TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS
FOR THE CANADIAN RADIO-TELEVISION AND
TELECOMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
TRANSCRIPTION DES AUDIENCES DU
CONSEIL DE LA RADIODIFFUSION
ET DES TÉLÉCOMMUNICATIONS CANADIENNES
SUBJECT / SUJET:
CBC LICENCE RENEWALS /
RENOUVELLEMENTS DE LICENCES DE LA SRC
HELD AT: TENUE À:
Place du Portage Place du Portage
Conference Centre Centre de conférence
Outaouais Room Salle Outaouais
Hull, Quebec Hull (Québec)
June 1, 1999 Le 1er Juin 1999
Volume 7
Transcripts
In order to meet the requirements of the Official Languages
Act, transcripts of proceedings before the Commission will be
bilingual as to their covers, the listing of the CRTC members
and staff attending the public hearings, and the Table of
Contents.
However, the aforementioned publication is the recorded
verbatim transcript and, as such, is taped and transcribed in
either of the official languages, depending on the language
spoken by the participant at the public hearing.
Transcription
Afin de rencontrer les exigences de la Loi sur les langues
officielles, les procès-verbaux pour le Conseil seront
bilingues en ce qui a trait à la page couverture, la liste des
membres et du personnel du CRTC participant à l'audience
publique ainsi que la table des matières.
Toutefois, la publication susmentionnée est un compte rendu
textuel des délibérations et, en tant que tel, est enregistrée
et transcrite dans l'une ou l'autre des deux langues
officielles, compte tenu de la langue utilisée par le
participant à l'audience publique.
Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission
Conseil de la radiodiffusion et des
télécommunications canadiennes
Transcript / Transcription
Public Hearing / Audience publique
CBC LICENCE RENEWALS /
RENOUVELLEMENTS DE LICENCES DE LA SRC
BEFORE / DEVANT:
Françoise Bertrand Chairperson of the
Commission, Chairperson /
Présidente du Conseil,
Présidente
Andrée Wylie Commissioner / Conseillère
David Colville Commissioner / Conseiller
Barbara Cram Commissioner / Conseillère
James Langford Commissioner / Conseiller
Cindy Grauer Commissioner / Conseillère
Joan Pennefather Commissioner / Conseillère
ALSO PRESENT / AUSSI PRÉSENTS:
Nick Ketchum Hearing Manager /
Gérant de l'audience
Carolyn Pinsky Legal Counsel /
Alastair Stewart Conseillers juridiques
Carol Bénard Secretary / Secrétaire
HELD AT: TENUE À:
Place du Portage Place du Portage
Conference Centre Centre de conférence
Outaouais Room Salle Outaouais
Hull, Quebec Hull (Québec)
June 1, 1999 Le 1er juin 1999
- ii -
TABLE OF CONTENTS / TABLE DES MATIÈRES
PAGE
Presentation by / Présentation par:
English TV Network (Cont'd) 2068
English Owned and Operated TV Applications 2269
Hull, Quebec / Hull (Québec)
--- Upon resuming on Tuesday, June 1, 1999 at 0905 /
L'audience reprend le mardi 1er juin 1999 à 0905
10315 THE CHAIRPERSON: Good morning,
everyone. We have a new secretary. Welcome. Would
you please introduce where we are at for the people who
are joining us this morning?
10316 MS BÉNARD: Thank you, Madam Chair.
We will continue with the question period for the
English Television Network and then we will proceed to
the regional television station applications.
10317 THE CHAIRPERSON: Can you begin?
10318 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Good morning all.
I have a few follow-ups from yesterday and then I will
go back into the main -- we were talking yesterday
about program sales to and from Newsworld. There was
some mention of buying of the main station for this
conversation -- of the main channel -- buying
programming from Newsworld. When you buy, do you buy
it from Newsworld at cost or at a discount or at some
other amount?
10319 MR. KLYMKIW: Commissioner Cram, we
treat it like we treat any other acquisition. We
negotiate with them and they are as tough as any other
company in the country when we buy programs. So we
come up with a price that we think is fair and fair
market value.
10320 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So then, it would
be a revenue stream for Newsworld. Is that the concept
rather than simply a cost-recovery kind of thing?
10321 MR. KLYMKIW: It is treated as a
program sale. That is correct.
10322 COMMISSIONER CRAM: What about when
Newsworld acquires programming from the main channel?
10323 MR. KLYMKIW: It works differently on
that side. The understanding has always been that when
programs run on the main channel, then Newsworld can
have another run at them. That has been the history of
the relationship between Newsworld and the information
program side now for 10 years.
10324 So obviously, the programming we
produce on the main channel can have another window on
Newsworld, but to keep cost separation, obviously, I
mean, cable subscribers -- I can speak about this. I
had a few years at Newsworld. Cable subscribers don't
want to, in a sense, subsidize the main channel. So
when they produce programs out of cable revenues, we
have come to the conclusion that the best way of
dealing with that is to acquire a price. So that is
what we have done.
10325 MR. HARRIS: If I can just add one
thing. If there are any incremental costs incurred,
rights, costs or anything like that, Newsworld pays any
incremental costs that their airing of the program
costs.
10326 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Incremental costs
as a result of running -- is it always a second run in
the sense that the main channel has the first run and
they will go after?
10327 MR. KLYMKIW: Sometimes, even the
third run. It really depends on the program. But
generally, it is the second run. Like this "fifth
estate" would be the best example of that.
10328 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So that is free
to them essentially, except for the incremental costs.
10329 Then when we go back to the CTF --
and I wanted to talk about the CTF and CBC's position
vis-à-vis the CTF. In a lot of ways, would it be fair
to say that CBC has an edge in terms of the new rules
because the new rules, as least on the licensing side,
appear to favour distinctly Canadian drama and isn't
that what CBC is into?
10330 MS PLATT: That is definitely what we
are into. I think we are in a situation where the Fund
goals move everybody toward distinctly Canadian if they
want to go through the Fund. So the private
broadcasters are also in that business when they are
accessing the Fund. So I am not sure that it gives us
an edge.
10331 COMMISSIONER CRAM: M'hm. You are
the pros at it though?
10332 MS PLATT: We like to think so. But
as you will notice, there are others who are getting
into the field who are already very strong in the
field. I would mention YTV for example, in the area of
youth, who are heavy users of the Fund.
10333 COMMISSIONER CRAM: M'hm. There is
the other second issue that the CTF considers licence
fees. Generally, your licence fees are higher because
they are distinctly Canadian and the lack of
marketability outside Canada. So that would be another
edge, wouldn't it, in terms of the Fund?
10334 MS PLATT: One of the things that we
have said is that we believe we can compete on a level
playing field, and a level playing field would mean
that licence fees in both the private and public
sectors would probably tend to move more to an
equivalency.
10335 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So they may come
up to your licence fees?
10336 MS PLATT: They may come up to ours
and we may move somewhat down toward theirs.
10337 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Then there is the
money for -- or the extra points for regional
production. That would certainly fit with what I
appeared to be speaking about yesterday. Would that in
some way change CBC's applications to the CTF to a more
regional type of contribution?
10338 MS PLATT: Well, I think we are
already quite heavily regional. We need a balance from
across the country and Toronto is still the strongest
production centre. So the calibration is year to year.
10339 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And this year,
you are at 29 per cent, did you say, in Toronto, and
the rest outside?
10340 MS PLATT: In 1998-1999, we were at
29 per cent of development out of Toronto.
10341 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Of development,
okay. In your application, at paragraph 494 -- and you
don't have to read it -- it talks about, in the future,
of a predominance of drama from the regions and
reflecting cultural and linguistic diversity. That is
why I thought there would be more of a regional sort of
flavour to the drama.
10342 MS PLATT: Well, we are very heavily
in the regions. The question is: How high do you go?
How high can you go? But we are very committed to
continuing our efforts to help develop both the
industrial infrastructure and also the creative bench
strength in the regions.
10343 The initiative that has been brought
forward to help fund some programming out of the
regions, the new initiative that we mentioned
yesterday, is very much an attempt to help continue our
talent development, our seed money, our strengthening
and connecting of the dots kind of approach to
developing regional production.
10344 COMMISSIONER CRAM: When you said in
that paragraph that there would be a predominance from
the region, again, I ask: Does regions mean outside of
Toronto in that sense?
10345 MS PLATT: That is correct.
10346 COMMISSIONER CRAM: In the
application, you were referring to the CTF
contributions and that it was in large part responsible
to meet the expectations -- the drama expectations.
10347 In terms of the percentage of monies
from the CTF and the CBC budget, has that as a ratio
been relatively constant, the budget for drama and the
monies from the CTF? Has that been relatively -- for
example, the CTF funds have provided 20 per cent of the
funding constantly over the years or has that ratio
changed over the years?
10348 MS PLATT: If you are talking about
the ratio between the CBC broadcast licence levels and
the CTF contribution to drama...
10349 COMMISSIONER CRAM: M'hm.
10350 MS PLATT: It has fluctuated somewhat
over time. When we went through our belt tightening --
our significant belt tightening, we did find that we
could no longer pay the level of licence fee, for
example, that we had been paying.
10351 The introduction of the Fund, as I
mentioned yesterday, was a godsend in terms of being
able to -- it allowed independent producers to
structure their financing in such a way that they could
still come up with the same bottom-line budget despite
the fact that the CBC licences had had to reduce to
some degree. Does that answer your question?
10352 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes. So over the
years, can you give me just a general idea of what the
ratio was? Is the ratio now increasing in terms of
CBC's licence fee contributions?
10353 MS PLATT: It has increased because
we felt that we needed to again recalibrate a bit and
move up a bit because of some of the changes that had
occurred within the Fund itself to ensure that there
was adequate financing to ensure the quality of these
productions.
10354 So it is really a question of what we
can do in any given year and what is happening within
the Fund. Our main objective is to make sure that
adequate financing is in place to allow the independent
producer to make quality work.
10355 In terms of the ratios, I would
really have to go back and look at that to give you
something accurate.
10356 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Do you think you
could just provide to us the ratios over the years of
CTF funding and --
10357 MS PLATT: And our licence fee
levels?
10358 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes.
10359 MS PLATT: Yes. We could do that.
10360 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
10361 I see in your projected program
development increases -- I have to say I find it very
interesting -- 1994-1995, your development was, and I'm
sure I am going to get the millions wrong, but it was
1.970 versus 946 in 1998-1999, one-half of that. Yet,
you are producing double the drama with that amount of
money. How has that come about?
10362 MS PLATT: Those figures tend to
fluctuate within a range over time, depending on where
we are in any given cycle. If we are in a cycle where
we have, for example, a number of quite successful
programs on the air that have just come to air in the
last year or two, we need less development because to
develop too heavily behind a successful schedule means
essentially that you are raising expectations or
spending money that you probably won't be able to make
best use of in the long term.
10363 So the levels do fluctuate depending
what is on the agenda at any given time. I think, as I
mentioned yesterday, feature film development is now a
new part of that equation.
10364 COMMISSIONER CRAM: The projected
hourly cost of drama you projected to go down
essentially almost to about 50 per cent of the
1996-1997 costs by the end of the licence term. How is
that coming about?
10365 MS PLATT: You mean a cost -- the
direct financial cost to the CBC --
10366 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Per hour.
10367 MS PLATT: -- per hour of producing
drama? A lot of it has to do with our ability post
belt-tightening to pay what we used to be able to pay.
10368 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So we are not
talking about issues of the quality going down, we are
just talking, really, about the CTF contributing and
some efficiencies. Is that it?
10369 MS PLATT: I think certainly not the
quality going down. If anything, the quality has gone
up. Again, that has a great deal to do with the
maturation of the industry and the work that we have
done with the industry.
10370 I think it is important to point out,
however, that the question of the access to the fund is
a very critical one, and the quality issue could become
an issue if our access is significantly reduced, or the
type of drama programming could perhaps be forced to
change.
10371 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Could the
projected reduction in hourly costs also be related to
the issue of independent production going to
independent producers?
10372 MS PLATT: We do the great percentage
of our drama currently with independent producers. We
do less and less in-house drama production.
10373 We maintain some level of in-house
drama production because we believe there is some drama
that others simply will not do. For example, we
received a letter, which I believe has gone to the
Commission, from Dennis Foon, who was involved as a
writer in both "Little Criminals" and "White Lies". It
is a very eloquent letter in which he points out that
at least he believes that nobody else would have made
these movies, or if they had there was a chance that
because they would have had to have foreign pre-sales
in order to close their financing the actual nature of
the films would have changed, and perhaps not for the
better. I would be happy to table that letter if you
haven't received it.
10374 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I'm pretty sure
we probably have, somewhere in that building.
10375 One of the prices of Canadianization
I guess is the repeats. Our numbers on that are about
29.3 per cent in 1994-1995 to 34 per cent -- 34.23 per
cent, to be precise -- in 1997-1998. I take your
point, Mr. Beatty, that repeats aren't necessarily
repeats any more but they attract a new audience.
10376 But in terms of repeats, is there any
consideration of repeating only the successful drama
versus successful and unsuccessful drama?
10377 MR. KLYMKIW: First of all, in terms
of repeats there are kind of two theories out there and
they are both correct.
10378 One is, obviously as we tighten our
belts repeats help manage the economic side of the
schedule.
10379 The second, as fragmentation has hit
us right between the eyes, people are watching TV in
such different ways than they have had for a long time.
There are waves of audience that come at different
times of the day, different times of the week.
10380 If you look at one of our big
specials and you look at the cost of them for one of
our big series, even when we get very good audiences it
is a fairly small proportion of the entire Canadian
audience. So both us and American broadcasters and
European broadcasters are looking at much more
innovative ways of getting those programs out there
more often, partly because of the cost and partly
because, you know, you want to get as many Canadians
watching those programs as possible.
10381 So I think the repeat strategy has
two sides to it. One, I think it makes sense given the
market we are in.
10382 Secondly, it obviously helps us
reduce our costs.
10383 In terms of your question, we don't
do it with everything. I think it has to be a
judicious choice about what you repeat.
10384 "Air Farce" and "This Hour", which we
do repeat, does very, very well for us, and it does
well because people want to see the show but maybe on
Monday night they can't, or maybe on Friday night they
can't. So the repeat makes an enormous amount of sense
when you have a program like that. So we judiciously
decide we are going to repeat.
10385 The other thing you don't want to do,
it seems to me, is have so many repeats that you skew
the nature of the schedule and of the network.
10386 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I did see the New
Year's "Air Force did very well, first and second time.
Is that the same with the regularly scheduled "Air
Farce" and "This Hour Has 22 Minutes", that the second
audience is as good as the first, if not better?
10387 MR. KLYMKIW: The second audience is
a little smaller, but when you look at the two
audiences together you know that the show gets close to
two million viewers a week. If we only ran it once it
would get a million-three, a million-four. So more and
more Canadians get to see it.
10388 We learned a lot of valuable lessons
in unfortunate circumstances during the strike when we
repeated third runs or second runs of "Air Farce" and
"This Hour". They did very, very well. Audiences who
hadn't seen them or couldn't see them came back to
them.
10389 So we are learning a lot about that,
and that has a lot to do with the kind of fragmentation
and choice that we are going to have in the information
age.
10390 MR. BEATTY: Commissioner, just as an
indication, I think we have tabled with the Commission
a list of the top 20 Canadian series on Canadian
television from September until mid-February. In the
case of "Air Farce" and "This Hour Has 22 Minutes",
both of them, the repeats came back up into the top 22.
One of them -- was it "Air Farce" or "22 Minutes" --
had the repeat in the top 10.
10391 So it is quite remarkable that with
your top rated programs drawing the largest audiences
you have that in one showing even you don't generate
the maximum total audience. Most of the people coming
the second time are not repeat customers, not people
who liked it the first time and are watching it again.
I think the overlap would be about 25 per cent or so.
10392 MR. KLYMKIW: It is an unduplicated
audience for the most part. We are a service as much
as we are anything else, and it seems to me we have to
get a lot of -- we have to get our programs to as many
people as possible.
10393 That is the other reason we repeat
"The National" at 11 o'clock. We simply think it is a
service. People ought to get as many opportunities as
possible to see our key and critical programs. It
makes enormous sense in the environment that we are in.
10394 COMMISSIONER CRAM: We talked
yesterday about the long term expectation of 10 hours,
and in between my coughing I'm not sure I heard, but do
I understand that you may be thinking that 10 hours is
a bit too much in prime? Is that what I heard? I
didn't hear it?
10395 MR. REDEKOPP: I'm sorry, 10 hours
of --
10396 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Drama. I'm
sorry.
10397 MS PLATT: I think what we were
concerned about is two things. One, whether we can --
what level we can sustain or move to based on, again,
the CTF situation.
10398 Two, what is the best balance in a
schedule at any given time depending on the external
environment, depending on internally what is happening
with us.
10399 So whether or not 10 hours, again, is
the right level for drama is I think something that we
are still kicking around and struggling with.
10400 COMMISSIONER CRAM: At the present
8.5 hours in prime I have it at about 32 per cent of
prime time.
10401 MS PLATT: I think the total amount
for arts and entertainment in this prime time schedule
is about 40 per cent all together, close to 40 per
cent. So that would sound about right, yes.
10402 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Do you agree with
that, about --
10403 MR. KLYMKIW: When you look at the
balance of our schedule -- and I think you have a pie
chart that we have given you on this, the famous CBC
pie chart.
