Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Senate Report Says CBC Should Find New Ways To Pay For Productions, News

The Canadian Press, 20 Jul, 2015 11:21 AM
    OTTAWA — A Senate committee is calling on Canada's public broadcaster to publicly disclose how much employees make and ensure non-executives aren't getting paid more than their peers in private broadcasting.
     
    The Senate's communications committee is also calling on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to find new ways to fund its operations to limit the amount of funding it receives from the federal government.
     
    The recommendations stem from what was a politically-charged study of the CBC, where senators pressed the broadcaster for salaries of its top on-air talent, specifically chief correspondent Peter Mansbridge.
     
    The report also references scandals involving former radio host Jian Ghomeshi and business correspondent Amanda Lang in calling for stricter policies to prevent problems, rather than having to react after they become public.
     
    The committee says it's time to update the Broadcasting Act, noting the legislation hasn't been updated since the "pre-smartphone, pre-multi-platform" era of 1991.
     
    A Liberal senator on the committee is rejecting some of the recommendations and says the government should increase funding to the CBC.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa Man Working In Edmonton Wins $12.5 Million In Lotto Max; 1 Of 4 Who Shared $50 Million

    Ottawa Man Working In Edmonton Wins $12.5 Million In Lotto Max; 1 Of 4 Who Shared $50 Million
    Eddy Mushibuka had been working in Alberta and bought his ticket at a Safeway Gas Bar in west Edmonton in June.

    Ottawa Man Working In Edmonton Wins $12.5 Million In Lotto Max; 1 Of 4 Who Shared $50 Million

    Government Abruptly Drops Supreme Court Appeal On Overseas CSIS Spying

    Government Abruptly Drops Supreme Court Appeal On Overseas CSIS Spying
    The court agreed to take the case after federal lawyers argued for guidance on whether CSIS needed a warrant to seek allied help in spying on Canadians abroad.

    Government Abruptly Drops Supreme Court Appeal On Overseas CSIS Spying

    Indian And Filipino Communities Worry New Citizenship Rules Are Stigmatizing Them

    Indian And Filipino Communities Worry New Citizenship Rules Are Stigmatizing Them
    OTTAWA — Dual citizens say they're concerned the government's new powers to take away Canadian citizenship are stigmatizing certain communities.

    Indian And Filipino Communities Worry New Citizenship Rules Are Stigmatizing Them

    Alleged 'Sexsomniac' Ryan Hartman Who Admits To Raping Woman Wins New Trial

    Alleged 'Sexsomniac' Ryan Hartman Who Admits To Raping Woman Wins New Trial
    A man who admitted to raping a sleeping woman years after being convicted of sexually assaulting her won a new trial Monday after arguing he was also asleep at the time of the attack.

    Alleged 'Sexsomniac' Ryan Hartman Who Admits To Raping Woman Wins New Trial

    About 9,000 Out Of Homes In Northern Saskatchewan As Wildfires Continue To Burn

    About 9,000 Out Of Homes In Northern Saskatchewan As Wildfires Continue To Burn
    Emergency officials say the wildfire situation in northern Saskatchewan remains critical and about 9,000 people are out of their homes.

    About 9,000 Out Of Homes In Northern Saskatchewan As Wildfires Continue To Burn

    Police Seek Man In London, Ont., Shooting Death Involving Cellphone

    Police Seek Man In London, Ont., Shooting Death Involving Cellphone
    Officers say 24-year-old Mohamed Ibrahim Sail is wanted on a second-degree murder charge in the death of 18-year-old Jeremy Cook.

    Police Seek Man In London, Ont., Shooting Death Involving Cellphone