By Konrad von Finckenstein

THE STATED PURPOSE of Bill C-18, the Online News Act, “is to regulate digital news intermediaries with a view to enhancing fairness in the Canadian digital news marketplace and contributing to its sustainability, including the sustainability of independent local news businesses.”

The motivation for the act stems from the idea that local newspapers do not get the appropriate recompense for news that they produce but that reaches the public via digital platforms. These platforms are considered to have inordinate market power that can be misused.

Scheme of the act

To rectify the situation, the act contemplates a mandatory bargaining process between platforms called Digital News Intermediaries (DNIs) and news organizations called Eligible News Businesses (ENBs).

The process commences with an ENB or (group of ENBs) notifying a DNI that it wants to bargain. The bargaining process is limited to matters related to the making available, by the DNI in question, of news content produced by an ENB. The process will be conducted to pursuant regulations and a code of conduct to be issued by the CRTC.

The DNI and ENB are obliged to bargain in good faith.

The bargaining process can involve up to three steps:

  1. bargaining; if that fails,
  2. mediation; if mediation fails,
  3. final offer arbitration.

The CRTC:

To implement Bill C-18 with respect to sustainability the CRTC will have difficult and critical but problematic functions to perform. This includes:

Maintaining a list of DNIs

Issue: The act considers a communications platform a DNI

… if, having regard to the following factors, there is a significant bargaining power imbalance between its operator and news businesses:

(a) the size of the intermediary or the operator;

(b) whether the market for the intermediary gives the operator a strategic advantage over news businesses; and

(c) whether the intermediary occupies a prominent market position.

DNIs are obliged to self-identify. The CRTC can demand information from an online communication platform including any information it requires to verify compliance with self-assessment and notification.

Points of concern:

Designating ENBs

Issue: On request the CRTC must designate a business as an eligible ENI if it

(a) is a qualified Canadian journalism organization as defined in subsection 248(1) of the Income Tax Act; or

(b) produces news content that is primarily focused on matters of general interest and reports of current events, including coverage of democratic institutions and processes, and

(i) regularly employs two or more journalists in Canada,

(ii) operates in Canada, including having content edited and designed in Canada, and

(iii) produces news content that is not primarily focused on a particular topic such as industry-specific news, sports, recreation, arts, lifestyle or entertainment.

Points of concern:

Granting exemptions

Issue: The bill allows for DNIs to apply for an exemption order from the mandatory obligation to bargain, provided they meet all the established criteria to be set out in agreements between a DNI and ENB. Agreements qualify if

(i) they provide for fair compensation to the news businesses for the news content that is made available by the intermediary,

(ii) they ensure that an appropriate portion of the compensation will be used by the news businesses to support the production of local, regional and national news content,

(iii) they do not allow corporate influence to undermine the freedom of expression and journalistic independence enjoyed by news outlets,

(iv) they contribute to the sustainability of the Canadian news marketplace,

(v) they ensure a significant portion of independent local news businesses benefit from them, they contribute to the sustainability of those businesses and they encourage innovative business models in the Canadian news marketplace, and

(vi) they involve a range of news outlets that reflect the diversity of the Canadian news marketplace, including diversity with respect to language, racialized groups, Indigenous communities, local news and business models; and

(b) any condition set out in regulations made by the Governor in Council.”

It is not clear who will monitor these agreements and how. However, the CRTC can repeal an exemption order if

(a) the Commission is of the opinion that the operator of the digital news intermediary in question is acting in a manner that is inconsistent with this Act;

(b) a condition referred to in subsection 11(1) is no longer met; or

(c) a condition contained in the exemption order is not met.

Points of concern:

Creating a more targeted definition of news content

Issue: The definition of “news content” and news outlet are extremely broad.

According to s. 2(1), “news content means content — in any format, including an audio or audiovisual format — that reports on, investigates or explains current issues or events of public interest,” and “news outlet means an undertaking or any distinct part of an undertaking, such as a section of a newspaper, the primary purpose of which is to produce news content.”

Points of concern:

Establishing the collective bargaining process

The bare bones of the bargaining process are set out in the act

(1) The bargaining process consists of

(a) bargaining sessions;

(b) if the parties are unable, within a period that the Commission considers reasonable, to reach an agreement in the bargaining sessions, mediation sessions; and

(c) if the parties are unable, within a period that the Commission considers reasonable, to reach an agreement in the mediation sessions and at least one of the parties wishes to initiate arbitration, final offer arbitration.

The scope of the process is explained as being “limited to matters related to the making available, by the digital news intermediary in question, of news content produced by a news outlet that is identified under section 30 as a subject of the bargaining process and, if an application is made under subsection 31(1), determined by the Commission to be a subject of the bargaining process.”

The act also specifies “Any final offer arbitration under the bargaining process is limited to monetary disputes.”

The exact details are to be set out by regulation. In addition, the CRTC is empowered to issue a code of conduct.

Points of concern:

Payment for links

Issue: The bill applies to any platform that makes news content available to Canadians, including merely facilitating access to news “by any means, including an index, aggregation or ranking of news content.” (It requires DNIs to negotiate payments for this activity). Linking clearly falls into this definition. In short, DNIs are required to pay for linking.

Points of concern:

Decisions based on values

While the goal of Bill C-18 is considered by many to establish a laudable scheme, it is unnecessarily complex, vaguely drafted and leaves a host of difficult decision to the CRTC. Although the Governor in Council may make regulations regarding such matters as factors to be considered when identifying DNIs, time periods for notification by DNIs and criteria used to apply exemption provisions, the key decisions are left to the CRTC. There is very little legislative guidance regarding many decisions to be made – these decisions are mostly based on values rather than objective facts.

Formulation of powers

In addition, many of the decisions to be are expressed not as enabling powers but as obligations. For instance, the CRTC must:

This means decisions will have to be made in terms of rights not policy or regulatory goals. Exemption is a perfect example. Every claim for exemption will have to be examined and submissions examined before a reasoned decision is rendered.

Summary

The CRTC in its present structure and present resources will be completely overwhelmed by the combined effect of a complex scheme, vague definitions, unfamiliar concepts, the need to set up a whole new process and the exercise of new powers and duties expressed as obligations. Needless to say, all these factors also open the door to possibly successful contestation at every stage.

Implementation of the bill will require new resources, acquisition of new skills and time. Any mention of quick implementation and speedy payment of substantial funds to ENIs, as its promoters constantly claim, is completely illusory.

This is the first of a two-part series. Part two will address how Bill C-18 attempts to address the issue of fairness.

Konrad von Finckenstein is a past president of the CRTC and commissioner of competition.

 

 

 

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