10404 Yes, I think the balance makes
enormous sense for the kind of broadcaster that we are.
We roughly have 40 per cent of drama and entertainment
and 40 per cent of public affairs and news and about
20 per cent of sports. That is the kind of -- I mean,
we have to work within that in terms of the
calibration.
10405 I think that is what Harold and
Phyllis were talking about yesterday. We have to find
the balance in terms of the new initiatives we have
talked about and where we think we have to go in the
new millennium. So we need to keep some flexibility on
that. But part of that is obviously going to be driven
by our resources. But that balance as we have it now
we are very pleased with.
10406 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I will be getting
to balance eventually.
10407 But in terms of drama, 8.5 hours as a
proportion of total of the yearly prime time, is it at
about 32 per cent?
10408 MR. KLYMKIW: Drama is at about
17.6 per cent of the prime time schedule in the peak
year --
10409 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Over the year?
10410 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes. That is, yes,
over the year.
10411 MR. HARRIS: The complication is that
in this pie chart that sketch comedy is in "Variety",
where actually in the CRTC categories that is our
"Drama" category.
10412 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay. So the
17 per cent doesn't include the comedy?
10413 MR. HARRIS: (Off microphone).
10414 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Oh, okay.
10415 So including the comedies where would
we get as a total?
10416 MR. HARRIS: Just one second.
10417 Thirty per cent, if we include the
movies, the drama and the stuff that in this chart is
part of "Variety" but in your coding part of "Drama".
So it's about 30 per cent 1997-1998.
10418 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So then we get
into independent production. I understand there was
problem in the past about coding of independent
production with CRTC logs. That's been dealt with?
10419 MR. HARRIS: Yes, we sent a letter.
We haven't heard back so I hope it has been dealt with.
10420 The problem was largely that when we
did, for example, I guess "22 Minutes" is a good
example of this, that was a program that is produced in
our Halifax plant, but is owned by the independent
producer. And when we coded it in our coding it got
done as something we did in Halifax, so, you know, it
is the coding we are working out, but we had the wrong
number in places for a bunch of things. And I think
overall the story, not having heard back and we know
how little we actually do in-house and end up owning
that we are at about 60 per cent overall and in drama
at about 90 per cent in independent production.
10421 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Some of the
problems you mentioned in terms of independent
production, one was the long-term rights.
10422 What is the value to you of the
long-term rights?
10423 MR. HARRIS: Well, this has been an
important debate within our organization and within the
industry.
10424 It seems to me -- and I think Perrin
should speak about this a bit when I'm done -- that in
the age that we are entering, we as a public
institution get most of our value, in fact all our
value, from the programs we put on the air and the
public pays for those programs. And our sense is we
have to find a mediation, a middle ground between us
and the independent producers.
10425 But obviously they feel that they
need those rights or their rights, their intellectual
capital, and we, as an institution, need to have some
library rights that we can re-purpose that material,
use it in different ways, rebroadcast it. And I think
that that's going to be part of the discussion we had
with independent producers in our trade discussions.
10426 But, as you know, the value of an
institution is it's content. And we have to wrestle
with a way that the content has as much value for the
taxpayer and for our constituency as possible. So we
are in the middle of that. I don't have a definitive
answer of where we stand on that, but we recognize that
we have to come to some terms on that issue. And that
value is very important to us, and it's important to
every other institution and company and public
broadcaster that we've studied and we have talked to.
10427 MR. BEATTY: Commissioner, I don't
have a great deal to add to what Slawko was saying.
10428 If you look at what's changed in
terms of structure of our business in a sense over the
course of the last few years, it's been that as we've
found our budgets reduced substantially, the Canadian
Television Fund has come in and has saved us and saved
our schedule with our ability to put original
programming on air.
10429 But a condition of the Fund, of
course, is that this can't be used for in-house
productions. So what you have seen is a major
transfer, if you look at the corporate structure of the
corporation of the value of intellectual property from
the corporation to the independent producer.
10430 The issue for us going forward that
we are discussing with the industry is that
increasingly, and it comes back to Commissioner
Colville's question about what is the constellation
approach they are talking about -- increasingly we want
to take an integrated approach toward looking at how we
develop programming and how we connect it with
audiences. Do we have a number of different platforms
that we can use to deliver programming to Canadian
audiences. And what we have to do is to work out with
the industry how we can insure at the time that we
commission programming that we are able to have
adequate showings on the main channel on any potential
specialty services we might have and also into new
media, as well, and take an integrated approach.
10431 They quite legitimately say, "Look,
we want to sell this to you for your showings,
possibly, in the main network or a package that would
include specialty services, but you will have to
negotiate each of these in turn". We are at a stage of
discussion -- discussing it with the industry now, we
are not unique in this, other broadcasters have to do
the same thing but it is a work in progress at this
point.
10432 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I wanted to get
into the CFTPA.
10433 You've been consulting with them, I
understand, and talking with them and they refer to the
BBC code. Are you in the process of drafting that or
sort of trying to arrange that?
10434 MR. BEATTY: We are and I will ask
colleagues to respond in that. But let me just say at
the outset, we see the independent producers as our
partners. They are not our opponents, they are our
partners. Without them we would be dead.
10435 We could not fill our schedules. We
couldn't fill it with the high-quality Canadian content
that's so important to us and we couldn't supply the
sort of regional diversity that we have on our
schedules. What we want to do is to ensure that we
work out terms on which both of us are happy. That we
have confidence in the relationship, they feel that
they are fairly treated by us and that we feel
confident of being able to get affordable high-quality
programming from them as well. It's never easy, but I
think we are making important process.
10436 And either Slawko or Harold or
Phyllis could fill you in on some of the discussions
we've been having.
10437 MR. REDEKOPP: Commissioner Cram, you
are quite correct. We've been speaking with the CFTPA
and in fact their models are both the BBC and the ABC,
Australia Broadcasting, in terms of trade agreements.
So we have those, we are going to be meeting with the
CFTPA in Banff and we hope to conclude our own terms of
trade by the end of the calendar year.
10438 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And the core
issue is this rights?
10439 MR. REDEKOPP: Well, that's part of
it and I will let Slawko speak to it, but it has to do
with the whole business of how you pitch programs and a
kind of transparency that goes along with the whole
business of pitching programs and designing programs
and accepting programs.
10440 MR. KLYMKIW: I will talk a little
about that and then Phyllis can continue.
10441 I think there is two issues or more,
but two major ones. One is an issue of transparency
that the way we make decisions are clear to everybody
and clear to the producers and they want to make sure
that there is a sense that all our judgements are in
the open and that they understand them. And we are
going to work toward finding something of that sort.
10442 We also want dispute mechanisms.
When we have differences of opinion, how does one sort
that out without taking forever and ever. Both of us
feel that we have to deal with that.
10443 But I think key is that the
independent producers, as Perrin has said and Phyllis
before, are seminal partners in making that schedule.
And so it is important for us and with partnerships,
you know, you are going to have days that they don't
work as well as others.
10444 So we are trying to find a way of
formalizing the relationship even more than it is and
finding a way of really being able to work through some
of the difficult issues that face us and the industry,
because we really -- the partnership is very, very key
to us. And that schedule has a lot to do with the
success of that partnership.
10445 MS PLATT: I think as I mentioned
yesterday, it is important to understand the context of
700 submissions a year. What has happened between us
and our partners is that CBC has done business with the
independent sector for some time, but there has been an
explosion, again, to some degree to do the CTF
developments, in the number of relationships. And so I
think both sides have found that we have needed to work
through new ways to manage that relationship.
10446 And we, internally, have tried to
become more and more client-based in terms of, for
example, being very accessible at Banff and having
seminars about how we operate and introducing our
people to new producers. We developed a brochure that
we send out to independents that has to do both with
how we function and how various departments operate.
10447 We are developing an intranet site
specifically for independent producers to keep them up
to date on everything we are doing. But the most
important development, I think, is this movement
towards terms of trade agreement, because I think for
both the independents and for the CBC, to have a very
clear template of how we can function best together
will make it clearer and much more easy for everyone to
know where they stand. So we are looking forward to
concluding that agreement with the CFTPA.
10448 COMMISSIONER CRAM: In the consults,
in terms of independent producers, we heard some issues
of the small producers being ignored by CBC. You in
fact I believe referred to that yesterday, you talked
about the small producers.
10449 I need some idea of how you define a
small producer.
10450 MS PLATT: I think it is interesting
to remember that most of the bigs were once smalls and
that a lot of companies that are now very large, and
public companies, began as quite small companies taking
their first work to the CBC. I think of "Atlantis". I
think of "Salter Street" as examples.
10451 Small can be, you know, anything from
a one-production shop, i.e. someone who is making one
documentary project to, in the arts and entertainment
area, a company that is just getting into the drama
side and has a commission for say six episodes of work
which we institute to some degree to allow growth on
the part of small companies so that they could take
their first steps in a sort of protected environment
with a lot of support from us.
10452 One of the things we found through
the developments in the CTF is that we can provide a
very important service to small companies on the
business side because the CTF rules and regulations are
fairly complex and a lot of the small companies don't
have the legal or business infrastructures to make it
easy for them to deal with the rules and regulations
and the changes in the rules and regulations. So we
have also tried to, for the small companies, provide
some basic understanding of how the system works as
they come into the system.
10453 So small is -- it's not a sort of
absolute or distinct definition, but I hope I have
given you an idea.
10454 COMMISSIONER CRAM: In terms of the
total independent producers -- I think you said there
were 200 or did you say 700?
10455 MS PLATT: We get 700 submissions of
proposals, but there are about 300 members currently I
believe of the CFTPA.
10456 COMMISSIONER CRAM: How many, in your
estimation, would be small?
10457 MS PLATT: I really can't answer
that. I would have to go back and try to come up with
a breakdown. I don't deal with the documentary side,
for example, and a lot of the small companies are on
the documentary side.
10458 MR. CULBERT: Could I just speak to
that?
10459 We have a very strong relationship
with various sizes of companies, but the documentaries
sometimes are driven by proposals, story access, so
often we do deal with maybe people who literally are a
one-person company. They have a great idea for a story
and we think they can carry it off.
10460 On the main channel we get that on
"Witness" and "Life & Times", but "Rough Cuts", which
is an unusual program, has specialized in dealing with
young, independent filmmakers, sometimes their very
first attempt at a documentary and in many ways that
has been the strength of that series.
10461 COMMISSIONER CRAM: In terms of small
versus large, do you strive for some proportionality
between the two at any time or is that something that
you don't consider at all?
10462 MS PLATT: We definitely want to work
with both large and small companies. The large
companies often have expertise that is very important
to us particularly in terms of the big budget
productions we work on. The small companies are
companies that we expect to grow into medium sized and
eventually larger companies. So we have very much a
system that encourages production with and the growth
of the smaller companies.
10463 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So in terms of --
and again I'm looking for numbers -- is there a ratio
that you look at when you do this?
10464 MS PLATT: No, there isn't a ratio.
I think again it is really more a question of where do
we see brilliance, where do we see quality, where do we
see great ideas, and great ideas come from both small
and large companies. So it can vary from year to year,
but to reassure you, there is definitely an emphasis on
working with the smaller and medium sized companies.
10465 COMMISSIONER CRAM: When we are
talking independent production, do I understand from
our discussion yesterday that there is very little
consideration given at the present time to acquiring
independent production on a regionally balanced basis?
10466 MS PLATT: No. There is a lot of
emphasis on trying to encourage production on a
regionally balanced basis, but it is not a quota
system.
10467 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
10468 You are off the hot seat, Ms Platt.
We are going to come to another topic, sports,
Mr. Clark, and everybody else.
10469 The 1994 decision, 94/437, we said it
may be time to reassess the amount and nature of sports
programming.
10470 I understand since then the sports
issue has been raised with the Standing Committee on
Heritage and they recommended that you, CBC, evaluate
costs and benefits of professional sports and report
back. Have you ever reported back?
10471 MR. REDEKOPP: Let me check with
Michael.
10472 MR. HARRIS: I will get the answer
for you. I don't know the answer.
10473 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Mr. Redekopp, you
said last Tuesday that 12 per cent of your programming,
exclusive of specials, games and olympics, is sports
and you agree with me that with specials, games and
olympics is 15 per cent?
10474 MR. REDEKOPP: I believe that's
correct. Let me just again check with Michael.
10475 Certainly the 12 per cent excludes
specials, and that is the overall number.
10476 Michael?
10477 MR. HARRIS: Yes.
10478 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes, it is.
10479 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes.
10480 But if I look at peak, it's 21 per
cent of peak in non-olympic years. Michael?
10481 MR. HARRIS: Yes.
10482 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And 25 per cent
of peak in olympic years.
10483 MR. HARRIS: Yes.
10484 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you,
Michael.
10485 Mr. Redekopp, you said on Tuesday
that 95 per cent of the sports you have is Canadian.
What is the basis of saying that?
10486 MR. REDEKOPP: I will let Alan speak
specifically because he deals with it. We were saying
virtually all of our sports is Canadian. We are
talking about the crew, the commentators, the
perspective, and yes while the games occur outside the
country we consider that Canadian content.
10487 Perhaps I could ask Alan to
elaborate.
10488 MR. CLARK: I think what has changed
over the period of the licence -- and we accept your
numbers -- while the balance is about right, what did
change was that we got rid of, under the banner of
"Home of the Champions", which we developed -- was to
say that the CBC should really be there to celebrate
major Canadian events that happen in this country. So
we jettisoned a lot of material, such as U.S. golf,
which was about 30 hours of simulcast programming on
CBC; we had a lot of motor sport on Sunday afternoons
and Saturday afternoons, we got rid of that; and we had
acquired U.S. programming which we got rid of.
10489 So if you are asking "How did you
maintain the balance", well, largely it came back
through about 80 hours of hockey, which was
double-header hockey, which was to serve the west and
to serve and expose our Canadian teams. That is where
we maintained the balance.
10490 But in terms of Canadian, I think it
is now about 98 per cent. Even that little percentage
that is left is what we call Canadianized, in other
words, we just don't take an ESPN show and throw it on
the air.
10491 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So what is that
2 per cent?
10492 MR. CLARK: Part of it is the late
night motor sport that you see, Indy car racing, and
the other is we carry a simulcast of the Breeder's Cup
for four and a half hours, but we send Brian Williams
and a small crew to that event and we put about
30 minutes of pure Canadian content into that four and
a half hours. So even though we call it a simulcast,
it is Canadian -- we think it has Canadian content.
10493 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So the basis for
the fact that it is Canadian is the production crews
and the journalists that go along, even if it is two
American baseball teams?
10494 MR. CLARK: Well, we know Toronto
lost last night, so on Saturday night we are going to
have two American teams, but you will still see Ron
McLean and hear Bob Cole and it's Canadian.
10495 COMMISSIONER CRAM: In your
application you say at paragraph 263 that the only
addition you made to sports since 1994, aside from the
games and the olympics, was the NHL double header. Do
you agree with that?
10496 MR. CLARK: There was, in our last
baseball contract, an increase in Blue Jay baseball.
But in terms of professional sport we actually, I would
argue, took more out than we put in because we lost
some contracts over the course of the licence period
such as world junior and European figure skating, which
was considered professional, and as part of our
commitment to start to reduce the professional, as
contracts come up I can tell you that we have not
renewed our contract with the Ontario Jockey Club so
there will be five horse races that will -- it used to
be seven, down to five, now there will be none.
10497 We looked at something like the
Montreal Grand Prix which TSN had bought the rights to.
It was two hours on a Sunday afternoon and, quite
frankly, we can replace that with about eight amateur
sports productions representing 16 hours. So we have
already started that process of getting rid of some of
our additional professional sport.
10498 COMMISSIONER CRAM: If I understand
it, you added the double-ender in 1995. So if I look
at the prime time numbers, before 1995-96 there was
18 per cent in prime time; then I go to 1996-97,
another non-olympic year, there is 21 per cent in prime
time. Would that be the double header, the additional
3 per cent, in terms of programming in prime time?
10499 MR. CLARK: I would say so, and the
other is as simple as whether a hockey series in the
playoffs goes seven goes or ends in four.
10500 COMMISSIONER CRAM: In terms of prime
time, in April and May, you are very prominent,
50-40 per cent, and all professional pretty well.
10501 MR. CLARK: That's NHL hockey.
10502 COMMISSIONER CRAM: At paragraph 264
of your application you talk about the 40-50 per cent
prime time being mitigated by people being able to
access Newsworld. Clearly, you agree that doesn't
apply to people who pick up CBC off air?
10503 MR. REDEKOPP: That's correct,
Commissioner Cram. In addition to putting "The
National" at 9:00 in the eastern time zone, on
Newsworld we have also tried to make arrangements with
cable companies. We haven't been entirely successful.
I think the Commission is aware of efforts that we are
making to place both the supper hour that may be
displaced in the west and "The National", if that is
possible, in those smaller areas so that in fact people
who aren't getting cable -- I guess if they can't get
cable, they can't get cable.
10504 COMMISSIONER CRAM: That's right,
they can't get it.
10505 MR. REDEKOPP: So I think that is a
problem, but we are certainly trying to address
displacement with a cable solution.
