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CCA Bulletin 25/06
FROM
THE DESK OF ALAIN PINEAU
National Director
Canadian Conference of the Arts
Ottawa,
May 24, 2006
Will the
CRTC increase Canadian content rules for commercial radio?
The
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission
(CRTC) spent all of last week in Gatineau , Québec,
holding a public hearing on the
review of its Commercial Radio Policy. The Commission
received a total of 183 briefs from various individuals and
organizations from all over the country. Of this number, fifty-five
intervenors (including the Canadian Conference of the Arts)
had obtained permission to participate in the public hearing
and debate their views in front of a panel of five commissioners,
including the President of the CRTC, Mr. Charles Dalfen.
Each
intervenor was given between 10 and 20 minutes to present
his views, followed by question periods of various lengths
depending on the particular interest of this presentation.
Some, like the Canadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB)
or the Québec music industry (ADISQ), which had presented
voluminous briefs in the initial filing and being parties
central to the debate, were given the lion's share of the
panel's time. So much so, that after two days, the process
was so far behind that the CRTC decided to extend their workday
(and that of those who were waiting to be heard!) in order
to catch up. After sitting late at night both Tuesday and
Wednesday, they were pretty much back on track by the time
the CCA was called on Thursday morning.
The
main issues of the week were obvious after the very first
day:
- Canadian
Content rules: should
CanCon be increased, and if so, by how much (the requirement
was increased from 30 to 35% at the last revision)? Positions
on this varied from status quo all the way to 51%. Some
increase seems to be likely, but it is hard to predict for
sure.
- Diversity:
How to ensure that there
is more diversity (in terms of artists, songs and genres)
on commercial radio, whose formats are very limited and
whose DJs keep playing the same songs all the time? Everybody
was concerned with this issue. The CAB put forward a bonus
plan for playing the music of 'emerging artists', to encourage
broadcasters to take programming risks! Many intervenors
pointed out that there was absolutely nothing preventing
such risk taking right now and that a bonus point system
was just a backdoor way to less Canadian content overall.
Others, like the CCA supported incentives
if CanCon were raised to 40 or 45%, and as long as the current
level of 35% become an absolute floor.
- Emerging
Artist: At the centre
of the debate concerning any bonus system is the definition
to give to 'emerging artist'. A variety of suggestions were
put forward by participants, some linked to the length of
time following the first appearance of an artist in the
Top 40 (one year? Four years?), some starting the clock
after the launch of a first or a second commercial CD, some
referring to a Gold record, etc. Then there is the
question about dealing with an artist who has
been pursuing a career for a number of years with limited
success and has never made it to the Top 40? Obviously,
any bonus system for CanCon raises many difficult questions
as to whom it should apply!
- Contribution
to Talent Development (CTD):
In 1998, confronted with the poor financial health of commercial
radio, the CRTC lowered the contributions broadcasters must
make to CTD each year (or in special circumstances, like
when buying a new station). The Commission had at the same
time considerably relaxed restriction on multi-station ownership
in the same market. This de-regulation has led to a considerable
amount of consolidation of the industry in a number of large
networks and has contributed greatly to the re-establishment
of healthy profit margins for the industry, particularly
in Anglophone markets.
This
return to financial health has prompted many intervenors to
demand that contributions to CTD be raised back considerably,
despite broadcasters' arguments that things may be better
for the moment, but can only get worse because
of the increased competition they face from other media (an
argument radio has been using since the appearance of television!).
Still
related to CTD, there was quite a lot of discussion on how
best manage the money. Should the CRTC accept the argument
presented by broadcasters that since FACTOR/MusicAction are
generously funded by the federal government and that therefore,
all the money broadcasters contribute should be directed to
their own funds, StarMaker/RadioStar, whose mandate is to
give a boost to the career of artists who have already reached
a certain level of success? Or, on the contrary, should the
CRTC listen to intervenors representing artists or producers
(SOCAN, CIRPA, ADISQ) or the CCA, who advocate for a consolidation
of the central role played by Factor/MusicAction?
In
its presentation
to the panel, the CCA reviewed the main arguments included
in the
brief filed on March 15. Commissioners paid attention
and asked a number of questions. One of our main points was
that it is necessary not only to maintain Canadian content
requirement on commercial radio but to extend the notion in
whatever appropriate way to any other media offering music
(Internet, satellite radio, cell phones). The CCA also stressed
the importance of having a level playing field when
it comes to supporting Canadian talent development. It is
vital for the health of the Canadian music industry that new
media be asked to contribute as much, if not more,
depending on the real exposure they give to Canadian artists,
than traditional broadcasters. The CCA has expressed serious
concern with the exemptions granted by the CRTC to new media,
whose popularity and impact is growing fast.
This is a file to which we will come back in a few weeks!
CRTC's
new Commercial Radio Policy should be published in a few months,
after they have finished analyzing and weighing the various
arguments put forward by the numerous intervenors. Stay tuned!
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