'CLEAR, SIGNIFICANT AND UNEQUIVOCAL'
Where have all the benefits gone?
An intervention submitted
by the CCA 23 March 2001
for the CRTCpublic hearing regarding renewal of conventional
television licences controlled by BCE and Global
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA) is a non-governmental,
not-for-profit arts service organization representing cultural
workers, cultural industry organizations as well as individual
Canadians interested in the arts. The CCA welcomes the opportunity
provided by the CRTC’s April 17th’ public hearing
to share its views regarding the licence renewal applications
filed by CTV and Global with respect to the individual conventional
television undertakings they control.
The CCA notes that in 1999 the CRTC issued a new policy for
Canadian television. It described this sector as a success
and concluded that “…conventional television will
remain the cornerstone of essential support for the Canadian
independent production sector and the core of the Canadian
television broadcasting system.”
The Commission's’ new policy maintained existing Canadian
content levels, extended the time during which priority Canadian
programs are to be exhibited, and broadened the definition
of ‘priority programs’ so as to include every
Canadian program but news and sports, dropped specific expenditure
requirements for large MSOs, and encouraged private broadcasters
to continue to provide local programming to the communities
they serve.
Under the Broadcasting Act individual broadcasters face no
specific legislative requirements about local programming,
independent production or entertainment programming. It is
up to the CRTC to decide how the private, public and community
elements that make up the broadcasting system provide such
programming, and what individual programming undertakings
should be doing. The licence renewal proceeding involving
CTV and Global for which this intervention has been prepared
is the first opportunity for the CRTC to make such decisions
using its new policy.
As part of its own preparations for this hearing the CCA commissioned
independent research about consolidation in Canada's private
television sector and its impact on issues of interest to
the CCA, and also reviewed the current and historical public
examination files of the conventional television stations
now controlled by CTV or Global. In this process we learned
that the CRTC routinely destroys all public examination files
after fifteen years. This now means that private broadcasters
ownership, programming plans and financial commitments from
1968 to the early 1980s are no longer available for public
review. We therefore make the following recommendation to
the CRTC.
Recommendation 1: Retain current and historical
public examination files for their historical value.
We have also found that the public record in this proceeding
has made it virtually impossible for members of the public
to comment in an informed fashion about the central issues
in this hearing – and in many other proceedings of this
nature – because the information central to these discussions
is available to only two of the three groups involved: the
CRTC itself, and the licensees or applicants appearing before
it. This does not encourage effective public participation,
but curtails it.
The Act calls for Canadian programming to predominate –
yet the Commission did not release any historical spending
information about non-Canadian content. Without this information,
how do we know the manner in which Canadian programming expenditures
have been made, compared to non-Canadian programming expenditures?
Although the CRTC did release information about these licensees’
total revenues, the data were aggregated for all licensees
controlled by CTV or Global, to meet concerns related to confidentiality,
and covered the last four years -- though a standard licence
term lasts seven.
Federal access to information legislation requires applicants
for confidentiality to substantiate – not simply declare
– the competitive harm that will take place if historical
confidential information is released. Does evidence exist
to support the claim that releasing historical data up to
the latest two years of a licence term directly and substantively
harms licensees? If such evidence is unavailable for individual
stations, the CCA believes the public interest in understanding
the manner in which Canada's broadcast licensees meet Canada's
broadcasting policy (as defined in section 3 of the Act) can
only be met by publishing annual financial data (including
profitability and non-Canadian programming statistics) for
individual licensees, for all but the most recent two years
of licence terms, at the time licensees seek to apply for
the renewal of their licences.
Recommendation 2: Publish historical financial
performance statistics, by station, when considering applications
for renewal or acquisition, up to the last two years of the
current licence.
We note that this hearing involves an exceptionally large
number of individual conventional television station licence
renewal applications. Yet with respect to the fundamental
issue of Canadian content exhibition no central record of
statistics maintained by the CRTC about television stations’
performance was available. Finding a complete record of this
fundamental aspect of Canadian broadcasting policy –
resulting in the three-page table in Appendix 1-- required
a search of almost two hundred public examination files. Bearing
in mind the Commission’s current policy of destroying
all public examination files after fifteen years, Canadian
content performance statistics now in the licensees’
public files for these years will also disappear from public
view. We believe that there is a simple solution to this concern.
Recommendation 3: Publish historical Canadian content performance
and weekly hours of original programming or news, by station
(both through the Commission’s internet site and in
paper form).