10506 MR. BEATTY: To assist, though,
Commissioner, one of the advantages now that DBS is
available, many of the people who didn't -- weren't
passed by cable before simply had no option. Suddenly,
with DBS, all homes not passed by cable, should people
choose to acquire it, have access to DBS and would have
access to Newsworld through that.
10507 MR. REDEKOPP: If I may, I think my
program director has just reminded me that in fact part
of the rationale for putting "The National" at 11:00 is
not only to get the audience that may not get it at
10:00, but if there is the hockey game, they can
certainly -- if the playoff goes into overtime can get
us at eleven o'clock.
10508 But let me say one other thing,
Commissioner Cram, and that is keeping all of these
things in mind, we have also and this is really a
tribute to Alan and his colleagues, we have been able
to negotiate with the NHL an earlier start time. So
that this year, for instance, the start time for the
NHL playoff games during the weekday period is at seven
o'clock which limits the amount of overage past "The
National". So I think we have reduced the number of
occasions in which we have had "The National" displaced
by a considerable amount.
10509 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I would like to
talk about the percentage of amateur to professional.
And by numbers that I believe were given to us by
yourselves, from 1990/1991 to 1998/1999, exclusive of
special events, amateur sports as a percentage of total
sports programming went from 28 per cent to 18 per
cent.
10510 Do you agree, Michael?
10511 MR. HARRIS: Yes.
10512 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And so --
10513 MR. HARRIS: I want to agree with
something.
--- Laughter / Rires
10514 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And do you agree
that most of this amateur sports is aired out of prime
time?
10515 MR. CLARK: Yes.
10516 COMMISSIONER CRAM: You had better
put the microphone on just so we have it on record.
10517 MR. CLARK: Sorry, yes. Not all but
yes, most of it is.
10518 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And according to
our logs and calculations, in the non-Olympic year of
1994/1995, 11.6 amateur sport was shown on prime time.
Do you agree, Michael? Not sure yet?
10519 MR. CLARK: I don't have that
breakdown, but I will look --
10520 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Subject to check.
10521 In 1995/1996, an Olympic year, 17.4
per cent of prime was amateur and that would probably
be Olympic?
10522 MR. CLARK: Yes.
10523 COMMISSIONER CRAM: In 1996/1997, a
non-Olympic year, zero per cent amateur in prime time?
10524 MR. CLARK: Correct.
10525 COMMISSIONER CRAM: 1997/1998,
Olympic, 18 per cent in prime time amateur?
10526 MR. CLARK: Yes.
10527 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Is that the
trend?
10528 MR. CLARK: Well, in some cases, and
I think, quite frankly, there is a sensitivity about
what sports gets, you know, into prime time. And I
have made the argument and, you know, as you would want
me to do to fight for my area, but I will give you an
example of something that is going into prime time this
September and that's Spruce Meadows show jumping. I
mean, Spruce Meadows is one of the unknown success
stories in this country and it is one of the -- voted
the second finest show jumping location in the world.
And Slawko has agreed that this is an event that has
a -- it is amateur, but it has a cross-over audience of
high female viewership and is suitable for prime time.
So we are going to try it this year.
10529 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And you mean the
1999 schedule?
10530 MR. CLARK: That will be in this
September. Well, it is only -- it is a Saturday and
Sunday night, or a Monday night, I'm sorry. So it is
two Monday nights does not put it into the schedule in
terms a streamed programming or regularly scheduled,
but as a one-time.
10531 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Can I have some
explanation?
10532 MR. KLYMKIW: The prime time schedule
starts the first week of October.
10533 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay. So you are
putting Spruce Meadows in in September twice for two
hours. Have I got that?
10534 MR. KLYMKIW: That's correct. The
other -- sorry. I should check with Michael.
10535 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Michael will --
I'm convinced.
10536 MR. CLARK: The other that we did
announce yesterday is our documentary series and it
will be 18 half hours to be scheduled in January
between 7:00 and 8:00, we haven't settled on the day or
whether it is 7:00 or 7:30. But that will be a prime
time exposure for Canadian storytelling sports.
10537 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Amateurs?
10538 MR. CLARK: Yes, the first series is
called, the working title is "The Olympians, Century of
Canadian Heroes". And they are all amateurs.
10539 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So do I take it
that some effort, at least, is being made to profile or
showcase amateur sports on prime time? It sounds like
it anyway.
10540 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes, correct.
10541 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Any hope that you
would ever get to, say, 10 per cent of prime time being
amateur in a non-Olympic year?
10542 MR. KLYMKIW: I don't think you would
want me to program that way.
10543 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I see.
10544 MR. KLYMKIW: You know, it really has
to be based on the creative content and the kind of
programs and I can assure you Mr. Clark's in my office
every week trying to get amateur sports, specifically
with sports in the prime time schedule. So I think
that that kind of creative tension about what gets on
there is important. I think it produces the best
schedule, the best Canadian schedule and the most
watchable schedule so that we get value from it.
10545 But obviously, you know, there is a
commitment both from sports and the network to try to
find more and more amateur sports that can get to, you
know, the biggest audience possible.
10546 COMMISSIONER CRAM: When I go to the
full day, you have now added, if I understand, you said
amateur sports was a Saturday afternoon?
10547 MR. CLARK: That's correct.
10548 COMMISSIONER CRAM: When I was
talking before, I was talking about 28 per cent in
1990/1991 as a proportion of the total sports
programming. Is that what you are trying to head back
to, some sort of a one-third, one-third, one-third
coverage, or sort of one-third amateur and then
two-thirds professional? Is that what you are trying
to head for?
10549 MR. CLARK: Well, what we -- when we
were successful in acquiring the Olympics, which is
clearly our biggest sports franchise in terms of what
it costs, it made no sense to simply run the Olympics
every two years and not expose and I hate to use the
word "support", but let's say showcase the athletes who
would be appearing in Sydney, Salt Lake, Athens and so
forth.
10550 And quite frankly, what happened, you
know, during the cuts was that amateur sport was easily
exposed. Those contracts are not sought after. They
were on, in many cases, one year contracts and when we
were confronted with existing professional sports
contracts, guess what got cut.
10551 And so what we have done, you know,
in the last two years and in particular in looking
ahead, was to say, as those professional sports
contracts come up and ones that we would argue are
marginal and I would put horse racing as one of them
and motorsport as another, we have said, "In terms of
the priorities of our company, they are not there
anymore, but amateur is" and so we have cut there.
10552 I think it is also important to say
that, you know, we haven't done this simply on the back
of cutting professional sport because we are increasing
by 60 hours, but we have also done it by -- just so you
know -- internal cutting. And the corporate sector has
stepped forward, the Royal Bank, for example, in
athletics. And in the documentary series, I will look
at sales, I don't think I am to tell you who it is, but
we have a corporate sponsor who has stepped forward to
support that project.
10553 So this is how we have accomplished
it, but the balance overall is being righted back in
terms of amateur, yes.
10554 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And what is the
balance? What is the goal of the balance?
10555 MR. CLARK: Well, you know, let's be
honest. When you look at hockey, it is almost 60 per
cent of our professional sport and I don't, you know, I
would certainly not argue that I want to see us get out
of hockey or that I want to see us not support the
Canadian Football League.
10556 So I think there's certainly
realities of how far we can go. Maybe I can have more
of the off-prime schedule to put amateur sport, I don't
know. But as I have said to you, we are trying to get
rid of those marginal professional sports or ones that
are simply -- could be available somewhere else that we
would move out of.
10557 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So there is no
goal, there's just a general direction, is that what
you are saying?
10558 MR. CLARK: Yes.
10559 COMMISSIONER CRAM: You say about
sports that there is -- on Tuesday, last Tuesday, you
are saying a small profit. In each professional sports
property, do you make a profit in each one?
10560 MR. REDEKOPP: Perhaps I could take
that.
10561 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Sure.
10562 MR. REDEKOPP: I think that what we
have said is over the last licence period that the
professional sports, all three properties cover their
rights, the commercial revenue covers the rights,
covers the production costs and makes a small
contribution to overhead. I could ask for specifics on
that from Michael, I guess. But in fact, that's the
situation.
10563 Let me just say one other thing if I
may, Commissioner Cram, then --
10564 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So each one then
at least covers its own costs?
10565 MR. REDEKOPP: That's my
understanding.
10566 MR. ATKINSON: I would have to look
at that. I can tell you that for total sports, total
professional sports, it provides a contribution to
overhead. But in given years one sport may be down
then up, depending on the performance of the sport in
that year. But we have made an undertaking that in
total, total professional sports provides a
contribution to overhead.
10567 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Has there been
any analysis of individuals --
10568 MR. ATKINSON: Yes, we have that
analysis.
10569 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And you could
provide that to us?
10570 MR. ATKINSON: I could, yes.
10571 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
10572 The Olympics. You say in your
calculations when you were making the bid that there
would be a small profit and in your application you go
through the process of how you developed what you would
bid for.
10573 These calculations and the concept
that you would make a profit from it, was that made
before or after what you journalists call the Olympic
Scandal?
10574 MR. REDEKOPP: Well, I will let
people who were there talk about the bidding process,
but certainly when we bid for the last round, that was
obviously before the so-called scandal erupted.
10575 So I don't know where you want me to
take that.
10576 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And have any
calculations been made now based on that?
10577 MR. REDEKOPP: Perhaps I should ask
Bill Atkinson to speak to that, but I believe our
projections, I think are still on track.
10578 MR. ATKINSON: Our sales are on
track. I mean, that's where the potential loss would
be. But our pacing on our Olympic Games for Sydney are
on track, so we still are projecting a profit.
10579 COMMISSIONER CRAM: CTV said to the
Heritage Standing Committee that there was $160 million
paid for the next five games. That comes down to $32
million each game. Surely TSN is paying some of that?
10580 MR. REDEKOPP: That's correct, they
are a part of the package.
10581 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Mr. Clark, you
said yesterday that amateur sports will increase by --
the written part said "approximately" but you said "at
least" 50 per cent over the next two years.
10582 MR. CLARK: I am more optimistic than
the scriptwriter.
10583 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes, you were. I
made very specific notes on that by the way.
10584 MR. CLARK: I hoped you would because
I intend to overachieve that target, which I hope you
won't hold against us in terms of the total balance of
sports.
10585 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So you mean that
the number of hours of amateur sports will increase by
50 per cent within the two years?
10586 MR. CLARK: Yes. It will be 45 per
cent this year and we have already started to do it.
We did water polo last weekend in Winnipeg and that is
part of the new hours that are being added. So it is
45 per cent and what we consider -- and I know your
years don't quite match our years, but let's just say,
in 12 months, 45 per cent in this year and a minimum of
55 per cent next year. That is why I say at least
50 per cent over the next two years.
10587 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Then, you talked
about the documentary in prime. What is going to be
taken out in order to fit in the documentary?
10588 MR. KLYMKIW: Well, we haven't made
that decision yet.
10589 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I see.
10590 MR. KLYMKIW: But the documentary
series Alan was talking about is directly linked, I
believe, to the Olympics. So we will find a spot for
it. Just to reinforce what he suggested, if we are
going to have banners across the country that we are
the Olympic network, we have to be there from the day
the Olympics end until the next one starts, and I think
that is the point of all this.
10591 So we are going to find time,
obviously in off prime, but we are going to find time
in prime time to be able to accentuate that particular,
very proud brand we have. But I don't have a date and
a schedule for you today.
10592 MR. REDEKOPP: But just to clear, we
did make the commitment, and Alan has also made the
commitment, that while we are going to increase by
50 per cent at least, which is about 60 hours of
amateur sports over the next two years, we are going to
also reduce professional sports by that amount over the
whole day to make sure that the total amount of sports
does not increase.
10593 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I was going to
ask you that, Mr. Redekopp, because you then spoke
about the amount of professional sports falling by
10 per cent when the amateur sport strategy is fully
implemented next season.
10594 MR. REDEKOPP: I think what I should
have said is: over the next two seasons. In other
words, I think that we are looking at two years to get
up to the 60 conditional hours, and during that period,
we are going to reduce by 10 per cent on the
professional sports front.
10595 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So that 10 per
cent of the hours presently broadcast in professional
sports will be reduced by 10 per cent?
10596 MR. REDEKOPP: That is correct.
10597 COMMISSIONER CRAM: What about prime
time?
10598 MR. REDEKOPP: I think we have
limited ourselves to sports throughout the day. If I
may, I think we are incredibly proud of our sports
programming here. I don't know if this is the place to
talk about it. If it isn't, then you will stop me.
10599 We look at sports -- and I come from
somebody who isn't necessarily from the sports field --
we look at it as good programming and we look at it as
good business, good programming in the sense that that
is what Canadians want.
10600 The last survey I looked at in terms
of what people were interested in, in television,
something like 28 per cent of viewers said they are
very interested in sports, and I am talking obviously
about anglophones. That is higher than the number that
are very interested in international news. That is not
to say we are going to skew our programming but there
is obviously a very strong interest in sports.
10601 Every national public broadcaster is
covering sports because it is a major part of cultural
life. I won't get anecdotal here because that would
take all morning, but across the country, we know the
kind of interest that exists for sports.
10602 The other thing I would say is we
have been in sports since the beginning of television.
Indeed, we have been there since "Hockey Night in
Canada" started on the radio. But on television, we
have been there with hockey, with the Grey Cup. It is
part of Canadian tradition. It is part of the CBC
tradition.
10603 Alan can go on at length to tell you
about the reputation of the quality of sports
programming they do around the globe. We have already
talked about the fact that it is all Canadian and
Slawko can talk about the fact that sports makes good
sense as an audience driver and in terms of a platform
for promotion. So on the programming front, we believe
it is a very important part of our offering.
10604 It is also paying for itself. That
is, the professional sports does, and when we lump them
together, they cover the cost of rights, they cover the
cost of productions. They put in place an
infrastructure that allows us to do amateur sports and
it frees up, if you like, the government appropriation
for underrepresented parts of our program offering.
10605 It is also good business. As I said,
it pays for itself. We have entered into partnership
with TSN and we will probably look at expanding that
over the next licence period.
10606 So I think those would be the major
arguments that we would put forward, that we are proud
to be in sports, that it makes good sense for the
schedule overall.
10607 COMMISSIONER CRAM: You are now on
the record, Mr. Redekopp.
10608 I want to now go to the performing
arts. Prior to 1994, the Commission required one
performance per month. In 94/437, the Commission said
it was not clear that you had actually done that and
talking about -- the intention was to allow Canadian
viewers to see full presentations by the major
performing arts. It was not the intention to include
excerpts of concerts.
10609 Could we take 5 minutes?
10610 THE CHAIRPERSON: With pleasure. We
will be back in 10 minutes.
--- Short recess at / Courte suspension à 1015
--- Upon resuming at / Reprise à 1030
10611 THE CHAIRPERSON: Now, we will pursue
with...
10612 MS BÉNARD: Yes, Madam Chair, we will
continue.
10613 LA PRÉSIDENTE: Merci.
10614 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you, Madam
Chair.
10615 So we were at performing arts and the
94/437 saying it was not the intention to include
excerpts of concerts or other performances during
magazine-type programs but the full presentations.
10616 I then find it curious, in your
application, that at paragraph 165, you say, within the
narrowest of definitions, you didn't meet the
expectation but you met the spirit of it. You really
agree that you didn't meet the expectations?
10617 MS PLATT: We did not meet the
expectation of complete or substantially complete
presentation of a Canadian performing arts company's
performance. I would suggest, however, that we
maintained a significant arts programming -- if I could
just sort of give you a bit of that history.
10618 When we decided to Canadianize and
were Canadianizing in the midst of budget cuts, the
emphasis on protecting and building the prime time
schedule was very intense, and since we were doing well
and pretty well in comedy already, the first
significant emphasis went to drama in order to build a
schedule that would have a lot of strength in it. We
believe we have done quite well in that area.
10619 We, at the same time, felt that we
needed to change our arts programming over time, that
there were issues. Frankly, because of not being able
to do everything at the same time in issues of
priorities, in issues of money and financing, that has
taken us longer than we would have liked.
10620 However, what we decided to do was
maintain the existing commitment and try to move toward
a change that would both address the more specific
definition of the Commission. We have gone toward a
series of specials we call "Something Special" now and
stood down the "Adrienne Clarkson" program. But
Adrienne's program was on the air for, I think, eight
seasons and really provided almost a weekly special on
the arts for Canadians, which was something, I think,
that not only no one else would do in Canada but
probably most parts of the world.
10621 So we were able to do that despite
everything, at the same time, trying to move towards
something new. What we have engaged in is a
consultation with key people in the arts industries.
We have done the first leg of that consultation and it
has included dance and theatre, music, and we are going
to broaden that out across the country.
10622 What we are hearing through this
consultation is that a lot of the key people involved
in the arts are not necessarily convinced that the full
performance model is the model that will be best for
their communities, that they are looking to find a way
to suit their expression to our medium, in a sense, so
that the Canadian public will attach itself more to the
arts and therefore, everyone would hope, be more
connected to both live performance in the theatres and
in the dance halls but also coming to arts on
television in larger and larger numbers.
10623 So we are hoping that that ongoing
consultation, which will involve setting up a permanent
arts council that will advise the CBC, will take us to
the place we need to get to to be most supportive of
the community as a whole.
10624 One of the other things that we are
looking at as part of that overall strategy is
something that has been successful in the Halifax area.
