Consumers wooed over fee-for-carriage issue
Last Updated: Monday, September 14, 2009 | 5:10 PM ET
CBC News
This fall's battle over fee-for-carriage — a fee that cable and satellite companies would pay to broadcasters to carry their signals — has begun.
The major conventional broadcasters, including CBC-TV, have created a new alliance to gain public support for fees to underwrite the cost of local programming.
CTV, Global, CBC and the A channels, all networks that provide over-the-air broadcasting, are forming Local TV Matters, which will back their individual efforts to set up a system that will see cable and satellite firms pay into a local programming fund.
The federal regulator, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, plans a hearing this fall to work out a framework for such a fee.
It already has created a $100-million fund for local programming, after local stations in Hamilton, Montreal and Victoria changed hands for only a few dollars because the big networks did not want to keep them going. Another local station in Red Deer, Alta., closed at the end of August.
The cable and satellite companies are vigorously opposed to paying any kind of fee towards local programming and say they will have to hike prices to consumers.
Rogers Cable opposes fee-for-carriage "as an unnecessary bailout for over-the-air broadcasters and an unfair tax on cable and satellite television subscribers," Rogers said in its brief to the CRTC, made public Monday.
"Canadians do not want to pay additional charges for services that have always been available over the air for free," Rogers vice-chairman Paul Lind said.
If cable and satellite firms pay for Canadian TV signals, they might get U.S. broadcasters demanding a fee for their signals, further raising fees for consumers, he said.
But Local TV Matters argues on its website that Canadian cable companies already pay in excess of $300 million a year to U.S. cable channels, but nothing to Canadian over-the-air stations.
"Over the past five years, cable bills have gone up more than twice the cost of living and their profits have grown by more than a billion dollars," said Steven Guiton, CBC/Radio-Canada's chief regulatory officer.
"At the same time, we have had to reduce our people, programs and services, especially given the extremely difficult economic conditions over the past two years."
He said Local TV Matters was formed to address a need to inform the Canadian public ahead of the CRTC hearing in November.
The cable companies have already launched a campaign to engage consumers in the debate, with letters in their bills warning that what they pay could increase because of the CRTC initiative.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Oda's travel expenses cause dissent in Tory caucus
- Conservative MP John Williamson, who was once head of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, has raised the issue of International Co-operation Minister Bev Oda's spending habits behind closed doors with the Conservative caucus. more »
- Canada accused of 'complicity' in torture in UN report
- The United Nations Committee Against Torture has condemned what it calls Canadian "complicity" in torture and human rights violations of Muslim men caught up in the post-9/11 security net. Terry Milewski has exclusive details. more »
- Diamond Jubilee: Your photos of royal encounters
- The CBC Community team asked you to submit your best photos of the Queen's visits to Canada, or visits by any member of the Royal Family. The result was tremendous! more »
- Helicopter crash kills 3 near Terrace, B.C.
- All three people aboard a helicopter that went down west of Terrace, B.C., died in the crash, the aircraft's owners say. more »
Latest Technology & Science News Headlines
- Newly mapped tomato genome could yield tastier, hardier fruit
- You might think you know all you need to know about the humble tomato, but now, you can truly get a look at what this fleshy fruit is made of thanks to the work of about 300 scientists who have identified almost all of the genes that make up one common variety. more »
- Last chance to see Venus transit across sun
- If you happen to glance at the sun in the early evening next Tuesday and notice a black dot moving across it, fear not, that's not dust in your eye or an early sign of glaucoma — it's Venus. more »
- Call of Duty creators, Activision settle legal fight
- Activision has reached a settlement with the creators of the hit video game series Call of Duty following a bitter legal battle. more »
- Google flags censored search words to Chinese users
- Google has fired a new salvo in its censorship battle with Beijing by adding a feature that warns users in China each time they enter keywords into its search engine that might produce blocked results and suggests they try other terms. more »
- Social mapping software turns neighbourhoods into 'Livehoods'
- You might have no doubt about what neighbourhood you live in, but can you pinpoint your livehood? If you're in Montreal, you can now, thanks to a new mapping software that redraws traditional city boundaries using data gleaned from social media applications such as Twitter and Foursquare. more »
Bob McDonald's Blog
SpaceX got it right when things went wrong Jun. 1, 2012 2:55 PM It was back slaps and hugs all around this week as the Dragon space capsule, the first privately-built spacecraft to visit the International Space Station, returned safely to Earth. What's most impressive is how problems that arose during the mission were solved along the way.
Quirks & Quarks
- June 2: The Day the World Discovered the Sun Jun. 1, 2012 4:32 PM We'll look back at the Transit of Venus in 1769, which sparked a worldwide competition among aspiring global superpowers, each sending its own scientific expedition to far-flung destinations to track the transit, in order to measure the distance to the Sun.
Latest Features
- Body-parts victim a Chinese student in Montreal
- Edmonton teacher suspended for giving 0s
- Flooding closes Toronto subway hub Union station
- Owner defends 'gore' site connected to Luka Magnotta
- New duty-free limits will challenge Canadian retailers
- Copyright board to charge for music at weddings, parades
- Helicopter crash kills 3 near Terrace, B.C.
- Alberta teen hospitalized after fight involving dozens of students
- 2,000 jobs cut as GM to close Oshawa plant

