Search Results for: crtc

Cable / Telecom News

CRTC says Telecom Act supersedes Quebec’s Bill 74

Bill would force ISPs to censor the Internet IN A LETTER WHICH suspends a CRTC application made by the Public Interest Advocacy Centre which said Quebec’s new web-blocking legislation, Bill 74, is not only unconstitutional, but directly conflicts with the Telecommunications Act, the Commission made it known that it more or less agrees with PIAC. (Ed note: So do we.) Bill 74 requires Quebec-based Internet service providers to block certain gambling websites when told to do so by the province. The Quebec government created the new law because it wants to keep as much gambling as possible with the province’s… Continue Reading

Radio / Television News

ACTRA hits back at Blais

THE CRTC ISSUED a decision ACTRA didn’t like and criticized it in a press release last week. CRTC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais didn’t much care for that press release and on Wednesday sent the actor’s union a letter saying so. Now, today we have a letter sent back to the chair from ACTRA president Ferne Downey (right) defending its position. In his letter to ACTRA yesterday, Blais defended how the Commission reached its decision on a new policy for Certified Independent Production Funds (CIPFs), noting that the public proceedings held over the past two years made for a… Continue Reading

Radio / Television News

INDEPENDENT FUNDS DECISION: Writer’s Guild catches CRTC’s “significant factual error”

TORONTO – The CRTC has corrected a portion of its controversial Certified Independent Production Funds (CIPFs) policy framework decision after being called out on a misattributed quote by the Writers Guild of Canada (WGC) early Thursday. In a statement entitled “CRTC Gets the Facts Wrong”, WGC publicly questioned “the rigour” of the CRTC process that erroneously claimed that the Canadian Media Fund (CMF) argued in favour of reducing the points needed for Canadian productions to receive funding from the CIPFs to six. “In fact, the CMF didn’t say any of that”, said the WGC.  “Documents on the public record… Continue Reading

Cable / Telecom News

Kellogg Canada coughs up $60,000 for spamming violations

OTTAWA–GATINEAU – Kellogg Canada Inc. has served up $60,000 as part of a settlement over alleged violations to Canada's anti-spam legislation, plus agreed to improve its spam compliance program, the CRTC said Thursday. The food manufacturing giant, or a third-party service acting on its behalf, allegedly sent electronic messages to recipients without consent between October 1, 2014 and December 16, 2014, just months after Canada’s anti-spam legislation (CASL) kicked in on July 1st, reads an enforcement activity on the CRTC’s site.   In addition to the monetary penalty, Kellogg’s also agreed to update and implement various components of their CASL compliance… Continue Reading

Radio / Television News

Yanking ads means fewer resources for CBC/Radio-Canada programs, services, says Corp.

OTTAWA – The CRTC’s decision to revoke paid advertising on Radio 2 and ICI Musique “shows a lack of understanding about the reality of public broadcasting”, says CBC/Radio-Canada. Responding to the Commission’s decision Wednesday to rescind ads on the two music services, the public broadcaster said that it that the regulator got it wrong when it said that the federal government’s commitment to increase funding over the next five years makes additional revenue from radio advertising unnecessary. “The Government's reinvestment ($75M this year, rising to $150M in following years) is vital to stabilizing the Corporation so it can implement its… Continue Reading

Radio / Television News

Why calls for new conditions on broadcasters must be rejected

This is not another new policy review GATINEAU – Canada’s major broadcasters say that a time when consumers have more TV viewing choices resulting from new flexible channel packaging rules and the continued inroads from exempt (often foreign) platforms, the CRTC must resist adding to the regulatory restrictions already imposed on their programming services. The comments come as the Commission wraps up the written phase for this fall’s licence renewal hearing for the country’s major English- and French-language broadcasting groups. Many interveners have called for more stringent regulation of the large broadcasters. They relate to a number of… Continue Reading

Radio / Television News

INDEPENDENT FUNDS DECISION: Blais says he’s disappointed with actors; says group missed a hearing

GATINEAU – CRTC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais took an unusual step Wednesday in publicly batting back a press release issued by the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA) over the Commission’s new rules surrounding Certified Independent Production Funds. In a letter to ACTRA president Ferne Downey, Blais was primarily upset that ACTRA characterized the decision as one which was made without any public process. “You mention that Canadians deserve open hearings on important decisions. I agree. This is why we held the Let’s Talk TV conversation that garnered more than 13 000 comments from… Continue Reading

Radio / Television News

Parliamentary appropriation rising, radio investment falling, so no more CBC Radio ads, says CRTC

GATINEAU – As of yesterday, CBC is no longer allowed to air advertising on Radio 2 and ICI Musique. The CRTC granted the CBC’s request back in 2013 to sell national advertising on the services until August 31, 2016. The Corp. complained at the time its parliamentary appropriation had been shrinking every year, and it needed a financial boost to make certain ends meet. Advertisers, however, did not exactly beat down the CBC sales doors to buy ad time. According to the CBC’s Commission filing earlier this year to extend the permission to… Continue Reading

Radio / Television News

ACTRA rallies members to oppose CRTC’s CIPF changes; directors angry, too

TORONTO – Add the Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA) to the list of stakeholders objecting to the CRTC’s recent changes to its policy framework for Certified Independent Production Funds (CIPFs). The union of English-language professional performers is taking issue with the regulator’s decision to drop the minimum CAVCO point requirements from eight to six to fund a Canadian independent production, and criticized the Commission’s rationale that the move could “facilitate the hiring by production companies of non-Canadian actors or creators, who may increase a project's attractiveness and visibility in international markets.” ACTRA says the ruling not… Continue Reading

Cable / Telecom News, Radio / Television News

MTS petitions CRTC to switch BDU ownership, control to Bell; full deal awaiting Competition Bureau

OTTAWA – MTS has officially asked the CRTC to transfer ownership and effective control of its licensed terrestrial broadcasting distribution undertakings operating in Winnipeg and surrounding areas to Bell Canada. In application dated June 8, 2016 but made public on Tuesday, MTS said that the steps of the proposed transaction affecting the licensed broadcasting undertakings would be as follows: – First, the parent corporation of MTS, MTS Communications Holdings Inc. (MCH), would be wound up into Manitoba Telecom; – Second, Bell would acquire all the issued and outstanding shares in the capital of Manitoba Telecom; – Third, BCE would incorporate a new wholly owned… Continue Reading