It is called "Arts Spots". They are small vignettes
that feature artists that can be dropped in throughout
the day's programming.
10625 It is something that BBC has done
very successfully and it is something that was
mentioned to us by one of the key people we talked to
as something that he felt could bring audiences who
aren't necessarily familiar with the performing arts to
those arts through drop-ins in everything from
"DaVinci" to "Hockey Night in Canada". So that is what
we have done and where we are hoping to move.
10626 MR. REDEKOPP: Commissioner Cram,
could I just also add to that, that in fact in the
final year of the licence term we did have 12 complete
performances.
10627 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes.
10628 MR. REDEKOPP: As you know, we have
committed to doubling that in the next two years.
10629 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I was going to
get to that. I wanted to though -- I am intrigued by
this leg one of the consultation and ending up at a
performing arts council. So this is sort of a plan you
have developed, that you are going to sort of proceed
with. When will the performing arts council sort of
come into existence?
10630 MS PLATT: As I said, we have
completed the first leg of the consultations. They are
primarily Toronto- and Montreal-based and we want to
move across the country to make sure we are
representative of the regions.
10631 COMMISSIONER CRAM: That is a good
idea.
10632 MS PLATT: So we believe that we can
complete that next leg by the end of the calendar year,
at which time we would like to draw from the
consultation a group of people that we feel is
representative of not only the regions but also the
various disciplines within the arts and it would be a
standing advisory council to the CBC.
10633 In addition to that, we are hoping to
talk to our colleagues in radio and in news and current
affairs. One of the things that was mentioned was that
arts groups would love to have a slightly higher
representation in the news and current affairs area.
10634 As you know, "Life and Times" has
done a number of specials on artists in this country.
That is being cheered. I think what we are trying to
do is take a coordinated approach to arts programming
across the board in order to strengthen it quite
significantly, we hope.
10635 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So this advisory
council, you would expect, would be set up by, say,
February or March of next year?
10636 MS PLATT: I think that is a
realistic expectation. I hope so.
10637 MR. CULBERT: Could I just mention,
on the news and current affairs front, one of the core
values we put into the new redesigned supper hours was
arts regular spots and a number of the programs have
daily sections for regional local arts and artists. It
has been, I think, one of the success stories of the
new supper hours.
10638 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I have one
concern and it is a small one, and I probably shouldn't
even raise it, but in terms of the three performances
that you had in 1994, you included 22 short films about
Glen Gould. That is a full performance?
10639 MS PLATT: Well, it wasn't a movie, a
feature film that looked at Glen Gould's life. It was
definitely substantially complete presentations of
pieces of Gould's work. So the entire feature was very
much performance art, it wasn't -- it was Gould
performing or people performing his work. It wasn't
kind of a story of his life.
10640 COMMISSIONER CRAM: For the feature
you say you will maintain your regular weekly arts
show. Can I sort of look at 1999, and that is CBC
Thursday, is it?
10641 MR. KLYMKIW: I think what you are
seeing here is kind of building the foundations or
laying the pipe for the future. We are going to have
arts performance programming on Thursdays in the prime
time, which is really pride of place in our schedule.
We are going to begin again to have it on Sunday
afternoons, and we are going to begin to put more of it
in on Sunday nights. So you are going to see much more
of that on the network.
10642 What we thought we should do is
foreshadow it through the architecture of the schedule.
We start building. We will let our audiences know that
we are heading in that direction. We will put quality
programming in there that we have now in either our
library or that we are producing or that we can
acquire, and over time I think there is going to be a
kind of richness that is going to come from those
streams.
10643 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So I thought your
weekly arts show was "On The Arts" and it is gone.
10644 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes. "On The Arts" was
a program we had from Newsworld and we don't have it
now.
10645 But obviously our "Magazine" program
has a lot of arts coverage. We are going to look at
that, to be honest with you. We have been talking,
again, inside for a long time about how we can have an
ongoing arts presence. But what we decided to do first
was create the Thursday night so that we could have
this pride of place to have performance, to have arts
programming that people could find on a regular basis.
That is the first step.
10646 We now are going to discuss between
our departments what we can do in terms of an ongoing
arts and entertainment program.
10647 What we did last year, simply to have
that in the schedule, was to take a second play of the
Newsworld program. We have decided not to do that this
year and we are putting our efforts and our financial
efforts into Thursday and Sundays, which is fairly
ambitious.
10648 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So the arts show
concept then would be covered in the news? Would that
be the idea, that it is now in what you were referring
to, Mr. Culbert?
10649 MR. CULBERT: No. I was referring to
the supper hours, and say we designed deliberately a
section in the supper hours.
10650 But I think what Slawko is referring
to, that the "Magazine" has always had a tradition of
covering arts stories, both when they are news and
sometimes profiles of artists, et cetera. In fact,
some of the other current affairs shows, you will find
arts sometimes on the "Fifth Estate", they specialize
sometimes in profiles of people in the artistic
community.
10651 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So what you are
saying is that is covered under Thursday night, the CBC
Thursday?
10652 MR. KLYMKIW: I think it will be.
10653 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay.
10654 MR. KLYMKIW: To be quite honest with
you, this was a conscious decision. We took "On The
Arts" off so that the money we put "On The Arts" we
could put towards Thursday nights and Sundays.
10655 We just can't do everything. But our
view was that we needed to have both the architecture
and the place -- pride of place to do performance on
CBC television, to continue to do the kinds of things
Adrienne I think has been doing, and our arts and
entertainment department has been doing for years and
years, but finding a regular place for it and build a
format that is going to tell our audiences "Look, this
is what the CBC does".
10656 So that is why we did that. But we
took "On The Arts" off because, frankly, we had to
redirect those dollars into that slot.
10657 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Is this new
weekly space going to be full performances or, as you
call it, performances as a key component?
10658 MS PLATT: There are full
performances within that strand, significant
performances. The total number will undoubtedly
include some of the substantially complete
presentations that are mentioned by the Commission.
10659 There will also be some full
performance that has no interruption, if I can put it
that way. Although "interruption" is probably not a
very good word, because one of the things that I think
the community has also felt is that putting the arts
into context for an audience is quite important and
that if you do a mix of some interviewing, for example,
and performance, that it gives the audience a better
sense of who the artist is and how he or she approaches
the discipline.
10660 MR. REDEKOPP: Can I give an example
of this, Commissioner Cram?
10661 I think when we recently put on Ben
Heppner, he obviously sang complete arias, he didn't
sing the whole part of Lowengren(ph). But I think that
does more, that is the profile that we did on Ben
Heppner, does more to bring people to opera, to the
world of opera, to Canadian singers than in fact just
putting on Lowengren, which is not to say that we won't
put on full performances.
10662 I think what we are wrestling with
here is: What is the appropriate place to build
audience for performance on television. That is really
the intent of the strategy that is going to double the
number of performances over the next two years.
10663 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Do you have any
proportion when you talk about full performances versus
a performance as a key component in this Thursday
program, any proportion between the two that you are
looking at?
10664 MS PLATT: I think because we are
still engaged in the consultation we are not yet to
conclusions as to what will work best for both
audiences and the artist community as a whole, so there
is no set proportion at this time.
10665 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Then we are
talking about the number of performances, and, as
Mr. Redekopp has said a couple of times, you are
doubling them. Are these going to be originals,
original performances, or second run, third run?
10666 MS PLATT: No, these would be
original performances.
10667 We are also, however, I think going
to look at performance from Saccate Radio-Canada, for
example, that we can play in a first run in English
Canada. We will be looking at partnerships with
Bravo!. We are already partnering with them on several
projects.
10668 Anything we can do to try to find the
levels of funding to bring original performance to
English Canadian audiences.
10669 COMMISSIONER CRAM: These
performances, the 24 in total, would, say, at least one
half of them be in prime time?
10670 MR. KLYMKIW: It's hard to tell, but
I think quite a few of them will be. For instance,
this year on the Thursday -- and we haven't quite
finished how we are going to schedule that -- but Pinky
Zuckerman at the NAC is going to be in there, "Bickers
Chancey", which is a two hour broadcast of the
performance "Notre-Dame de Paris" is going to be in
there, and then there is going to be "Frame by Frame"
which is a documentary about one of the great film
designers in this country. So it is going to be a mix
of those things, but there is going to be performance
in there.
10671 We also want people to see things
that have been on the network already, "Long Days
Journey Into The Night" and "Karen King" are two
terrific performances that were seen once.
10672 So it is an opportunity for us to go
back to stuff that we have had on the air, but again,
as I said, in a fragmented world people get to see once
or twice. We have much of that that we would like to
get in there. We simply want to make a big deal about
it every Thursday night and put the best material in we
can, which says CBC is in this business again.
10673 MR. BEATTY: It is also,
Commissioner, a useful form of counter programming on
Thursday night too, offering something that sets us out
from what everybody else is offering.
10674 COMMISSIONER CRAM: You talked about
it also today, Ms Platt, the issue of audience tastes
changing, or what is the word, appetite for arts or the
nature of their appetite for arts and this concept of
using television as a unique performance medium. The
basis for your saying that is with these groups that
you have -- leg one of your consultation. Is that why
this is your belief?
10675 MS PLATT: Yes, that has a great deal
to do with it, and that is everything from theatre to
dance to visual arts to music.
10676 Consistently we are hearing that the
people engaged in those disciplines believe that the
medium and the artistic message need to wed better
perhaps than they have in the past and that there are a
variety of ways of doing that, but that perhaps the
traditional approach of earlier years of taking cameras
and shooting a stage really creates quite a distancing
and doesn't attach the audience to the work in the same
way as some kind of other restaging or a different
approach to coverage of the arts.
10677 COMMISSIONER CRAM: It doesn't
necessarily mean less time in terms of coverage of the
arts, the issue is, I guess, the immediacy of the
medium?
10678 MS PLATT: That has a great deal to
do with it.
10679 I think that if you are, for example,
sitting in an audience and watching an opera in a hall,
there is a very different feeling than if you are not
surrounded by an audience and sitting in your living
room and watching a production that is essentially the
stage having been shot of a major production. There
isn't the intimacy that television as a medium has
mastered. I think that audiences who are used to that
intimacy find that problematic.
10680 THE CHAIRPERSON: To rest your
throat, maybe there are a few questions on areas that
you have already covered that other Commissioners could
pursue, if you allow.
10681 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: Thank you.
10682 I have had that cough. Let it go. I
think at another hearing I had to dash as well.
10683 On the arts programming, then, I
could continue a little bit on that just to get a sense
of your vision for arts programming.
10684 Commissioner Cram used the term
"coverage of the arts", which is one area, but I think,
Ms Platt, you were getting into another whole aspect of
this which are production values and the nature of how
to present performance, which is a whole other level,
perhaps we could say, of commitment to the presentation
of art and artists on our television screens.
10685 I'm wondering how that translates
when it comes to discussion of hours, when it comes to
a discussion of investment. When we see percentages of
hours on the screen or numbers of shows we don't get a
sense of what your vision is on arts programming to the
extent where, for example, you would be investing in
the creation of original works if, for example, it
isn't sufficient to present an opera with a camera but
rather to enter into the creation of that work. One
would expect then a slightly different vision, a larger
investment, a greater presence on the screen in the
final analysis for arts programming. Are you thinking
in those directions?
10686 I'm having trouble getting a sense of
the vision behind the numbers, the commitment to
coverage, but the commitment to the actual creativity
of arts programming and television as part of that
process.
10687 MS PLATT: If you are having trouble
catching the vision it is probably partly because, as I
said, we are still engaged in the process. We are
anxious to complete the process before coming up with a
firm vision, frankly, because we are finding through
these consultations that we are learning things that
have surprised us and delighted us.
10688 But if you look at the various
approaches to trying to bring arts to audiences in
television, you can look at something like the
restaging we did of "Nothing Sacred" for example, which
was taking a theatre play and restaging it in our
studios in a fashion that was far more intimate.
10689 You can look at something like the
art spots that I mentioned earlier where you have
30-second vignettes of an artist's work that are really
quite stunning. I don't know if you have had a chance
to see any of them, but they are -- the imagines that
they leave sort of burning in your brain are very
powerful and dropping those in on a regular basis I
think is feeding an audience with ideas about art and
with -- one would hope generating an affection for the
arts that may not be yet inherent in them.
10690 Art and television are not always an
easy mix or an easy fit, and finding the best way, I
think, to connect the art to the audience is something
that many broadcasters have worked on and struggled
with, and some more successfully than others.
10691 One of the reasons that we are
working with Bravo! and we would like to work more with
Bravo! is I think they are trying a number of different
and new ways of putting arts to air.
10692 So we are still in process and we
want to finish that consultation.
10693 But I think the idea behind it is how
to make arts -- the arts on television -- audience
friendly.
10694 I think Adrienne Clarkson has done a
tremendous amount of work in that area as well over the
years. I don't know how much of her program you have
had a chance to see, but really so many of her programs
were just extraordinary in terms of trying to make that
connection with "Le dortoir" and the "Ante Chamber" and
some wonderful complete works that were yet staged very
differently for the medium.
10695 So that is what we are trying to do,
we are trying to break through the distancing, and the
conventionality I guess, of some of what we have done
in the past to a much more connected approach to our
audiences.
10696 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: So that
would be the distinguishing characteristic of your
approach to arts programming? In other words, rather
than just straightforward presentation, you were
looking for something distinctive, something that is a
connection, familiarization with the arts. This is the
driver behind the choice/choices that you will be
making?
10697 MS PLATT: That's correct.
10698 MR. REDEKOPP: Could I give a
concrete example of what Adrienne Clarkson is working
on and I assume it is going to appear on the Sunday
night special or the Thursday night program.
10699 Alexina Louie has been commissioned
by the COC to write an opera and in fact Adrienne
Clarkson reminds us that television deals well with the
kind of process of the arts, so she is working on "The
Diary of an Opera in the Making", from the
commissioning to the casting into the performance.
That will be aired. We believe that will do a lot to
interest viewers in the whole business of opera, new
opera, and in the creative process.
10700 So that is already in the works. If
I may have a wish that I will pass on to our people
here after the hearing, I would like us to look at
things like the PBS series with Winton Marsallas where
he takes the Boston Symphony players and puts them with
a young jazz group and the connection between the two
types of music, that is the interpretive versus the
kind of preset, and the respect that they gain for each
other I think makes great television and it does a lot
to promote interest in what we call the classical arts.
10701 So I think there are a variety of
ways. I don't think any of us have a final blueprint.
I think what you are sensing from this table is a deep
commitment.
10702 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: I have
noticed on page 92 of your application, item 5, which
is actually a listing under "Drama", it says:
"Work closely with regional
stations to develop two new arts
and entertainment series in each
region over the course of the
next licence term." (As read)
10703 It is a fairly specific commitment
and it mentions arts and entertainment. In later
sections of the application we include something called
"light information", which I assume is not the weather
but is something else.
10704 What is the arts programming you are
envisioning happening in the regional stations?
10705 MR. REDEKOPP: Perhaps I can make a
start on this. We are going to announce at the next
panel, when we talk about regional stations, 1,000
hours of new regional programming over the licence
period. Basically, what we are saying is that in each
of nine regional areas we are going to have an
additional hour over the licence period devoted to the
non-news area, and a big chunk of that will be
arts/arts-related. We will also include light
information.
10706 So those are the two -- and there
will be two half hour series in prime time for a total
of an hour. That is what we will be talking about in
the next licence or in the next panel.
10707 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: I think
the balance of my questions are perhaps yet to be
addressed, so perhaps I could turn to my colleagues.
10708 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you.
10709 David.
10710 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I'm going to
get branded as being totally anti-sports I'm sure by
the media and the public as a result of this hearing.
10711 I hate to belabour this issue, but I
would like to get a little bit better understanding.
Let me preface my questions by just making this comment
and responding to Mr. Redekoff, and I guess,
Mr. Beatty, your comments earlier.
10712 The Commission understands that the
CBC does an excellent job in producing sports and has a
great reputation in its handling of professional and
indeed amateur sports. I don't think there has been a
suggestion that the CBC should get out of sports. It
is a question of balance I think, and that is all of
the questioning on it.
10713 Unfortunately, I think part of what
happens with some of our questioning is the media picks
up on this, whether it is sports or advertising or
whatever, and it gets characterized as either we are
championing the private sector or we want you totally
out of whatever area we are questioning on. That is
certainly not the case here with sports.
10714 MR. REDEKOPP: Commissioner Colville,
we sympathize entirely. We get misrepresented all the
time.
--- Laughter / Rires
10715 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Well, it is
something we are used to.
10716 MR. BEATTY: And what is worse, we
are the media.
10717 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Yes. Yes.
10718 I guess if I can pick up on a couple
of comments that I heard hear this morning.
10719 Mr. Klymkiw, you mentioned in your
comments, and I think I got the quote just about right:
"Mr. Clark is in my office every
week looking for more sports,
and in particular amateur sports
in prime time."
10720 I guess what we are trying to
understand is how you arrive at that balance. If
Mr. Clark is in and Ms Platt is in and others are in,
how do you arrive at -- what is the appropriate balance
to deal with here in terms of putting, say,
professional sports on as opposed to arts programming?
10721 I guess historically the Commission
had a bit of a concern that the balance seemed to be
shifting more towards sports, and in particular
professional sports, and in particular in prime time.