Canada's broadcasting legislation requires the broadcast regulator
to ensure that, through the efforts of its public, private
and community elements, the goals of our country’s broadcasting
policy are met. The CCA notes that of the public elements
in Canada’s broadcasting system the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation (CBC), is by far the largest, operating conventional
radio and television stations and networks across the nation,
along with three specialty services. Appropriations voted
by Parliament make up the majority of the CBC’s operating
revenues. Between 1994 and 1999 the CBC’s Parliamentary
appropriations fell by 20.4%.
Over the same period, the level of Canadian content on the
CBC’s English-language television network increased
from 65% to 74%, and on its French-language television network,
from 75% to 78%.
In January 2000 the CRTC renewed the CBC’s radio, television
and specialty service licences. Notwithstanding either the
real (constant dollar) decrease in its revenues or its success
in increasing the amount of Canadian programming it provides
to Canadians, the Commission sought more Canadian, local and
regional programming from the Corporation and supported the
CBC’s commitments with respect to its use of independent
productions.
We note that over the same period, between 1994 and 1999,
conventional, private television broadcasters’ revenues
rose by almost a quarter, while profits before interest and
taxes (PBIT) increased by two thirds.
We believe that all elements of the system should meet their
mandate under Canada's broadcasting legislation, especially
when their financial performance and capability are increasing.
Recommendation 4: Treat all elements of the system
more equitably with respect to programming expectations and
resource availability.
Industry consolidation – whose synergies and benefits
will be central to the issues to be raised at the CRTC’s
April hearing – now stands at its highest levels in
Canadian broadcasting history. Between 1994 and 1999 the proportion
of private television stations controlled by Canada's five
largest television broadcasters increased 13% (from 55.4%
of private stations in 1994, to 62.7% in 1999). By August
2000, Canada’s 5 largest television owners controlled
almost two thirds (62.7%) of the country’s private television
system and the two largest owners – BCE and Global --
controlled half (48%) of the country’s private television
stations.
As consolidation has increased, diversity in ownership has
fallen by half: in 1970 forty-one people or companies controlled
the country’s private television stations; by August
2000, twenty people or companies did so. Altogether 14 people
or companies now control almost all of Canada's private television
stations.
The CRTC has not granted every application received related
to industry consolidation, but in the decisions in which such
applications were allowed, the Commission has cited the need
to ensure that “clear, significant and unequivocal”
benefits result for the Canadian broadcasting system as a
whole, Canadian programming and Canadian viewers.
These benefits have frequently been linked to the efficiencies
and synergies to be gained from consolidation. Since the early
1980s, moreover, the CRTC has not only streamlined its regulation
of private television but made its policies more flexible
so as to meet broadcasters’ needs and encourage more
and better Canadian programming.
ver the last seven years, while industry consolidation has
continued, administrative expenses in private television have
fallen relative to total expenses, by about a fifth (-19.9%),
from 17.3%% in 1994 to 13.9% in 2000. The number of people
employed by Canada's private television stations decreased
9%.
Over the same period, revenues increased almost 15%, while
profits grew three times as much (43.9%)
Yet despite increased revenues and profits and almost three
decades of regulatory flexibility, proponents’ claims
that industry consolidation would generate “clear, significant
and unequivocal benefits” for Canada's broadcasting
system have not been met.
Canadian content exhibition levels have declined
Over the last seven years levels of Canadian content carried
by thirty-seven private television stations unaffiliated with
the CBC and controlled by CTV or Global declined slightly
over the broadcast day and evening broadcast period.
Canadian content expenditure levels have declined
relative to total revenues
In 2000, Canada's private, conventional broadcasters spent
less of their income on Canadian programming than they did
seven years ago.
According to their renewal applications, stations controlled
by CTV and Global also plan to reduce the proportion of their
income that they spend on Canadian programming. In 1991, CFTO-TV
and CJOH-TV planned to spend 28% and 36% of their income on
Canadian programming; in 2002, their plans have decreased
to 25% and 26%, respectively. The decrease is particularly
noticeable for CIII-TV: in 1991 it planned to spend 21% of
its income on Canadian programming; in 2002 it plans to spend
12.6% of its total revenues on Canadian programming.
The proportion of income allocated to Canadian programming
has been decreasing for some time. If CFTO-TV, CJOH-TV, CIII-TV
and CKND-TV had not increased their spending plans for Canadian
content, but simply maintained their 1991 spending levels
(as a proportion of total income), just over $50 million more
would have been spent on Canadian programming by these four
stations. If these levels had been maintained to 2008, the
four stations alone would have spent almost $300 million more
on Canadian programming.
