Feds must examine Irving media empire: Fraser
Last Updated: Friday, October 12, 2007 | 4:51 PM AT
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
- Flyer distributor struggles to stay in business
- Rare search order used to seize documents from former Irving publisher
- Former publisher says Irving stifling his attempt to start a newspaper
- Newspaper group says don't regulate media ownership
- Canadian senators want investigation of media concentration
- Panel to examine Canadian media concentration
- AUDIO: Rare search order used to seize documents
- IN DEPTH: Media Ownership
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
The federal government needs to take a serious look at media concentration in New Brunswick, according to Senator Joan Fraser, co-author of a June 2006 report that raised questions about Irving media holdings.
Her comments come as Irving-owned Brunswick News Inc. takes a former publisher to court in the midst of his efforts to start a new newspaper.
"We didn't find anywhere else in the developed world a situation like the situation in New Brunswick," Fraser told CBC News on Friday. The senate report examined the state of all of Canada's news media.
All of the English daily newspapers in New Brunswick are owned by Irving and its other entities, as are all of the weekly publications, with the exception of the Sackville Tribune and the St. Croix Courier, and some radio stations.
Irving is also one of the largest employers in the province, with interests in the forestry, retail, construction, transportation and food sectors.
"The Irving interests are bigger in New Brunswick than the whole federal government is in the whole of Canada, if you see what I mean, proportionately," Fraser said.
The company's financial interests could mean Irving media may be less willing to pursue unpleasant truths about its other companies, Fraser said.
The current court battle between Brunswick News and the former Woodstock Bugle-Observer publisher William Kenneth Langdon could be an appropriate time to re-examine concentration, she said.
Langdon resigned from the newspaper in September, citing disillusionment with Brunswick News' management practices and orders from its vice-president, Victor Mlodecki, to drive competitors out of business.
In his resignation letter, now filed with the courts, Langdon informed Brunswick News of his intention to start the Carleton Free Press, which is expected to launch its first publication in November.
He also repeated allegations contained in a previously filed court document indicating the law suit is connected to Langdon's removal of confidential and proprietary documents before he resigned from his job and informed the company of his intentions to start a newspaper.
Brunswick News initially sought an injunction to stop Langdon from starting the newspaper but withdrew that request last week in a Saint John court.
Now Brunswick News is asking the court to issue an order preventing Langdon from approaching Bugle customers, advertisers and employees on behalf of his new paper and invoked a little-known court order to search and seize documents from his office, home and vehicle.
Mlodecki issued a statement on behalf of Brunswick News earlier this week saying that Irving welcomes competition in the newspaper business.
Brunswick News is owned by J.K. Irving, the Mlodecki statement said, and J.D. Irving Ltd. and Irving Oil Ltd. do not have any ownership interests in the company.
This is not the first time the Irving media empire has caught the attention of the senate.
Senator Keith Davy raised the issue in a report released in the 1970s.
In the 1980s, the Irvings also came under fire from the Kent Commission.
To encourage more competition and diversity of media voices, Fraser's report recommended financial aid for new publications, more licences for community radio and television stations and improved broadband services in rural areas.
New federal legislation should be tabled to give the government more clout in dealing with the situation in New Brunswick, she said.
Corrections and Clarifications
- Irving does not have shipbuilding interests in New Brunswick, as originally reported. Furthermore, William Kenneth Langdon did not say he got direct orders from vice-president Victor Mlodecki to drive competitors out of business. In fact, in documents filed with the court in Saint John, Langdon said he attended a meeting where Mlodecki said he was prepared to spend up to $1 million to put a competitor out of business. Oct. 15, 2007|11:15 a.m. ET
Share Tools
Latest New Brunswick News Headlines
- 'Unauthorized' pension change to be reversed
- Saint John's outgoing deputy mayor says an "unauthorized change" to the city's pension plan that would have benefitted the city's top earners if they retired early will be reversed. more »
- Fredericton invites citizens to weigh-in on new bylaw
- The City of Fredericton is inviting citizens to have their say on the municipality's new zoning bylaw. more »
- Workers' EI history to affect claim under new rules
- Human Resources Minister Diane Finley announced details this morning about the government's planned changes to employment insurance that would tighten the rules for Canadians collecting the benefit. more »
- 8 views on EI changes: 'political football' or 'eHarmony'?
- Human Resources Minister Diane Finley released more details of the government's plans for reforming employment insurance Thursday. Here's a sample of the reaction. more »
Top News Headlines
- Quebec faces mounting pressure amid student crisis
- The morning after nearly 700 people were arrested in protests in Montreal and Quebec City, Jean Charest announced he has replaced his top aide with his former right-hand man. more »
- Conservatives move again to have robocalls suits tossed
- The Conservative Party has filed a second motion to dismiss the robocalls lawsuits filed by the left-leaning Council of Canadians, calling council chairperson Maude Barlow a 'virulent critic' of Prime Minister Stephen Harper who has 'orchestrated' the litigation. more »
- Suspect arrested in decades old N.Y. missing boy case
- A man has been arrested in the 1979 disappearance of a six-year-old New York City boy, in the first arrest ever made in a case that helped give rise to the nation's missing-children movement. more »
- Double-lung recipient Hélène Campbell dances for joy
- The Ottawa woman who has become Canada's best-known advocate for organ donation was happy, smiling and in great spirits today as she described her new life less than two months after receiving a double-lung transplant. more »
- Man dies after assault at house party
- 'Unauthorized' pension change to be reversed
- Workers' EI history to affect claim under new rules
- 300 litres of heavy water spilled at Point Lepreau
- Saint John managers ‘duped’ council, says deputy mayor
- Scrap metal plant sparks noise complaints
- Moose on the loose shot in Fredericton
- Food safety course necessary, trainer says
- Plastic bag fees should be legislated, council says