I guess we are trying to get a better sense of how
those decisions are made and how one might approach
this in terms of shifting that balance back a bit.
10722 So let me ask a general question
first. I asked this when we were starting this process
a week ago.
10723 It would appear that there is quite a
different philosophy between the English network and
the French network when it comes to dealing with this
issue. The French network in particular, it would
appear, not just because of the suggestion from the
Commission in the last licence renewal but because of
its own look at the programming and the audience, made
a conscious decision to say, "We are going to back off.
We are still going to do it. We do a good job in it,
but we are going to play down this area because we
think there are other areas that are perhaps more
important."
10724 I don't get a sense of where you draw
this distinction between the French network and the
English network in arriving at this balance between
saying, "Okay. In fact, we are doing more professional
sports or have over the past licence term at least."
10725 MR. BEATTY: Perhaps I could,
Commissioner, start, just before asking colleagues to
comment because you raise a corporate issue of what is
the balance between French and English.
10726 The approach we have taken is that
that is spelled out in the Act that says in doing our
programming we should recognize the fact that there are
different needs or different interests in the
francophone and the anglophone markets. In both cases,
what we try to do is to present a balanced schedule,
one which allows us to meet various elements of our
mandate, the various items that are enumerated in the
Act as being important for the corporation to be
dealing with, but setting it in the context of the
market itself: What is the interest of the people to
whom we are trying to speak?
10727 The simple fact is, what we find in
the francophone market is that there is a lower degree
of interest in seeing sports on our French television
than there is in the anglophone market, so that --
10728 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: And how did
you arrive at that conclusion?
10729 MR. BEATTY: Just simply from
experience in dealing with the market. Our programmers
find that what really drives the audiences on the
French side tends to be the Canadian dramas that we
have on on the French side.
10730 You tend to find that on the English
side that sports is something that really connects with
audiences.
10731 Then within that what we would do is
try to strike a balance to ensure that it is indeed a
balanced schedule, that there is a broad variety of
programming that we have on, and it's a
work-in-progress. There is no arbitrary figure that
one sets that X-percentage is and should be for all
time either in French or in English, the amount of
airtime they devote to sports or to drama or a comedy
or to any other genre.
10732 In looking at it on the English side,
and I will ask my colleagues to comment momentarily,
what you are seeing taking place is precisely what you
were talking about earlier. I fully accept the point
that you make that you are not just simply saying sweep
away all sports, get out of it. We do it well. We are
proud of it. We believe it is an important part of our
mandate and we believe it is something that audiences
are looking for, but there is always this question of
balance.
10733 One of the things that you are seeing
happening now is a rebalancing with the amount of
professional sports coming down and with the amount of
amateur sports going up.
10734 On a regular basis, Slawko was
charged with the responsibility of looking beyond that
and saying, okay, between genres, between news and
current affairs, between drama, sports, how do you
strike this balance, keeping in mind what else is out
there in terms of offerings to the public, the mandates
spelled out under the Act, and expectations that the
CRTC may have, our sense as to what our mandate and the
appropriate mix this season would be in our schedule.
Slawko could certainly give you I think a very
straightforward sense as a programmer of how difficult
that sort of a choice is.
10735 MR. REDEKOPP: Just before he gets to
the balance, let me just give you some figures from CBC
Audience Research, and that speaks to exactly your
question about interest in sports and viewing in
sports.
10736 Our audience research people tell us
that, as I said before, about 28 per cent of
anglophones say they are very interested in sports,
which is higher than the number that are interested in
international news, and that is considerably higher
than the same number of francophones who are very
interested in sports. So that is on the interest side.
10737 On the viewing side, viewing to
sports on all English television is about twice what
viewing to sports on all French television stations is
in this country.
10738 So both in terms of interest and
actually in terms of behaviour there is a marked
difference in terms of an appetite for sports on
television.
10739 MR. BEATTY: Commissioner, even
within sports what you will find is the difference
between the markets in terms of the interest that there
is in specific sports. I think you will find on the
French side that there is a stronger interest in motor
sports at this point than there is on the English side,
not surprisingly because of the Villeneuve family. So
what you want to do is to program to the interests of
your audience there, even within the whole broad genre
of sports.
10740 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: But
notwithstanding that, you have decided to, more or
less, get out of motor sports. I happen to be
interested in motor sports myself --
--- Laughter / Rires
10741 MR. REDEKOPP: I will get it back.
We can get it back if you like.
10742 MR. BEATTY: We are reconsidering
that decision right at this moment.
--- Laughter / Rires
10743 MR. KLYMKIW: I am going to walk you
through specifically why we made the three decisions
about sports, but before I do that, you all know in the
last several years we made some tough decisions and we
are all very proud of them.
10744 During cuts we decided we needed to
do several things. One is to consolidate our
information service so that our strong information
service continued; that we create and put on air strong
Canadian drama, more strong Canadian drama, which we
have; that we maintain our movies and mini series,
which I think are a credible part of our legacy; and we
had to do that within -- and then we wanted to make
sure that that reflected, over the years, that schedule
so that schedule would go out there and win the hearts
and minds of Canadians so more Canadians would watch
Canadian television.
10745 That is what we did. That was our
approach. We will see if you agree with it or not, but
that was our approach and we agree with it.
10746 I think we have gotten to a point now
where we have stabilized the share -- oh, by the way,
to do that -- I guess it is a big point -- we needed to
maintain a resource base. When we ran hockey and it
fills air time and it pays for itself, and we run
baseball, run CFL, it helps us do those other things,
and we made that decision.
10747 We have gotten to the point now where
we recognize we have a variety of things we need to do,
and you know them all: youth, feature films, regions,
arts performance. We recognize there is limited shelf
space and we recognize that we have to come to certain
terms about that. I guess that is our job, to come to
that balance, create a balanced schedule to do that,
and I think Alan has talked about the beginning of
certain reductions we are going to make to do that.
10748 In the case of the sports properties,
I will tell you why we decided to do baseball. We
decided to do baseball because what we found in the
summer, as the world fragmented and fragmented, was
that if you didn't have fresh material in the
summertime people would not watch you. We also
recognized that it would pay for itself. So instead of
investing a lot of money in the summertime, we went to
baseball so that we could put most of our emphasis in
the fall and in the spring. We had that debate for six
months.
10749 We did CFL because there was
enormous, again, pressure and debate in our own
organization about: Should we support the CFL; should
that particular institution be on our network? We came
to the conclusion it should.
10750 We decided to do double-header hockey
because it's Saturday night at 10:00, it, as Alan I
think argued earlier, spoke to audience and needs in
western Canada. We have a lot of hockey fans, younger
hockey fans.
10751 So we did all of that. We did all of
that so that we could do the other things that we have
talked to you about. That is how we came to those
decisions.
10752 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: On the
double-header hockey, if your prime concern was serving
a western audience, why would you use up all of the
evening for hockey for the entire country with a
double-header rather than run a game in the east and
then a separate game for the west, instead of using up
the whole --
10753 MR. KLYMKIW: It goes back to my
point again that by running double-header hockey, you
know, it was a smart business and it was smart
programming, and it allowed us not to have to put more
programming on Saturday night. It actually created
programming that worked on Saturday night to allow us
to do the Sunday nights that have been so successful,
to allow us to "Da Vinci's Inquest", to allow us to
keep the strongest information and news organization
strong and vibrant. I mean, those are the trade offs
and that is why we made those decisions.
10754 I must say, to go ahead we recognize
we have to recalibrate again, a word I'm sure you are
going to hear a few more times today. We recognize
that as the world changes around us, as services change
around us, as demands change around us, we have to, as
a fluid organization, continually take those into
consideration and create the balance that makes sense.
That is the process we are in the midst of doing.
10755 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: During a
discussion with Commissioner Cram, you indicated
that -- I'm sorry, I missed your name, the gentleman
behind Mr. Klymkiw.
10756 MR. ATKINSON: Atkinson.
10757 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Atkinson --
that some of these sports, on the whole, makes a
profit, which implies to me at least that some doesn't,
some of the professional sports doesn't. I guess you
have agreed that you would file that information with
the Commission in terms of the analysis of that
information.
10758 Given that, that some of the sports
doesn't make money, then the profitable sports is
actually subsidizing some of the losing sports, which
actually, then, if you weren't having losing sports,
you would have even more profit on the remaining sports
which could be supporting some of this other activity
here.
10759 What sort of analysis do you bring to
that sort of thing in deciding why we would continue to
carry some of the sports which in fact isn't making
money?
10760 MR. BEATTY: If I might start with
that, Commissioner, and then my colleagues might want
to comment.
10761 Taken as a whole, sports is our
single least-expensive programming that we put on air.
Whether we are dealing with news, with arts programming
certainly, drama and so on, all of that draws very
heavily on the parliamentary appropriation.
10762 I guess what we are saying is that if
you look at the time on the schedule that is allocated
to professional sports, we do not have to draw upon the
parliamentary appropriation for that. If we were to
drop any sports property that isn't turning a profit in
and of itself, we would have to replace that.
10763 We could either replace it with
profitable sports activity, in which case the net
profit would go up if such properties were available,
or we could replace it with other programming which
draws upon the parliamentary appropriation and
generates less revenue than the sports it would be
replacing.
10764 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: But didn't we
make that statement, Mr. Beatty?
10765 MR. BEATTY: I'm sorry.
10766 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: You were
surprised about how when you dropped the American
programming and replaced it with Canadian programming,
and I take it that was not all just replaced with
sports, that in fact the audiences stayed there and the
advertising revenue came along with them.
10767 I don't understand why we wouldn't
take this similar approach and say: Well, some of the
sports are losing money. Let's have the confidence
that we could drop the losing sports and replace them
with some of the programming that we have here and
hopefully get the same kind of surprise that we had
when we dropped the American programming.
10768 MR. BEATTY: First of all, as it
relates to the Canadianization of the schedule, there
was indeed some reduction of revenues as a result of
Canadianization, but the reduction was not as great as
we anticipated it was going to be when we Canadianized
and we were very pleased with that. It was a risk we
were prepared to take in the public interest because we
felt it was appropriate to do so.
10769 Further, as we continue to re-examine
sports properties and look at the balance within the
schedule on a measured and reasoned basis we will be
taking that sort of a risk. We do know to date though
precisely what revenues we get both from sports
properties and from non-sports properties. We
certainly do have a pretty good idea.
10770 If you were to replace professional
sports properties, which may be close to break even but
may not have actually made it there, with normal drama
or news and current affairs programming, we can project
fairly easily what the impact would be on our revenues
and we will certainly share any figures with you that
we can on that.
10771 What I don't want to leave you with,
Commissioner, is the impression that we have a fixed
and inflexible view toward the role of sports on our
schedules. It is a balance which we are constantly
adjusting. It is an area where we are prepared to and
where we do take risks. It is an area where we are
constantly saying to ourselves: In terms of our
mandate, what is the appropriate balance to try to
strike?
10772 As Slawko was trying to indicate,
what we are trying to do, looking first to our mandate,
looking at the desires of our audiences within the
resources available to us, is to build the strongest,
most varied, most mandate-driven television schedule
possible, one that is proudly, assertively Canadian in
everything that we do and one which takes risks that
nobody else will take and one that adds value to the
whole of the system.
10773 We see ourselves -- and it's an issue
which inevitably will be raised, either at this session
or in a different one -- we see ourselves as adding
value to the system, often by taking risks and doing
things that nobody else will do and we are quite
prepared certainly to continue to do that.
10774 We don't consider -- we are proud of
our sports. We believe it adds enormously to our
schedule, but it is not a case that what we do is cast
in stone and that we will never make changes to the
balance that is there. What Mr. Redekopp is signalling
is that this is an issue that is constantly under
review.
10775 I would make just one other broad
comment, if I could, and I apologize for going on so
long. Let me pull back and talk about the English
network as a whole from my corporate perspective: that
is that you are seeing a network in transition in an
environment that is exceptionally fast-changing.
10776 We have taken the first step, one we
are very proud of, and that is to Canadianize English
Television. We are the only broadcaster in Canada that
has made that commitment to Canadianization and we are
proud of it, but Canadianization in and of itself is
not enough. It is only the first step.
10777 Within that, we intend to further
sharpen the differences between us and other
broadcasters to ensure that there is a distinctive
public broadcasting personality that English Television
offers. It makes good sense from the point of view of
our mandate because that is why we exist: to add
something of value to the system.
10778 But I believe as well, Commissioner,
that it makes good business sense as well. On the
first day, you and I had a discussion about
constellations. We had a discussion about new media.
We may disagree about the speed or even whether
eventually we will be finding streaming video of
broadcasting quality, causing an explosion of new
choices out there.
10779 I mentioned to you the first day the
study that was done by News Corp that was printed in
"Business Week" a year ago that extrapolated up to 2010
and said that, at that point, Americans would have
1,000 different choices for any minute they were
watching TV.
10780 Let's assume for a second that Rupert
Murdoch is a very stupid businessman and he got it
wrong, that he was 70 per cent wrong, and that by 2010,
there are only 300 choices out there instead of 1,000
for any minute of programming that broadcasters are
doing.
10781 All I know is that we will never know
less competition than we do today and that as a
business person, it makes sense to me that the way in
which you can stand out in that is by offering
something that is unique and that makes you stand out
from the rest of the pack. If everybody else is doing
reruns of "Mad About You", they are going to split that
market that is interested in that.
10782 Where the public broadcaster can
offer something is with an all-Canadian schedule and
one that increasingly sharpens its personality and
stands out from the rest of the pack, even with
Canadian programming. That is the direction in which
Mr. Redekopp is taking the English network. It won't
happen overnight. It is a work-in-progress.
10783 We will make mistakes, but we are
going to move inexorably in the direction of offering a
proudly Canadian schedule that stands out from what
anybody else is offering in the system and all of the
elements within our schedule are elements that are
building blocks really to allow us to do that.
10784 I'm sorry -- I apologize for going on
with this long narration but I think it is important
perhaps just to pull back and say: Where are you
taking the network? What will it look like five or 10
years from now and how will you be able to offer
something that is unique to the system when there is
all that explosion of choices taking place?
10785 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: That is quite
all right. I would agree with you and I would even go
perhaps a little farther and suggest that even if there
are no more channels than there are today, but that I
could use the Internet to access even the existing
channels and I can go right to ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, and
get my American programming, then if I am going to be a
successful Canadian broadcaster, whether I am a public
one or a private one, I had better figure out a way to
differentiate myself because I won't be able to depend
on that American programming even if the total number
of offerings is static.
10786 MR. BEATTY: Exactly.
10787 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Let's pick up
on your last point then: What are we going to look
like in the next five to 10 years, let's say seven
years, being the maximum licence term by law we are
allowed to award and let's go back to sports.
10788 In Mr. Redekopp's comments in your
opening of this English network session at page 14 of
your written text -- and I will just read it here:
"We are committed, at a minimum,
to not increase the overall
proportion of sports on our
schedule in the coming licence
term. We will carefully review
each of our major professional
sports contracts as they come up
for renewal in the next several
years. We will seek reductions,
where appropriate, in the total
amount of air time we devote to
professional sport --
particularly during prime time.
In fact, that process has
already begun."
10789 So if we are looking forward not five
to 10 years, I guess it is five to 10, but let's say
seven, and given that direction -- and I am picking up
and stress the words you used here "minimum" -- so I
take it that we are looking at something beyond the
minimum so that we are looking at "the minimum was not
to increase". So if I go beyond that, that implies to
me at least a decrease.
10790 We talked about this review in
contracts that will come up for review during the
licence term.
"We will... review each... major
professional... contracts as
they come up for renewal in the
next several years. We will
seek reductions, where
appropriate, in the total amount
of air time we devote to
professional sport, particularly
during prime time."
10791 So given those statements and the
direction you are looking at in terms of what the
Corporation would want to move to, what can we expect
over the next licence term then? If we were sitting
here for your next licence renewal and reviewing what
happened over the last, I guess it would be probably
six years, what would we see? What would we be looking
at? What would we be reviewing in terms of what CBC
did in professional sports?
10792 MR. REDEKOPP: Commissioner Colville,
I don't think we can be any more specific than what I
said in my opening statement, simply because we don't
know what the assumptions will be, what other
expectations the Commission may have for us.
10793 I would say that following the
Tuesday appearance before the Commission, we have done
some preliminary work and I just want to say that when
you look at replacing high-audience, high-revenue
professional sports with similar programming that will
attract similar audiences, as I say, our preliminary
analysis shows a net cost to us.
10794 So there is obviously more work that
has to be done. We are obviously anxious to know
exactly what the full list of expectations might be and
I think we would have to come back to the Commission at
that point.
10795 We are trying to forecast as best as
we can, in an uncertain world, in a fragmenting world,
where the funding isn't secure, where we are not sure
what happens to government appropriation. When we are
looking increasingly at commercial revenue as a
relatively stable source of funding, I think we want to
make all of those calculations carefully and come back
to the Commission and say: We have a better idea of
what we are talking about in terms of appropriate
reduction.
10796 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: But are
you -- let's just assume the Commission wasn't here.
You were just operating this Corporation under the
mandate of the Broadcasting Act that you have. I take
it from these words that these words weren't here just
to satisfy us, that you have some plans to deal with
this issue on your own account.