Between 1994 and 2000 expenditures on Canadian programming
increased slightly, but declined when measured in constant
dollars.
Meanwhile, spending on non-Canadian programming increased
by 70% in current dollars and over 50% in constant dollars.
Both CTV and Global plan to spend more on non-Canadian than
Canadian programming, beginning with the first year of a new
licence term ($146 vs. $139 million in the case of CTV, and
$223 vs. $132 in the case of Global).
Over the last seven years private television broadcasters’
total spending on Canadian drama increased by almost a quarter
in current dollars, and by more than 14% in constant dollars.
Spending on non-Canadian drama, however, increased by over
70% in current dollars, and almost 60% in constant dollars.
Finally, the gap between spending on Canadian and non-Canadian
drama grew: in 1994, private conventional television broadcasters
spent 3.7 times more on non-Canadian drama than on Canadian
drama; in 1999, they spent 4.8 times more on non-Canadian
drama than on Canadian drama (28% increase).
Local programming
Private broadcaster’s spending on local programming
declined between 1994 and 1999, in both current and constant
dollars, and in some cases, the amount of original local news
either decreased from previous years (CFTO-TV) or, after an
increase, declined to previous levels (CKND-TV)
Independent production expenditures have increased
Private broadcasters’ spending on independent production
increased between 1994 and 1999, both in current and constant
dollars. Private television broadcasters, however, spent more
than four times as much of their revenues on non-Canadian
programming and the gap between the two grew (3.9 times more
on non-Canadian programming than independent production in
1994; 4.4 times more in 2000).
Script and concept development levels have decreased
Spending on local programming has gone down, in both current
and constant dollars. In brief, between 1994 and 2000, and
as industry consolidation increased, profits earned by Canada's
private television broadcasters before interest and taxes
increased by 44% in real, constant dollars. Their administrative
costs fell as a proportion of their total expenses, and total
staffing levels in the industry decreased by 9%. Nevertheless,
- the level of Canadian content
carried by the stations now controlled by CTV and CanWest
Global declined slightly over the broadcast day and evening
broadcast period
- spending on Canadian content, measured
in constant dollars, declined while spending on non-Canadian
programming increased
- both CTV and Global now plan to
spend more on non-Canadian programming than on Canadian
programming
- Spending on non-Canadian drama
was 3.7 times greater than spending on Canadian drama in
1994, and 4.9 times greater in 2000; in the last seven years
spending on Canadian drama (in constant dollars) increased
25%, while spending on non-Canadian drama increased by 60%.
- Spending on local programming
declined in both current and constant dollars, as did spending
on development (either as script and concept funding or
within telecast programming)
Moreover, while
private broadcasters’ revenues and profits have increased,
incomes in Canada's cultural sector remain low, and in the
case of actors, have fallen in constant dollar terms. Where
have all the “clear, significant and unequivocal”
benefits gone?
We believe that the private elements in Canada's broadcasting
system can be as creative and resourceful as the CBC with
respect to the goals laid out for Canada’s broadcasting
system.
We therefore urge the Commission to adopt the following:
Recommendation 5: Define the CRTC-regulated holdings
of BCE and CanWest Global to be networks for the purposes
of the Act and set expectations of these new networks which
are commensurate with their size.
Recommendation 6: Set spending and exhibition
levels with respect to Canadian content to match previous
levels set for existing television networks and to increase
over these levels by 2008.
Recommendation 7: Conduct and publish quantitative research
to assess diversity and access within private broadcasting
and hold a public hearing to assess its results and implications
for future industry consolidation.
Recommendation 8: Measure and monitor the benefits anticipated
from streamlining, flexibility and regulatory relaxation to
ensure that Canada's broadcasting system and all its components
– broadcasters, creators, staff, producers and, most
importantly, Canadians -- benefit to the same degree.
Recommendation 9: Grant full, seven-year licence terms if
and only if Canadian content – both during the day and
evening broadcast period – has been maintained (i.e.,
a 0% reduction in the percentage of Canadian content exhibited)
or increased over the licence term.
Recommendation 10: Raise Canadian content regulatory requirements
for private conventional television broadcasters, by increasing
the level of Canadian content during the current evening broadcast
period from 50% to 60% over the next two years.
Recommendation 11: Ensure that the quality and
level of local programming improves over the coming licence
term by disallowing local sales time income for private broadcasters
who reduce their service while their profitability increases.
We look forward to the opportunity to discuss these issues
and recommendations further with the CRTC at its April hearing.
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