ahead of the country's broadcasters.

    The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission has offered up a draft code that would, if enacted, require cable and satellite companies to make customer contracts easier to understand.

    Broadcast service providers would also have to more clearly spell out fees and policies surrounding early contract cancellations and adding or removing individual channels.

    The proposal follows on other recent CRTC directives that prohibited 30-day cancellation policies and required cable and satellite services to offer individual channel selection on top of a trimmed-down, lower cost basic TV service.

    And it comes on the heels of a dispute that went public this week between the president of Bell Media and CRTC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais over the regulator's so-called "pick-and-pay" system.

    The proposed TV service code is the latest announcement to emerge from the CRTC's "Let's Talk TV" hearings held last fall.

    The regulator is accepting public comments on the draft code until May 25.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bill Gates to visit Ottawa next week to talk world development with Harper

    Bill Gates to visit Ottawa next week to talk world development with Harper
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates will visit Ottawa next week to discuss further collaboration on helping mothers and newborns around the world.

    Bill Gates to visit Ottawa next week to talk world development with Harper

    Finance Minister Says B.C. Budget A Good Deal For Taxpayers Despite Fee Hikes

    Finance Minister Says B.C. Budget A Good Deal For Taxpayers Despite Fee Hikes
    VICTORIA — Finance Minister Mike de Jong says he hasn't found a magic money tree to hand cash to British Columbians, but he came close to saying his latest balanced budget is the next best thing.

    Finance Minister Says B.C. Budget A Good Deal For Taxpayers Despite Fee Hikes

    Transgender Students Protest As Canadian Schools Grapple With Washroom Debate

    Transgender Students Protest As Canadian Schools Grapple With Washroom Debate
    The 20-year-old Simon Fraser University student, who identifies herself as trans feminine, goes out of her way to avoid multi-stall washrooms — even tolerating hours of discomfort to avoid the subtle but powerful harassment levelled against her.

    Transgender Students Protest As Canadian Schools Grapple With Washroom Debate

    Vanity Of Canine Variety Credited For B.C. Beagle Winning Best In Show

    Vanity Of Canine Variety Credited For B.C. Beagle Winning Best In Show
    ENDERBY, B.C. — Steak at a Manhattan celebrity haunt, invitations to bark on TV talk shows and a chance to rub noses with Donald Trump.

    Vanity Of Canine Variety Credited For B.C. Beagle Winning Best In Show

    Caterpillar Dealer Finning International To Cut Canadian Workforce By 500

    Caterpillar Dealer Finning International To Cut Canadian Workforce By 500
    VANCOUVER — Caterpillar dealership Finning International (TSX:FTT) says it will reduce its Canadian workforce by roughly nine per cent or about 500 people.

    Caterpillar Dealer Finning International To Cut Canadian Workforce By 500

    Jersey worn by old-time NHL great Eddie Shore goes up for auction

    Jersey worn by old-time NHL great Eddie Shore goes up for auction
    Scott Johnston was going to frame Eddie Shore's jersey and put it on his basement wall before he learned how valuable it was.

    Jersey worn by old-time NHL great Eddie Shore goes up for auction