10797 I take it that this means that you
have some plan to reduce the dependence on professional
sports during prime time over this next period of seven
years?
10798 MR. REDEKOPP: I am going to go to
the word that Slawko used and that is "recalibration".
I think when we talk about what we are going to do for
underrepresented categories, obviously that is part of
the recalibration. There are only so many hours in
prime. That is a consideration. The whole issue of
rights is going to come up when the contracts come due.
10799 So we are committed to a balanced
service that has wide interest programming, that
attracts significant numbers to the schedule. Beyond
that, at this point in time, it is very difficult to be
more precise. Perhaps I can ask someone else on the
panel to speak to it, but that is the situation we are
at, at the moment.
10800 These are all the variables that we
are going to have to look at. We are going to have to
calculate revenue implications. We are going to have
to make sure that the programming that we replace in
any kind of recalibration also includes significant
audiences.
10801 I think that what we want to avoid,
in any event, is to be marginalized and to be, as you
call it, a picturesque side road. So that is the
exercise that we are going to go through in the next
week or so.
10802 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I don't
understand though -- I mean, I take your comments -- I
don't understand how you think we should deal with this
in terms of issuing a licence then for the next seven
years when it comes to dealing with these kinds of
issues and where the Corporation is going to go and how
we are expected to treat this whole business, whether
it is performing arts or sports or whatever.
10803 MR. REDEKOPP: I think in each case,
Commissioner Colville, we have tried to put down what
we call minimum expectations, in other words, taking
into account a sort of uncertain future. We are saying
in every area what the minimum will be.
10804 We have said that about professional
sports. We have said that about the performing arts.
We are saying that about youth and children and I think
that would be the most prudent way to proceed, which is
to say: Given a range of assumptions that may be
conservative, here is a minimum and you know the CBC's
record.
10805 English Television's record is always
to strive to exceed beyond those minimums but there is
a minimum that we will commit to. That is really, I
think, our approach throughout this whole hearing.
10806 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: You said that
you might have a better handle on this, whether it is
sports or some of this other programming, in another
couple of years, and then you might want to come back
to the Commission. How would you propose to deal with
that sort of thing?
10807 MR. REDEKOPP: Well, we would always
come back to the Commission if we are talking about a
significant change in our licence. So if it were
significant, we would certainly come to the Commission.
We are hoping that we can come to some kind of an
agreement that respects minimums and allows us to
overachieve wherever possible so we won't have to cut
back in a couple of years. But if that need arose, we
would definitely come back to the Commission.
10808 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Of course, I
guess overachieving in some areas may mean
underachieving in others to get that balance, right?
10809 I think we will leave it at that for
now.
10810 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you.
10811 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Thank you
very much.
10812 THE CHAIRPERSON: Some other
commissioners have additional questions, but I think we
will complete Commissioner Cram. I want to mention for
the public record that there is -- comment on dit un
haut-parleur?
10813 MS BÉNARD: An audio feed in the
staff room.
10814 THE CHAIRPERSON: Audio feed in the
room where Commissioner Cram went to calm her coughing.
10815 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I did hear
Commissioner Pennefather asking about cultural issues
and Commissioner Colville.
10816 The other part -- and I am back at
performances -- the other reason you talked in your
application about why you haven't gone for major
performances, you said, one, the whole issue of the
performance medium and the audience taste changing; and
the second, the fact that there are other channels that
offer it.
10817 So therefore, I take from that that
it is not as necessary to offer performing arts. Is
that what I should take from that?
10818 MS PLATT: Certainly not that it is
not as necessary to offer performing arts. I think
what you are seeing us put on the record is a
significantly increased commitment to the performing
arts. The real question is how best to present
performing arts to the public so that there is that
strong connection between audiences and the artists.
10819 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I take it that
you are going to sort of essentially, hopefully, come
up with a strategy once your council or your advisory
group has been established?
10820 MS PLATT: That's correct. We do
want to complete the consultations before coming up
with a firm strategy because we feel that we have not
heard, particularly from the regions, and we also want
to have the larger discussion with some of our other
potential partners in this enterprise.
10821 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Mr. Redekopp --
and I do hate to go back to the issue of sports. You
talked about it as a major part of our cultural life.
Isn't performing arts just as major?
10822 MR. REDEKOPP: Absolutely. And you
don't have to convince me of that.
10823 But I will tell you, when I come out
of the broadcasting centre any day and see streams of
traffic going to the Air Canada Centre, or streams of
traffic going to the Dome, I don't see that same stream
going to the Hummingbird Centre, and I go there
regularly.
10824 I think what we are trying to do is
provide a place in our schedule where all Canadians,
including the ones who are streaming past the
broadcasting centre, can come and see programming.
10825 I think what we are saying in the
performing arts area is that we would like to optimize
audiences for full scale performances. We are not
backing away from those. But I think what we are also
saying increasingly is we have to be concerned about
what makes good television.
10826 Adrienne Clarkson in her advice to us
is what may be more interesting and more useful is to
do a diary of a creation of an opera rather than put
the whole thing on without any kind of context. So I
think what we are looking at is a combination of those
kinds of techniques.
10827 But, yes, we do believe that arts is
an important part of our program offering. You are
seeing that in our schedule, and you are going to see
that throughout the schedule so that it becomes an
actual part of, say, "Current Affairs", an actual part
of "Life and Times" so that it isn't isolated for once
a week. I think that is what we really are aiming to
do in our arts strategy.
10828 MS PLATT: Could I just add that
building on our experience with children through the
Children's Outreach Program, we also want a component
of outreach involved in our arts strategy.
10829 One of the things we have been
hearing from our consultations is that arts groups feel
we should be doing far more talent scouting, and we are
also looking at the possibility of providing some
sponsorship support for the arts in order to help build
and encourage the base.
10830 COMMISSIONER CRAM: When you
referred, Mr. Redekopp, to a survey saying 28 per cent
of the individuals surveyed wanted sports, how many
wanted arts?
10831 MR. REDEKOPP: I could ask our
research people and Christine could speak to that.
10832 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Jennifer?
10833 MR. REDEKOPP: No, it's Christine
this time. Christine Wilson.
10834 MS WILSON: The question was asked
classical arts, which is ballet, classical music, and I
believe the number is something like 13 were very
interested.
10835 COMMISSIONER CRAM: The equivalent
one to the sports, the 28 per cent very interested?
10836 MS WILSON: Yes, that is exactly
correct.
10837 I'm sorry. I found the page, and --
I'm sorry, that was the total of interested and very
interested.
10838 Very interested is 6.6 per cent.
10839 MR. KLYMKIW: Could I add something
to that?
10840 I think when Phyllis was talking
about finding the right medium between arts and
television and Harold was talking about getting folks
to the network. Our primary goal, it seems to me, is
really to be a place that engages our audiences and
engages communities into art. That is what we have to
do, and I think that is what distinguishes us.
10841 There is no point in us running a lot
of these programs and having tiny audiences. We don't
want to do that. We would like to get more and more
people to find interest.
10842 I mean, the challenge for us is to
find a way of producing and creating those shows and
those formats so more and more Canadians use the CBC to
come to us. I think that that is one of the most
salient goals we have in arts performance programming,
which we are completely behind and completely want to
do, but we want to get more -- every community to buy
more and more into that. That is why we have done
Thursday, that is why we are doing Sunday, that is why
we are probably going to expand Thursday in a year or
two, it is because we want to find pride of place in
the schedule so those kinds of shows get there and
attract more and more Canadians.
10843 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Michael gave me
this distribution of broadcast time and program types.
In the meantime, in 1997-1998, 1996-1997, 1995-1996,
1994-1995 I think this category would be in "Others",
would it, Michael, at 1 per cent in prime time,
performing arts?
10844 MS WILSON: No. I think that it
would probably be categorized under either "Variety" or
"Drama", depending on -- "Others" is basically
instructional programming.
10845 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So there is no
way, then, of knowing where performing arts would have
been in a --
10846 MS WILSON: Principally I think it
would have been under "Variety", but there could be,
for example, situations where it was like a dramatic --
a play, for example, which might end up in the "Drama"
category, whereas perhaps a ballet would end up in
"Variety" because of the musical component.
10847 COMMISSIONER CRAM: It is your
intention, clearly, to increase from what it is now,
increase that substantially in prime time?
10848 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes.
10849 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes.
10850 Can we get some sort of quantifiable
number for that?
10851 MR. KLYMKIW: No.
--- Laughter / Rires
10852 COMMISSIONER CRAM: We can't
quantify --
10853 MR. KLYMKIW: We promised about the
performance, I just don't want to repeat all of that.
10854 You know, we are going to try to work
both those streams out. We are going to try to produce
more.
10855 A lot of it really is driven by the
resources we have and where we place them. It goes
back to Commissioner Colville's issue of balance.
Where do we -- you know, the pie is just one size
actually, although -- I was going to say a shrinking
one, but I won't talk about that. Let's assume it is
the same size.
10856 We simply have to move resources and
money and priorities around to do that, and we are
going to do that. So we have already committed, it
seems to me, fairly directly to how many more
performances we are going to have on the CBC.
10857 I think we will probably do more than
that, because we have already committed the air time,
the structural part of the schedule to it. So our
commitment is very brassy and bold and I assure you we
are going to work very hard at getting more and more
programs into that.
10858 MR. REDEKOPP: Could I just make a
comment, Commissioner?
10859 I recently had to go to an arts
summit event, and I think the people in the arts who
are dealing with symphonies and ballets and opera
companies, and so on, they are all wresting with the
same thing we are.
10860 I think the initiative that Phyllis
is talking about will help us get the appropriate
treatment of performance on television. I think that
all of them would like to work with us, so we don't
have an absolute grouping for the next seven years, but
I can tell you that the commitment is there and the
commitment to work with this arts council is there so
that we do get the appropriate treatment, which will
include full performances, but it will also include the
kinds of profiles we have done with Ben Heppner, and so
on. I think they would argue that that is a great way
to develop interest in the form of opera.
10861 MR. KLYMKIW: Just to point out, we
have been doing quite a bit of this. It always sounds
when we say this that we have to put it on the record,
but I think it is important.
10862 Ben Heppner we put in the middle of
prime time this year. We did that with four or five or
six others. One of the things we have been trying to
do is find real pride of place for these specials so
more and more people will find them and know who Ben
Heppner is and know something about his life and
recognize what an incredible gift he is to opera, not
only in this country but everywhere else. So we don't
want to put it -- we want to find pride of place and a
place where people are going to find him. We did quite
a bit of this this year, which we have submitted to
you.
10863 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
10864 Canadian music talent. Last time
around, 1994, the Commission talked about exposure to
artists in the other official language. Now, I am not
clear on whether that was even referred to in your
application or whether -- I don't believe it was.
10865 Mr. Klymkiw, you have a different
idea?
10866 MR. KLYMKIW: No, I don't have a
different idea.
10867 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay. So was
there some of this during this last license term?
10868 MS PLATT: There was certainly some
exposure of Quebec artists to English audiences on
programming like "Rita And Friends" for example. We
every year do the major Canada Day and Governor
General's Awards programs that definitely does that
kind of exposing of talent to the other culture.
10869 One of the programs in development
right now is called "Rendez-vous Québec" and we are
looking to it, we hope, to bring specifically in a
program designed to do that Quebec talent to English
audiences. This will be the program called "Kaboom"
that we are piloting this summer that is a mix of
musical and other types of talent.
10870 So there has been exposure. We are
hoping to increase that level.
10871 COMMISSIONER CRAM: The first program
that you were talking about, was that the variety
series?
10872 MS PLATT: That's correct.
10873 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Is it going to be
a half an hour or an hour, and when is it going to be?
10874 MS PLATT: I'm sorry, I thought you
were referring to "Rita and Friends".
10875 COMMISSIONER CRAM: No, no.
10876 MS PLATT: Yes, it is designed to be
a half hour or an hour -- depending on through our
programming what the best mix is -- program
specifically designed to expose Quebec musical talent
to the rest of the country.
10877 COMMISSIONER CRAM: What about the
discovery and promotion of music talent in "n'importe
quelle langue" in terms of just musical talent, because
you were talking about that before, I believe,
Ms Platt.
10878 MS PLATT: We have an extraordinary
history of doing that. I think if you talk to artists
who are now international stars like Celine Dion,
Alanis Morissette, Anne Murray, Shainia Twain, they
would tell you that they got their television start at
SRC, or in Ottawa, or with the CBC. I think that that
is an indication of the talent development that we have
done over the years, not just with musical talent but
across the board.
10879 In a way, I guess the CBC is the
cornerstone as well as the keystone of the industry, of
the television industry. We are the cornerstone very
much because there is a tremendous effort put to
developing talent of one kind or another, and in the
musical vein we have consistently done that over the
years. The list of names, Bryan Adams, Terry Clarke,
Tom Cochrane, Bruce Guthro, k.d. Lang, Joni Mitchell,
these are significant performers who either got their
start with the CBC or appeared significantly on the
CBC.
10880 COMMISSIONER CRAM: What about now?
10881 MS PLATT: I mentioned the
programming we have in development from Quebec. We
also have several conversations going with potential
producers of ongoing variety or musical series. We
want to find another major showcase for musical talent.
10882 One of the things that we are hoping
will happen through our regional initiative is that we
can root some of them in the regions. We spent some
time a few years ago seeing if we could create regional
music programming and did so quite successfully. We
think that we can return to, potentially, that idea in
the regions, but with the whole idea being to be a
talent developer and to create venues where that talent
can move through our system, we hope to more and more
international stardom, but the most important thing is
to expose them to Canadian audiences.
10883 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Am I right,
though, that -- I'm sorry.
10884 MR. HARRIS: I was just going to add,
Phyllis didn't talk about the award shows that we do
and maybe I will just nudge her in that direction just
for a second.
10885 MS. PLATT: Okay. I forgot the award
shows.
10886 We do, of course, the Juno's; we do
the aboriginal awards, which exposes aboriginal musical
talent; we do the ECMA awards in the east; have for the
first time produced the WCMAs in the west. The kind of
exposing of talent through shows like Canada Day, for
example, of major musical performers is consistent
through our schedules, and definitely award shows play
a big part in that.
10887 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Those people have
made it, though. Am I right that the last time there
was a show for new people, new talent, was "Rita and
Friends"?
10888 MS PLATT: That was definitely a mix.
It was not designed for new people, it was designed to
expose talent, much of it already fairly well
established.
10889 COMMISSIONER CRAM: New and so-called
old talent.
10890 MS PLATT: New and so-called old
talent. Yes, that's correct.
10891 COMMISSIONER CRAM: But is that the
last program that you had on the network that had
anything to do with new talent?
10892 MS PLATT: No. We did a program
called "The Nine O'clock Show" which was an experiment.
We were dealing with cost issues and trying to bring
the cost of this kind of programming down so we tried a
new experiment, which wasn't entirely successful, and
we are moving on to other models.
10893 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So aside from the
Quebec variety show, anything else to expose new talent
in the pipe, and where in the pipe?
10894 MS PLATT: Again, I am hopeful that
the regional opportunity will prove very fruitful. We
did during that period of time a number of programs,
"Up On The Roof", "Fiddlehead Country". I think there
were five all together that were specifically designed
to spot and develop new talent.
10895 MR. KLYMKIW: Just to reinforce what
Phyllis said, there are several discussions going on,
we just simply can't discuss them here because there
are several people we are talking to about a musical
program or musical series. So those discussions
continue on.
10896 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Network
exchanges. There has been some network exchange.
Based on your experience do some genres work better
than others?
10897 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes, I think that's
true. I mean, if you don't mind, I would like to tell
you, we actually do have a plan on this and --
10898 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Oh, good, better.
10899 MR. KLYMKIW: I am more than prepared
to share it with you.
10900 COMMISSIONER CRAM: That's --
10901 MR. KLYMKIW: We decided a year ago
and this was in our planning book and went to our board
that we would begin systematically to find ways of
getting cross-cultural programming that would work both
for us and for SRC. We felt it was important that we
worked more and more together, we do a lot of that.
But we really wanted to formalize that.
10902 So we now meet on a regular basis and
we decided we would come together and develop programs
in the areas of children, documentary, series and
mini-series and feature shows.
10903 And then we did a very small thing,
but I think an important thing. We, on English
television created a slot for the best of programming
from Quebec that runs on Monday night and we hope that
in our Thursday slots and in our specials which we did
just a while ago, ran "Orphans" and "Duplessis", we are
going to do more of those.
10904 But everyone felt that what we needed
to do is really have a strong commitment to the
development so that we would produce programs that
would have a lasting value on both networks. There has
been a long history of that which often gets neglected
in this discussion so I would like to put that on the
record.
10905 I think we have put in a series of
programs where we have done that, but we have
formalized that relationship and are working very hard
to find new programs that are going to do that. And we
are doing that because we think it makes business sense
and we think it makes cultural sense and we think
inevitably we can get series that can work across the
country.
10906 And I say the very best example of
that would be our major documentary project, "Canada,
Peoples' History", which is 30 hours and I have to say
that, you know, it is conceived from the outset as a
culture shock in both languages, which adds to the
cost. That's not to say we shouldn't do it, but we
hope to build on that success, that it was not -- this
is not a translation from one language to the other, it
is conceived from the outset in both languages and it
will have the same range of interpretations around
historical events in both languages on both television
screens. And I think that's a major initiative that we
hope we can build on.
