Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

CRTC Under Pressure To Boost Local TV Funding As Hearings Get Underway

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2016 01:49 PM
    OTTAWA — Nearly half of the country's local TV stations could be off the air by 2020 without a boost in revenues to pay for local programming, the national broadcast regulator has been told as it prepares to open public hearings into the viability of local TV.
     
    The warning comes in a study submitted to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission in advance of hearings that begin  Monday.
     
    Conventional, private TV stations have seen revenues decline by about 25 per cent since 2010, said the report, jointly prepared by the consulting firm Nordicity and communications lawyer Peter Miller.
     
    But many stations that are holding their own for now could close over the next four years, potentially costing nearly 1,000 jobs, said the report submitted by the advocacy group Friends of Canadian Broadcasting.
     
    "In our view, the most likely scenario over the short-to-mid-term is a material, but not fatal, erosion of traditional television," said the report.
     
    Declining TV revenues can be blamed partly on the viewing habits of so-called millennials, who have turned away from traditional TV and instead watch programming online, it said.
     
    But recent changes to CRTC regulations will cause revenues to drop even further, the report warned.
     
    It cited the unbundling of TV packages as one measure that will erode revenue streams.
     
    Effective March 1, cable and satellite TV service providers will be required to offer customers a small basic service, capped at $25 a month, along with a so-called pick-and-pay menu of individual channels, along with any bundles of TV channels they have on offer.
     
    While it could result in savings for some consumers, the move will also reduce revenues that would otherwise go toward Canadian programming, said the report.
     
    "Without broadcast regulation and Canadian ownership requirements, spending on Canadian programming could be less than a third of what it is today," the report added.
     
    Canada's broadcasters spent roughly $4.1 billion in 2012-13 to produce  programming with approximately $1.3 billion of that coming from government-backed subsidies of one form or another, according to the study, which cites figures released by the CRTC during its recent Let's Talk TV hearings.
     
     
    The rest of the money comes from the broadcasters themselves.
     
    In launching the hearings into local TV, the regulator said it's convinced there's already enough money in the broadcasting system to ensure stations can create quality local programming, including local news coverage.
     
    But it said there may have to be a rebalancing of resources within the system.
     
    "The approach that the commission will eventually adopt will need to ensure that all elements contribute in an appropriate manner to the creation and presentation of local programming that meets Canadians’ needs," the CRTC said.
     
    The regulator also lamented that, despite being invited to do so, few interveners have to date brought forward proposals for ensuring Canadians are better served with high-quality local news and other programming.
     
    But "robbing Peter to pay Paul" won't alleviate the revenue crunch that has backed some TV stations against a wall, said Friends of Canadian Broadcasting.
     
    "Just redistributing the funds that the cable and satellite companies pass on from their subscribers would be, at best, a stop-gap measure and not a solution to the problem," said group spokesman Ian Morrison.
     
    There is particular concern for independent stations in small and medium-sized markets that aren't affiliated with the big broadcasting conglomerates.
     
    The situation for many of those stations was already dire a year ago, when the Small Market Independent Television Stations Coalition submitted a request for emergency, interim funding.
     
    In response, the commission did little more than acknowledge their concerns, said Morrison, who accused the CRTC of having its head in the sand over the issue.
     
    "The commission, in our judgment, has not been taking it seriously," he said.
     
     
    "But we think it's really serious. These are often the only television source of local news and information."
     
    "I hope the CRTC goes into the hearings with an open mind."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Montreal Musician Ian Kelly Pleads For Return Of Stolen Hard Drives With New Album

    Montreal Musician Ian Kelly Pleads For Return Of Stolen Hard Drives With New Album
    Montreal indie pop-rocker Ian Kelly is offering a reward to anyone who returns stolen hard drives containing the only copies of an album he was preparing to release.

    Montreal Musician Ian Kelly Pleads For Return Of Stolen Hard Drives With New Album

    Four Wolves That Wandered Into Whitehorse Killed By Conservation Officers

    Four Wolves That Wandered Into Whitehorse Killed By Conservation Officers
    WHITEHORSE — Conservation officers in the Yukon have killed four wolves that began following people in Whitehorse neighbourhoods.

    Four Wolves That Wandered Into Whitehorse Killed By Conservation Officers

    North Korea Shocks World With H-Bomb Claims

    North Korea Shocks World With H-Bomb Claims
    Defying global public opinion, reclusive North Korea has claimed to have detonated its first hydrogen bomb sending political shock waves around the world and even angering its ally China.

    North Korea Shocks World With H-Bomb Claims

    Statistics Canada Says The Trade Deficit Narrowed To $2.0 Billion In November

    Statistics Canada said Wednesday that the country's trade deficit with the world narrowed to $2.0 billion in November from $2.5 billion in October.

    Statistics Canada Says The Trade Deficit Narrowed To $2.0 Billion In November

    Royal Bank To Hike Some Mortgage Rates Starting Friday

    Royal Bank To Hike Some Mortgage Rates Starting Friday
    Royal Bank of Canada says its special offer five-year fixed mortgage goes up one-tenth of a point to 3.04 per cent.

    Royal Bank To Hike Some Mortgage Rates Starting Friday

    2015 Was A Record Year For Housing Sales In Toronto Area: Real Estate Board

    2015 Was A Record Year For Housing Sales In Toronto Area: Real Estate Board
    The number of sales last year through TREB realtors totalled 101,299 — up 9.2 per cent from 2014.

    2015 Was A Record Year For Housing Sales In Toronto Area: Real Estate Board