By Konrad von Finckenstein

THERE IS LITTLE DOUBT that Bill C-11 will be enacted by the government in substantially the same form in which it was passed by the House of Commons.

Once it is enacted it will be up to the CRTC to implement it. The purpose is clear; integrate streamers such as Netflix and Amazon’s Prime Video, into the Canadian broadcasting system and have them contribute their appropriate share to the production and promotion of Canadian programs. The CRTC is given new, wide discretionary powers to do so.

Scoping Hearing

The act will apply to online broadcasting undertakings that transmit programs. Given that the definition of programs under the act encompasses virtually any transmission of sound and images or combination, the first task will be to scope the universe it will regulate. It is given new, wide discretionary powers to regulate. However, the only guidance regarding the exercise of such power that can be found in the act consists of:

The CRTC’s first task should be a scoping hearing wherein it will seek submissions as to:

Key Issues Hearing

Once it has these hearings and rendered a decision, thereby defining the universe it seeks to regulate, the CRTC will be able to hold a hearing on the substantive regulatory scheme that it will impose on online undertakings. Among the most contentious and difficult issues will be:

Overriding Constraints

All decisions to be reached need to take into account:

Summary

Implementation of Bill C-11 will pose conceptual challenges, will be time consuming and heavily contested. There are legitimate doubts whether the present structure and resources of the CRTC will be up to the task. It already has a full plate with regulating telecommunications and it will soon get responsibility for C-18, the Online News Act. All of this should logically lead to a rethink and reform of the present structure and functions of the CRTC.

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

 

 

 

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