10907 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And in terms of
the plan, Mr. Klymkiw, is that the idea on the children
documentary series, mini-series, that you would do the
same type of essentially a production in one language
and then the next. Is that the idea?
10908 MR. KLYMKIW: Well, you put your
finger on what we are wrestling with. We are trying to
find what works the best, that could work the best.
Those discussions are continuing.
10909 I guess my only point is we have
taken it seriously, we always have. We have now
formalized that and we are working very, very hard in
those areas to find more opportunities not only to work
together, but to produce successful programs that will
work in both markets.
10910 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So you really
don't know which is the best technique in terms of
dubbing or anything like that? You are just not sure.
10911 MS PLATT: I think we have found and
we did do some surveying in the past when we have run
docu material that most audiences prefer dubbing to
subtitling. However, when we have run significant
feature films from Quebec, we have tended to subtitle
them because we feel that there are viewers who are
bilingual who would prefer to see the original version.
10912 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So it depends on
the genre then, almost?
10913 MS PLATT: To some degree, yes.
10914 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Can you provide
us with some idea of the number of hours that are on
the network that are based on exchanged programs?
10915 MR. KLYMKIW: I think I will turn to
Mr. Harris.
10916 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Michael?
10917 MR. HARRIS: We have done a lot of
that analysis and I believe I can get it to you
although I don't have it with me at this moment.
10918 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay, perfect.
10919 There was some discussion simply
because we have analysts that like to track this. Is
it possible that there could be some, when you send in
your logs you could sort of show this to be an exchange
program on the logging system, Michael?
10920 MR. HARRIS: It terrifies me to say
anything that has "logging system" in it.
--- Laughter / Rires
10921 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And with my
extensive knowledge of it, that is really helpful.
10922 MR. HARRIS: I will get back to you
on that, as well. I'm not going to say anything that
the people in Toronto are going to be on the phone.
10923 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
10924 So you were talking about "The Best
of French-Canadian TV" and then the Film Festival.
When are they going to be on air?
10925 MR. KLYMKIW: Well, "The Best of
French-Canadian Television" has been on for over a year
already.
10926 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay.
10927 MR. KLYMKIW: And it has done very
well, in fact. And "Omerta" has run in there and a
variety of programs and we are acquiring and buying
those programs on an ongoing basis and we will continue
to do that. Then we hope we are going to run some of
them on Thursday nights and we will begin to run some
of them on Sunday nights.
10928 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Why don't I see
that over here on the schedule?
10929 MR. KLYMKIW: There's only so much we
can put on that red schedule. I mean, I think Thursday
night represents some of that space for it. And then
on Sunday we have been doing it for a long time. It
didn't start this year or the year before, we have been
doing it over the years which we have outlined fairly
extensively in our presentation.
10930 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Feature films,
$30 million in the next five years, Mr. Redekopp. The
Heritage Committee wanted you to do $25 million and you
have outdone them.
10931 MR. REDEKOPP: Is that
congratulations?
--- Laughter / Rires
10932 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes. I wanted to
ask about the division between French and English of
that $30 million.
10933 MR. REDEKOPP: I will let Phyllis
speak to that.
10934 MS PLATT: The total commitment is
$50 million over five years.
10935 COMMISSIONER CRAM: It is $50
million, okay.
10936 MS PLATT: That's right. And $30
million for English and $20 million for French.
10937 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And are we
talking, like, 10 a year kind of concept when it is
over five years?
10938 MS PLATT: I think it will probably
vary marginally from year to year, but yes.
10939 COMMISSIONER CRAM: You talk in your
application about "a prime time Canadian feature film
program" starting in the year 2000 to 2001. Weekly, I
take it, Mr. Klymkiw?
10940 MR. KLYMKIW: That would be yes.
10941 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes. What will
be displaced? What nature of programming will be
displaced?
10942 MR. KLYMKIW: Well, it is that old
recalibration answer again. We are going to have to
make that decision. I mean, we do now have a feature
film stream which we started two years ago which we run
Saturday nights in the summertime. And the reason we
run it Saturday nights is this is probably the only
time in our schedule that we can start something at
nine o'clock and a lot of the content in these films
would be more difficult without severe cutting to start
earlier in the evening.
10943 So we have a variety of issues we are
going to have to wrestle with. The content, what can
run in prime time. You know, what makes the most sense
and then you get into huge creative discussions about,
you know, is television shaping the feature film or is
the feature film shaping television. And you know, we
obviously have responsibilities about what we run
between 8:00 and 10:00.
10944 So just to give you a flavour, that's
the kind of discussion we are having now about feature
film and how it fits in television. But the Saturday
night stream has worked very effectively for us. We
are committed, when given our development of feature
film and what we think is going to be the continuing
growth and nurturing of the feature film business that
we will have a prime time slot for it. I just can't
tell you where and when now.
10945 I mean, again, I don't want to make
Thursday night the catchall for everything, but it has
the potential of expanding the two hours, both for long
documentaries and feature films, so it is a good
short-term strategy to where we are going to get
inevitably with feature films. And I can't tell you
today what we are going to displace.
10946 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
10947 Northern service. You said in the
application that you provide a good deal of free
programming to TVNC and that you expect if they are
licensed as they were that you would have a
complementary relationship. Do you envisage any change
in your relationship with APTN?
10948 MR. KLYMKIW: Perhaps I could invite
Marie Wilson to come to the -- she's at that table, I'm
sorry.
10949 I would like to introduce her to you.
Marie is the Regional Director the CBC North Service.
10950 MS WILSON: Yes, good morning.
10951 And your question specifically is how
we imagine our ongoing relationship with --
10952 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes. How do you
envisage it?
10953 MS WILSON: We are currently an
associate member of TVNC and as you know from the APTN
application, their intention is to run basically a
southern distribution system with two releases and
maintain the northern distribution.
10954 So we continue to be involved in the
northern aspects of their organization, though we are
not an associate board member for APTN as it is in the
south. We do intend though and it was described in
their application for licensing that they foresaw
having CBC North programming as part of their core
schedule, the draft schedule, the program schedule that
they submitted to you included our programming in
there. And it is our intention to negotiate a
programming acquisition arrangement with them as soon
as they have their program director and that office in
place.
10955 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So let me get it
straight. You will still continue to give them free
programming?
10956 MS WILSON: No. And we made that
very clear, including in our own intervention on their
application for the national licence, that we would
expect to negotiate a program acquisition agreement
with them because it would not be possible for us to
provide that programming for free for southern
distribution. Of course there would be cost
implications for us including translation, but also
rights issues and so on.
10957 And also we are very well aware that
TVNC has benefitted from our programming contributions
over the past several years. Many of the -- the
advertising revenue that they have received on TVNC in
the north has, to a very large degree, been placed here
on our CBC North programming, which is prime in their
schedule. We have made no issue of that. They have
had that revenue pure and simple.
10958 But if it is a southern distribution
we are going to be incurring costs, we are going to be
adding to the profile, we hope the success of that
network. We have been fully supportive of them from
the beginning and we think it is fair and reasonable
for us to be properly compensated for that.
10959 And they have said in their initial
news release that that is their intentions.
10960 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So you are not
talking about charging them just incremental costs, you
are talking about charging them fair market value
costs?
10961 MS WILSON: Yes, because they are
talking about going forward in a progressive way,
becoming a self-supporting specialty channel and we
need to negotiate a business relationship with them.
10962 I just want to make clear, though, I
mean, we have been very, very supportive of them from
the very beginning. In fact just three weeks ago, I
was very happy to receive a plaque from them in
appreciation for all that CBC North had done in support
of both TVNC and its growth and development and the now
birth of APTN.
10963 COMMISSIONER CRAM: What about "CBC
North Beat", considering the cost and the little
audience and given APTN, is "North Beat" still a
priority? Are you the proper one to ask?
10964 MS WILSON: Yes, I am exactly the one
to ask and I don't know why you would say "low
audience", because that is certainly not our
indication.
10965 It is a very popular program, in
fact, with high recognition. It is award-winning, both
nationally and internationally and it is a very
important vehicle for programming of aboriginal and
non-aboriginal issues as it affects the entire north
and sometimes national issues, as well.
10966 So it is our intention to continue
it.
10967 COMMISSIONER CRAM: When I say "low
audience", I mean compared to Toronto.
10968 MS WILSON: Well, you know, I will
just speak to that. I mean, one of the difficulties we
do have in the north is because of the way our
population is dispersed it is very hard to use standard
tools for measuring.
10969 But it is also true the way we are
distributed that though our target in primary audience
is north of 60, which limits it in population size, our
reach goes beyond that into the northern provinces and
significantly into B.C., for example and we know that
we have significant audiences there, as well. So the
number of people it actually reaches is about double
what is within our mandate of reaching.
10970 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
10971 Foreign content diversity. There was
a reference in the 1994 Decision that you would
increase your diversity of sources. It wasn't referred
to in your application about what you plan to do with
the future. Michael?
10972 MR. HARRIS: I believe in the future
that whatever commitment we make will go along the same
that now we have reached a balance where the
non-American is slightly in excess of the American and
we would hope to maintain that balance in the future.
10973 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I recognize we
are only talking about two hours. I mean, we are not
talking about big numbers.
10974 So, do you think you could reduce the
American even further?
10975 MR. HARRIS: I will let Slawko talk
about this, but my original remark would be, you know,
it is certainly the simulcast American that -- there's
still a lot of places where we can bring value to the
system by bringing American programming.
10976 MR. KLYMKIW: Obviously we are out of
simulcast American. You know, there are programs that
are produced in the United States that are very good
programs that you don't see anywhere on Canadian
television. And I would hate to limit ourselves in
terms of being able to buy those in arts and
performance, certain movies. You know, there are a
variety of industries that are producing things that I
think are incredible documentaries.
10977 So I think the balance we have now is
very reasonable and I think we would like to keep it.
10978 COMMISSIONER CRAM: We are down to,
by the way, the short snappers, so I will be changing
subjects. No, this is not "Reach for the Top".
10979 I was talking about -- my next
subject is aboriginal portrayal and I think you have
made significant strides. What I notice though is that
there is not a series involving natives on the schedule
now. You had some very successful ones, but there is
nothing now.
10980 Do you think it is priority to have
that?
10981 MS PLATT: Just to know that there is
one that is going to be coming to --
10982 COMMISSIONER CRAM: It is in the
tubes, yes.
10983 MS PLATT: No, seriously, it has been
triggered for production and it is a children's program
called "Tales from the Long House" and this is a
definite show.
10984 You are right. We are out of "North
of 60", it had a very long and terrific run. "The Res"
did nicely for us, as well. I think it really again is
an issue of the ebb and flow of any schedule that if
there is a strong concept and a strong idea, then
obviously we are looking for this kind of material, it
is not necessarily always there. But we are constantly
encouraging aboriginal programming in our schedule. And
as you know, the record is quite strong.
10985 MR. KLYMKIW: I was just going to add
let's not forget "Big Bear" and the "North of 60" movie
were huge successes for us this year and important
projects. And on top of that, you know, we are working
very hard on a pilot called "All my Relations" which
is --
10986 COMMISSIONER CRAM: That was it.
10987 MR. KLYMKIW: That's right. Which is
an aboriginal magazine program. And we are going to
try our best to inevitably get that on the air.
10988 MS PLATT: Plus there is a second
"North of 60" movie coming for this coming season, as
well.
10989 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So instead of a
series, you have got sort of the three movies and then
you will be getting into the magazine?
10990 MR. KLYMKIW: Plus the "Aboriginal
Awards" which you are well aware of.
10991 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes, yes. "Big
Bear" and the "Aboriginal Awards", both in Saskatchewan
this year.
10992 MR. KLYMKIW: Did I tell you they
were in Saskatchewan?
10993 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Yes, the
schedule.
10994 The multi-cultural representation. I
note that you have training and internships for
natives. And plans to expand that into other sort of
cultural minorities?
10995 MR. REDEKOPP: Michael?
10996 MR. HARRIS: I will pass this to Bob.
10997 MR. CULBERT: In fact, all our
training programs embrace all. I am not sure what
program you are referring to, but the newest and one we
are most pleased about, we have a very high end
internship program we just started this year and the
idea is not just as other intern programs we have to
bring people in for a short term and work with us
usually maybe during summer or breaks in whatever they
are doing. But this is designed to give people a
year's experience in various programming areas, network
and the regions. The end result will hopefully get
them meaningful work in one of the network regional
units.
10998 And it is part of something we talked
about with "Newsworld". While this is separate from
the "Newsworld" program and the purpose of this, like
"Newsworld" is the gene pool was not helped by the cuts
and we are trying to bring in some very top people from
different areas to try and improve the gene pool.
10999 In that program, I believe, we have
two visible minority people in the first round of the
intern program and one aboriginal journalist and they
are currently now assigned to various units with
mentors to try and develop and hopefully this time next
year they will be working for us somewhere in the
system.
11000 MS WILSON: Madame Commissioner, may
I just say a word about that, as well.
11001 As you are aware, we had the creation
of the new Nunuvit Territory this year, and we have
done significant work, as well, in training northern
journalists to be able to cover their own new political
jurisdiction. We created a new bureau in Cambridge
Bay, which is a bi-medial bureau and trilingual, in
fact. And we have done particular work in training our
journalists on political and legislative reporting so
that they can do a proper job of covering that as a new
and stand-alone political jurisdiction.
11002 And we were very, very proud to have
some of key people as part of the national broadcast
team on Nunuvit Day when we were the only broadcaster
in the country who went live from Iqualuit and using
not people that had to be brought in for the purpose
alone, but also our northern based broadcasting who
were part of that event and proud to be so.
11003 MR. HARRIS: Just one more. We are
in the middle of what I think is an important
initiative on another aspect of this question and in
our news department where we have an extensive contacts
list and we have been going through that contacts list
in a two-year process to try and make sure that it
reflects the diversity of Canada so that when people go
to experts on subjects that the field that they have to
choose from is as diverse as the country is.
11004 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
11005 From your numbers you have 4 per cent
on air visible minorities. Do you consider that an
appropriate number? Mr. Redekopp, you don't want to
answer it?
11006 MR. REDEKOPP: I think that in all of
these categories we are not satisfied with our
performance. So the answer is yes, it should be
higher, it should reflect more appropriately the mix in
this country and I think we have steps to address that.
11007 I think part of the difficulty when
you are downsizing is that you have to take into
account the constraints of collective agreements. So
it hasn't been as -- we haven't been as aggressive in
changing, as it were, the face of our television screen
as we might have.
11008 But I can tell from all the
initiatives that you are hearing here, we are
determined to do that. So yes, there's work to be
done.
11009 MR. KLYMKIW: And we are beginning to
do it.
11010 I will let Phyllis talk in more
detail if you want, but "In the Mix", which just
happens to be a very, very good show that is coming on
next year, has two strong black leads.
11011 Phyllis, you might want to talk about
it a bit.
11012 MS PLATT: Yes. "In the Mix" is a
spin off from our successful program "Straight Up",
done with an independent production partner, and it is
the world of the hip-hop station and very much features
black performers, as will the opera "Beatrice Chancy"
which we are doing, the programs such as "Riverdale",
"Da Vinci's Inquest", "Nothing Too Good For a Cowboy",
"These Arms of Mine", "The Newsroom", programs like
that that have brought and will continue to bring
multicultural performers into integral roles in these
dramas so that they are seen to be part of the society
as a whole.
11013 I might just mention some of the
movies that we have done over the licence period that
reflect the multicultural realities of Canada: "The
War Between Us", "Frost Fire", "Trial at Fortitude
Bay", "Dance Me Outside", "Spirit Rider", "Big Bear" of
course, "Planet of Junior Brown", "One Heart Broken
Into Song" which goes to air this coming season, the
two "North of 60" movies, "Revenge of the Land" which
is coming this fall, and the big Christmas Movie "Must
Be Santa" starring a black santa.
11014 MR. CULBERT: Commissioner Cram, if I
could just add one from the information?
11015 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Sure.
11016 MR. CULBERT: At the network
information area we have 26 either aboriginal or
visible minority people on air, which I'm told is about
9.4 per cent of the staffing quota. We would like to
do better and that is why we are particularly sensitive
to it when we do the training programs.
11017 In the current affairs area we I
believe have 10 people working in various on-air roles,
reporters mostly. But we would like to do better, too.
11018 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
11019 The deaf and the hard of hearing, you
have yet again been quite successful. You refer now to
captioning blocks that have not yet been done and you
refer to children's blocks. What other blocks have not
yet been captioned?
11020 Is that you, Michael?
11021 MR. CULBERT: This is Michael. He
doesn't know as much as he pretends.
11022 MR. HARRIS: Essentially, we have
captioned prime time at this point and the big
questions left are daytime.
11023 I think that there was a lot of
resistance at the beginning to the idea of captioning
children's programming because -- or preschool
programming, you know, I suppose largely conditioned by
the expectation that it wasn't a reading group.
11024 But in fact we have had a lot of
input from parents, that they watch the programming
with their children and that the captioning is in fact
a very useful reading tool. It really can help not
only children but it can help new Canadians learn
English. It is getting used more and more in that kind
of way so that I would expect that our next initiative
would be in our children's block in the morning to
start captioning parts of that schedule.
