Online surveillance bill setup costs estimated at $80M
Lawful access law's startup costs $20M a year for four years
CBC News
Posted: Feb 22, 2012 1:11 PM ET
Last Updated: Feb 24, 2012 12:11 PM ET
A bill to force internet service providers to collect customer information, known as the lawful access or online surveillance bill, will cost $80 million to implement, CBC News has learned. (Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)
Related
Related Stories
- Community reaction to online surveillance bill $80M setup costs
- How should Canadians pay for Bill C-30?
- Vic Toews' predecessor opposed extra power for police
- Who will pay for online surveillance?
- Online surveillance bill opens door for Big Brother
- Online surveillance bill to get early committee review
It's going to cost at least $80 million to implement the government's lawful access bill to force internet and telecommunications service providers to collect customer information in case police need it for an investigation, CBC News has learned.
C-30, a bill to update Canadian law when it comes to crimes committed online, will cost $20 million a year for the first four years and $6.7 million a year after that, Public Safety Canada told the CBC's Hannah Thibedeau on Wednesday.
A spokesperson for Public Safety Minister Vic Toews wouldn't provide any more information about the costs. It's not clear if those are the only costs associated with the legislation.
The bill, also known as the online surveillance bill, would force internet and telecommunications service providers to install equipment to collect information on customers in case police obtain a judicial warrant to retrieve it.
A spokesman for Canada's telecommunications industry said whatever the costs, it's up to the government to compensate the companies.
"We want to make sure the government is fully aware of all the costs and that they fully compensate all the costs," said Bernard Lord, president of the Canadian Wireless Telecommunications Association.
"We feel it's really [parliamentarians'] job to decide what should be in the bill and companies will comply. But we want to make sure that parliamentarians and government realize that if they adopt this bill, these costs are attached to it."
Lord says it's hard to know the full costs to the industry yet because service providers don't know what changes will be made to the bill and there are more details to work out through regulations if the bill becomes law.
But, "some of our members have told us this could be millions and tens of millions of dollars across the country to set up the equipment, [plus] the ongoing costs," he said. "So this is significant in terms of investments."
In an interview with Evan Solomon, host of CBC Radio's The House, Toews said he didn't know what it would cost the ISPs and didn't want to try to estimate how much they'd have to spend on implementing the bill.
"No, I don't know, and I think it would be best coming from the internet service providers. I wouldn’t want to presume what it would cost a smaller internet service provider or a larger one. Simply, I don’t know.
"This is required of internet service providers in Europe, in the United States. This is done as a matter of course."
Telecom industry 'not arms of the government'
"This is a government decision. These providers are not arms of the government and should not become arms of the government but if the government passes legislation forcing someone to provide information then that compensation has to be in place," Lord said.
The bill also updates Canadian law to force those service providers to turn over specific customer information to police without needing a warrant and eliminates the legal barriers to providing other information requested by police.
It says the government can compensate ISPs for responding to requests for information.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Canadian climber's body taken off Everest
- The body of a Toronto woman who died while descending from the summit of Mount Everest earlier this month has been taken by helicopter to her family in the Nepalese capital of Kathmandu. more »
- RCMP commissioner pledges to rid force of 'bad apples'
- The RCMP's disciplinary process is so bureaucratic and out of date that "bad apples" end up staying on the force long after they should be thrown out, RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson says in a remarkably frank open letter to Canadians. more »
- Ottawa set to shut down hearing on F-35 jet purchase
- The federal government appears set to shut down the only public investigation into Ottawa's fumbling of the F-35 fighter jet purchase. more »
- New Italian earthquake death toll rises to 10
- A magnitude 5.8 earthquake hit northern Italy on Tuesday, killing at least 10 people in the same region still struggling to recover from another fatal tremor on May 20. more »
Latest Canada News Headlines
- 'Engine shutdown' forced Air Canada jet to land
- A Japan-bound Air Canada Boeing 777 made an emergency landing at Toronto's Pearson airport on Monday, after one of its engines failed. more »
- B.C. police shooting video sparks calls for new probe
- Amateur video of the shooting of a mentally ill Vancouver man five years ago has prompted calls for B.C.'s police complaint commissioner and Crown prosecutors to take another look at the case. more »
- Effects of CP Rail strike could linger past legislated end
- After tabling back-to-work-legislation, Federal Labour Minister Lisa Raitt says she wants to see Canadian Pacific Railway trains moving again by Thursday — but experts say it could be quite a while before the company's rail service gets back to normal. more »
- Wacky weather mix across Canada
- Canadians expecting a lovely spring day are getting more than they bargained for in many parts of the country today as weather forecasts look more like the dog days of summer or, in some cases, a winter freeze. more »
The National
The Current
- The Hour Between Dog and Wolf: John Coates May. 28, 2012 4:04 PM A stock-market trader turned neuroscientist maps the biological origins of booms and busts.
- Evolution skeptics will soon be silenced by science: Richard Leakey
- 'Engine shutdown' forced Air Canada jet to land
- Richard Branson suggests naked kitesurfing to premier
- RCMP commissioner pledges to rid force of 'bad apples'
- Newly discovered malware most lethal cyberweapon to date
- Thunder Bay flooding causes state of emergency
- Man, woman shot dead in Burnaby restaurant
- 7 mutilated cats found in Vancouver suburb
- Syrian children were executed, UN says
