Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

New regulations must balance consumer, broadcaster needs, says BCE

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 10 Sep, 2014 10:30 AM
  • New regulations must balance consumer, broadcaster needs, says BCE

Consumers will get less and pay more, and jobs will be lost, under proposals being debated this week to modernize television program delivery, the country's broadcast regulator has been told.

A throng of frustrated media executives warned of dire times ahead for Canada's TV world Wednesday as the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission held a third day of hearings on how Canadians get and pay for TV programming.

The CRTC has proposed new regulations that would, if enacted, bar TV stations from replacing U.S. advertising with Canadian spots on American shows.

The regulator has also proposed that consumers be allowed to pick the individual channels they want from cable and satellite service providers, over and above a price-capped, trimmed-down mandatory service that includes mainly local channels.

It has also opened the door to allowing TV stations to shut down transmitters, which would mean the end of free, over-the-air broadcasting of television signals.

That would do more harm than good, Bell Media president Kevin Crull told the hearing.

"Merely shutting down transmitters would actually make a dire situation even worse," said Crull.

Even if the CRTC accepted all of its proposals for reforming TV regulations, BCE may still have to shutter between seven and nine of its 30 local stations, the company's executive vice-president Mirko Bibic told the hearing.

Rather than banning simultaneous substitution of Canadian advertising over American programming, the regulator could help local TV survive by extending the practice to local broadcasters, said Bibic.

Stuart Garvie, an executive with media marketing company GroupM Canada, said the CRTC's proposed changes, if enacted, would hurt the economy.

"We believe that the proposals put forward will have serious negative impact on the media and marketing industries in Canada, leading to significant job losses," he said.

Barring Canadian TV broadcasters from airing Canadian advertising with shows from the United States would dramatically cut revenues, Garvie added.

The practice has frustrated Canadian viewers, particularly during major sporting events such as the Super Bowl, when they are unable to see the ads that American watchers see.

Hundreds of viewers have also complained to the CRTC that Canadian networks often cut off the final few minutes of the shows they broadcast by arbitrarily switching from American to Canadian programming, something BCE said is an issue that it needs to resolve.

BCE said it also had concerns about being forced to offer TV channels to consumers on an a la carte basis, although Bibic said his company supports a proposal to offer consumers individual channel choices on top of a so-called skinny basic package.

But he urged the commission to build flexibility into the regulations so service providers can tailor basic packages to the needs of their customers.

"There is no evidence of dissatisfaction with existing basic packages," he said.

"More intrusive unbundling regulation would actually limit competitive differentiation."

The CRTC proposal would see the cost of basic service capped at between $20 and $30 a month.

But it has stressed that the proposals up for debate this month are merely a guideline with no decisions made yet.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions

B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions
CRANBROOK, B.C. - Two leaders of an isolated religious commune in British Columbia have been charged for the second time with practising polygamy, more than two decades after allegations of multiple marriage, sexual abuse and cross-border child trafficking first attracted the attention of the outside world.

B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada
TORONTO - Canadian Heritage Minister Shelly Glover says politics has no place in the decisions on how best to use the 800 to 1,000 doses Canada has promised to donate.

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients
VANCOUVER - Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp. (TSX:TKM) is in discussions about making its experimental Ebola drug available to infected patients, but says there is no guarantee the treatment can be used to help quell the outbreak in West Africa.

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog
A Vancouver police officer used excessive and unnecessary force when he punched a driver three times during a traffic stop in 2012, said a ruling by B.C.'s police watchdog.

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog

Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto

Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto
A Calgary company is looking to boost the profile of the world's newest, and most controversial, currency with the launch of six more teller machines in Toronto that deal in the virtual currency Bitcoin.

Fleet of six new Bitcoin ATMs arrive in shopping centres across Toronto

White House talking to Canada, others about aiding Iraqi refugees

White House talking to Canada, others about aiding Iraqi refugees
The United States is considering a multinational mission to whisk displaced people to safety in Iraq and it appears there may be a supporting role for Canada.

White House talking to Canada, others about aiding Iraqi refugees