Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

CRTC To Require Cable, Satellite Companies To Offer Basic Package, With $25 Cap

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Mar, 2015 02:37 PM

    GATINEAU, Que. — The country's broadcast regulator is coming out with new rules today that will require cable and satellite companies to offer customers a trimmed-down, basic channels package, sources have told The Canadian Press.

    The cost of the so-called "skinny basic" package is to be capped at $25, said one source, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

    The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission is to announce details of its decision later today.

    The ruling is the latest result from the CRTC's Let's Talk TV hearings held in the fall.

    The Harper government had pushed the regulator to allow for a so-called pick-and-pay system that would allow consumers to choose and pay only for the individual channels they want.

    However, the CRTC hinted late last summer that it would be open to a pick-and-pay option built on top of a lighter mandatory service than what is currently being offered widely in the industry.

    It's not clear whether skinny basic would be an all-Canadian service that includes local stations and provincial educational channels, or a service that includes American networks as well.

    Critics including the C.D. Howe Institute have warned that any proposals to mandate pick-and-pay channel choices would be an exercise in futility, in light of technological change. They say it could harm the industry and actually end up costing consumers more rather than less.

    The CRTC has been criticized — and taken to court — over recent decisions from the Let's Talk TV hearings, including a move to ban the simultaneous substitution of Canadian advertising for American commercials during the Super Bowl.

    The regulator has also been both commended and panned for its decision to reform the rules governing the Canadian TV programming that goes to air.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ryan Miller Set To Face Old Team For The First Time When Canucks Host Buffalo Sabres

    After getting traded by the only NHL organization he had ever known, the veteran goalie was given the choice by the St. Louis Blues of facing his old team or watching the from the bench when the clubs met in early April.

    Ryan Miller Set To Face Old Team For The First Time When Canucks Host Buffalo Sabres

    Ontario couple accused of killing man and mother face new murder charge

    Ontario couple accused of killing man and mother face new murder charge
    TORONTO — An Ontario couple accused of killing a man and his mother now face a new murder charge involving another member of the same family.

    Ontario couple accused of killing man and mother face new murder charge

    CIBC cuts 500 jobs is past 2 weeks: Wall Street Journal report

    CIBC cuts 500 jobs is past 2 weeks: Wall Street Journal report
    TORONTO — A published report says the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (TSX:CM) has cut more than 500 jobs over the past two weeks.

    CIBC cuts 500 jobs is past 2 weeks: Wall Street Journal report

    A look at what other countries have done to combat the threat of terrorism

    A look at what other countries have done to combat the threat of terrorism
    OTTAWA — New anti-terror measures introduced Friday by the Conservative government are seen as a direct response to the attacks in October in which two Canadian soldiers were killed by men believed to be influenced by radical Islam.

    A look at what other countries have done to combat the threat of terrorism

    B.C. Home Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Three Children To Be Destroyed

    B.C. Home Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Three Children To Be Destroyed
    MERRITT, B.C. — The home where a British Columbia man killed his three children nearly seven years ago has been ordered destroyed by a city in the province's Interior.

    B.C. Home Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Three Children To Be Destroyed

    Spy service to get stronger anti-terror powers under federal bill

    Spy service to get stronger anti-terror powers under federal bill
    OTTAWA — Newly tabled anti-terrorism legislation would give Canada's spy agency more power to thwart a suspected extremist's travel plans, disrupt bank transactions and covertly interfere with radical websites.

    Spy service to get stronger anti-terror powers under federal bill