11025 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So then what
blocks, aside from children's, are not captioned?
11026 MR. HARRIS: Well, the afternoon
programming is not captioned. And late night foreign
movies aren't being prompted.
11027 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Do you think by
the end of the next licence term that the afternoon
block and the children's block will be done -- could be
done?
11028 MR. HARRIS: I guess you are in a
situation where the last bits are the most expensive
bits and that -- you know, we are certainly moving in
that direction. We are 97 per cent now in prime time.
You know, I think we are getting up over -- in this
licence term we will get over 80 per cent over the
whole day. So we are doing well.
11029 We did win a special award for the
network that had the biggest achievement over the last
period in terms of captioning. We managed to caption
all our supper hour news with live captioning ahead of
schedule and we are committed to doing this.
11030 You know, partly it's the cost coming
down and our expertise in live captioning going up, but
we are proceeding as quickly as we can.
11031 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I have about one
page of questions, but you have an obligation, so I
will hand it over to the --
11032 THE CHAIRPERSON: Yes. We will
pursue after lunch. Let's reconvene at 10 to 2:00
please.
11033 Thank you.
--- Recess at / Suspension à 1210
--- Upon resuming at / Reprise à 1355
11034 THE CHAIRPERSON: Alors, we will
start again.
11035 For the ones who are wondering and
following the proceeding, we will complete the
television this afternoon and we hope also to complete
the regional stations. Then we will interrupt for an
evening of rest, or worry depending on the agenda, and
we will start tomorrow morning with the radio.
11036 So, Commissioner Cram, you will --
11037 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you,
Madam Chair.
11038 I hope to be finished in a very short
period of time.
11039 DBS. In the application you spoke
about having discussions with the NBRS and said you
would let us know here what are your plans and what is
happening.
11040 MR. REDEKOPP: Michael?
11041 MR. HARRIS: I am going to ask
Suzanne Lamarre to come up to the table. Suzanne
Lamarre is with our CBC engineering department.
11042 MS LAMARRE: Okay. I can maybe give
you some information from a technical point of view.
11043 Maybe, Michael, you would like to
speak to a discussion first.
11044 MR. HARRIS: (Off microphone).
11045 MS LAMARRE: Okay.
11046 From the technical point of view, the
descriptive video system requires that we have a second
channel available in the TV transmitters. It's the
case for the Toronto English transmitter. It's also
the case for a certain number of transmitters in the
large English markets.
11047 However, one of the hurdles is
obviously to feed the descriptive video signals to
those transmitters. We have conducted a preliminary
study that shows that with a certain amount of
investment in those large markets it could be possible
at one point to be able to do that, but we would have
to, from an engineering point of view, go a little bit
further and see how much investment as far as the
distribution is concerned.
11048 MR. HARRIS: Yes. We are very proud
that we were the first network to do described video,
and we started with "The Arrow" and then last year we
did "Big Bear" -- this year we did "Big Bear", and it
was -- I mean, I looked at the tapes and it's really
quite incredible the quality of the work that is done.
11049 Because we were in at the front end,
we got a good deal on the cost, which is quite
expensive because essentially it has to be rewritten
and, you know, the script has to be delivered in time
and with sound ups and everything.
11050 I'm not sure that everybody has seen
it. If you haven't seen it, it's a very compelling way
to present programming for people that can't see the TV
set. There are more than a million such people in
Canada now and as us boomers get older there are going
to be even more, and television being as important as
it is it is important not to exclude them from
television events like those.
11051 On the other hand, we can only use
that second audio channel where we have stereo
transmitters and right now, as Suzanne says, without
significant investment, that's kind of Toronto.
11052 We have been talking with the
organizations concerned with this about -- they have
other ways to get the audio out, but all of them are a
little cumbersome. They have some access to some radio
frequencies in some markets or they can use the reading
channel to deliver audio, but that means that they
would have to have two TV sets in the room where the
program was. So largely it is technical.
11053 We are committing now that we will do
the next, whatever we are calling it -- Ann III,
Phyllis? That is how I have been referring to it --
"Ann of Green Gables" with this. We are looking at the
children's program "Guess What" and we have talked
about doing that in descriptive video because it is a
science show and we think that that would be a good use
for it. The big piece that we are really investigating
doing is the "People's History of Canada" because we
think that that ought to be available in described
video form.
11054 The cost is still pretty expensive.
It is still about $100 a minute to do it, which makes
it about -- well, 10 times as expensive, say, as
captioning.
11055 MR. BEATTY: Commissioner, could I
ask, have you had a chance to see this, because if you
haven't --
11056 COMMISSIONER CRAM: No, I haven't.
11057 MR. BEATTY: If you haven't -- I
don't want to speak too quickly here -- I would be very
pleased to have us make available for you a print of
"Big Bear" for you to see it.
11058 For most of us, when Michael did a
brief demonstration for us it was the first time that
we had had a chance to see it and most of us were just
blown over by it. It was just extremely impressive and
the mind starts going about other ways that you can put
this sort of material to use. I think you might very
well find it, just as an experience to see that, very
worthwhile.
11059 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Perhaps you can
just file it and then we can have access to it.
11060 MR. BEATTY: (Off microphone).
11061 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
11062 New media. Do I take it that the new
media in English fulfils the same role, somewhat the
same role, as in French in terms of it is also useful
for the digital TV lab concept?
11063 MR. BEATTY: Yes, Commissioner.
11064 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I know you know
the number of hits. Any idea of the proportion of
those hits that are youth?
11065 MR. BEATTY: I don't know whether
research would have that data. I guess not,
Commissioner.
11066 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Three short
questions.
11067 Do you agree to continue the COL on
advertising to children?
11068 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes.
11069 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Do you agree to
accept the COL regarding gender portrayal?
11070 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes.
11071 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I note that you
have 44 per cent women on air. Is that a number that
you believe is appropriate? What are your plans?
11072 MR. REDEKOPP: Slawko, are you going
to speak to this?
11073 MR. KLYMKIW: I think we want to get
as close with the population distribution as we
possibly can. I think we have done a very good job and
will continue to get as close to that as possible.
11074 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Or even the
allocation on the Commission: seven to six? It sounds
appropriate to me.
--- Laughter / Rires
11075 MR. HARRIS: I think we have always
been close to -- we have been performing well in terms
of on air. Where we have fallen behind is -- not
fallen behind, but where we are making bigger strides
is in terms of experts that we are interviewing and
stuff like that, and that is part of that database
project that I talked about earlier to increase the
women's representation.
11076 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
11077 On violence, there was some
discrepancy as to your own code. In 1994, you were
required to file it and I believe we wrote back and
said, "Please make these changes", and I don't think we
have ever heard from you.
11078 Are you content with a continuation
of the present COL?
11079 MR. REDEKOPP: We are. But in terms
of where we stand with our own code, I could ask
Michael to speak to that.
11080 MR. HARRIS: Yes. We are content to
live with the current code. I believe the only
question was in terms of the start times for
programming and you have heard Slawko talk about --
when we have programming that is inappropriate, we do
reschedule it out of family time and I think that is
the only discrepancy.
11081 So I would be just as soon to get the
other matter settled. I thought the ball was in your
court, but if it is in our court we will work on it.
11082 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Now we know that
we all have to work on it.
11083 There was some reference to
accountability at page 85 and 86. I listened to the
SRC and heard not only the same model but also the fact
that they have consultation groups. Is there any
consideration of that on the English side?
11084 MR. REDEKOPP: We made a start with
the arts consultative group and I think we have had
informal as opposed to formal consultation. Certainly,
my predecessor made a point of doing forums. When I
was in radio we did them regularly. We are going to
build on those.
11085 I think we are debating how
structured and formal we should be, but the
consultative process, certainly in the arts, will
probably be a useful clue.
11086 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
11087 Advertising, and I'm not going to
dwell on it.
11088 You heard Mr. Odette of Cogeco talk
about the discipline of ads; in other words, it would
be a good idea for CBC to keep advertising because it
disciplines you. In other words, if your ratings are
low, then you change your programming and therefore you
will get increased advertising.
11089 Am I fair in saying that it is not a
discipline to CBC that that reason for keeping ads on
CBC, the discipline of ratings and therefore more
money, doesn't necessarily affect CBC, because the
programming comes first and then you worry about the
advertising?
11090 MR. BEATTY: Commissioner, there is
no question that the programming comes first and we
worry about the advertising secondly. We are not
unaware of the impact of the revenues that come in. If
there is a shortfall in revenues, either on the English
side or on the French side we have to look at how we
make the books balance.
11091 But what causes us to take a decision
in the first place is going to be mandate-driven as
opposed to commercially-driven. An example of that
will be an issue you raised earlier this morning and
that was the olympics.
11092 I believe it was you who asked
whether, as a result of the olympic scandal, we were
losing value on the olympics. Certainly, there is that
risk that that could happen even if it has not happened
to date, but that clearly has had no mitigating effect
whatsoever on the decision by our journalist to cover
the whole olympic scandal. They have been very
aggressive on it and they have been front and centre
without any consideration for what economic impact
there could be for the CBC.
11093 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Mr. Klymkiw --
and I am having problems saying your name -- after you
have had the time to recalibrate, what are we going to
see in seven years on CBC? What is the mix? What is
the balance?
11094 MR. KLYMKIW: I think the balance
will be determined by the enormous changes that are
taking place around us. I mean, our job is to be
distinctive, to be popular, inevitably to be
indispensable with our audiences, and we have to take
everything into account, what the competition looks
like, how many platforms there are out there, how our
distinctiveness is measured against the rest of the
industry, and how we dispense the best we possibly can
both broadcast and cultural policy. I could make up
something today and tell you what it is going to look
like in seven years, but I suspect you wouldn't believe
me because I'm not sure it would be correct, but in
every year --
11095 You asked this morning about -- I
think we were talking about sports and commercial
revenue and so forth. We are sitting down every year,
as an organization like ours should, and look ourselves
in the mirror and say: How does CBC remain relevant
and how does it continue to dispense its
responsibilities? A great public broadcaster remains
fluid and the schedule has to represent that. We are
doing that more and more because the world is changing
and the country is changing around us quicker and
quicker.
11096 So I'm sorry for the generality of
that, but I can't paint a schedule today that is going
to be terribly accurate in seven years.
11097 MR. REDEKOPP: Commissioner Cram,
perhaps I could underline again the emphasis that we
placed on the schedule that indicates the direction in
which we want to go. In addition to news and current
affairs, which is our core asset, we are emphasizing we
are going to build on children and youth, we are going
to build on the performing arts, and we are most
definitely going to build on the regional roots.
11098 I would say that those are directions
that we are indicating now on which we are going to
build and I think that is where you would book for
improvement in that area. I'm sorry, I should have
also mentioned amateur sports, which is also part of
that.
11099 COMMISSIONER CRAM: And Mr. Beatty
referred to being Canadian isn't just enough, it is
Canadian plus more.
11100 Mr. Redekopp, in seven years, what
will tell you whether or not you have been a success?
11101 MR. REDEKOPP: I think, Commissioner
Cram, there are always two indicators. The first is
audience size measured by reach, measured by hours
tuned, measured by share. The second equally important
measurement, harder to get, is impact: To what extent
have we really registered with people, to what extent
is there loyalty and affection for the television
service? As I say, that is harder to measure, but I
think both of those indicators would indicate success:
impact and numbers of people who are enjoying the
service.
11102 MR. KLYMKIW: If I could add to that.
That famous pie chart that we have seen everywhere
about the many, many choices people have, and you see
the CBC share, the CBC has maintained its share and
will continue to and I hope, over time, grow it. The
reason we have done that is I think we have found a
distinctive way of getting quality Canadian programming
on the air, which ostensibly differentiates us.
11103 Obviously, as Harold has pointed out,
we are going to differentiate ourselves more in the
areas that he has laid out. But I think that in a day
and age when there are going to be so many choices to
get so many different programs, we have begun in the
right direction to make ourselves more and more
distinctive and I would hope indispensable to people
because of the red schedule you see there and the
programs.
11104 People are waking up in the morning
and seeing "Cowboy" and "DaVinci" and "This Hour Has 22
Minutes" and they are saying: Those are damn good
programs and they are on the CBC. I think that that
you are seeing more and more and more. So I think we
are ahead of the curve in terms of the mass of changes
that are taking place in the Information Age.
11105 COMMISSIONER CRAM: So the "Canadian
plus more" is "Canadian plus more quality"? Is that
the distinctiveness?
11106 MR. KLYMKIW: I think quality and I
think what Harold and Perrin and Phyllis and I have
been saying all day today -- and we want you to
obviously believe us on this -- looking in the mirror
and deciding how we become more distinctive and how we
redefine ourselves, given how things change around us,
is an ongoing process and we are dedicated to
continuing doing that.
11107 That means higher-quality programs on
an ongoing basis and I think that is taking place.
That is always looking at ourselves and saying: All
right. How do we make sure we are valuable,
distinctive, indispensable and in fact we are doing
something that we can define as a public broadcaster as
something that is not only worthy but distinguishes us
from everyone else?
11108 That process is never-ending in a
live organization like ours and it ought to be that way
in a public broadcasting organization.
11109 MR. BEATTY: If I can add,
Commissioner, I think there are a number of other
criteria in addition to that that we would look at. I
won't be here for the next hearings seven years from
now. You may very well be.
11110 COMMISSIONER CRAM: You might be, as
a consultant.
--- Laughter / Rires
11111 MR. BEATTY: And I will be much
better paid than I am today.
11112 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Never say you
won't be...
--- Laughter / Rires
11113 MR. BEATTY: I would hope that one of
the things that we won't be spending a great deal of
time on is the success of CBC in Canadianizing. I hope
that will be so deeply entrenched that nobody can
remember what it was like before it was fully Canadian.
11114 I hope the criteria that you will be
judging us on go well beyond Canadianization to the
quality, not simply in terms of production values,
quality in terms of the reflection that we give of
Canada, the contribution we make to Canada, to the
flourishing of Canadian arts and culture, to a genuine
understanding of who we are as a people, of the country
in all of its diversity, but also of the transcended
values that make this such a remarkable country; that
you measure us in terms of our kids' programming as to
whether or not we have provided for parents a place
where they feel it is a safe haven for their kids,
where the programming will help their kids learn and to
grow in a way that is healthy; that in our journalism,
that you will feel that we have set standards of
excellence that have drawn up everybody, that have
caused everybody to aspire to something better; that as
a public broadcaster that we have taken the approach
that not only can we afford to take risks that others
can't afford to take but that we can't afford not to
take risks; that in our programming, we should be
pushing the envelope, not for the sake of offending
people but for the sake of inventing new forms and
finding new ways of portraying Canada to Canadians; and
that we would give to Canadians an opportunity to --
the Act refers to a shared national consciousness and
identity.
11115 If we succeed in all of these areas,
the areas that each of you have been pressing on over
the course of the last week -- if we succeed in these
areas, then I think we offer something of unique value
to the whole of the system and it answers that
fundamental question: Well, why do you have a public
broadcaster? Why do you need one with all of these
choices in the 21st Century?
11116 The answer is: Because they offer
something that is indispensable, that is more important
today than it has ever been at any other time in its
history, and if we can have achieved that, then I will
feel that this process and the whole strategy that we
have laid out to you has been a success.
11117 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you.
11118 Ms Platt.
11119 MS PLATT: I was just going to add
that I think that there is something that a public
broadcaster -- and I would hope, the CBC -- does very
differently, and if you see that in seven years even
from where we are today, I think it will be important
and a victory, and that is that we treat our viewers as
citizens, not as consumers, that we program and we
imagine our programming for young people who grow up
with "Mr. Dressup" and who learn values and
sensibilities that are about this place and this
country and our society so that as they grow, they
expect to grow into citizenship rather than
consumerdom.
11120 We try to give them that throughout
the schedule, in our news programming, in our arts and
entertainment programming, and in our sports
programming: that they are a part of this community
and this country and citizens of this place and not
simply consumers. So I hope we are still there in
seven years.
11121 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you. That
is the end of my questions. I want to sincerely thank
the panel for your very frank and candid responses and
I want you to know I heard everything in the other room
too. So I know they were frank and candid even then.
Thank you.
11122 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you. There
are other questions from other commissioners, I think.
11123 Commissioner Grauer.
11124 COMMISSIONER GRAUER: I just wanted
to make sure I understood when you were talking about
rights earlier -- I think quite near the beginning
actually. You were talking about working with
independent producers and the problems and challenges
you had in not owning those rights.
11125 Now, this is a situation which is
common to the private broadcasters as well, is it not,
that you don't have the rights?
11126 Now, when you say you pay, you are
not paying for the program, you are paying a licence
fee. Is that right?
11127 MR. BEATTY: Yes.
11128 COMMISSIONER GRAUER: Okay. I just
want to make sure I understood that this is sort of...
11129 MR. BEATTY: That is quite right.
11130 COMMISSIONER GRAUER: Yes, and really
an essential element of the whole system is that the
independent producers retain rights and that is a
condition of all the funding access.
11131 MR. BEATTY: Yes, and it is a
fundamental change -- it means a fundamental change in
the structure of the CBC and its role in the industry
and also of the assets that it has.
11132 People often talk to us about our
archives and the value locked up in those archives,
that we have issues raised about program sales abroad
and what CBC is doing to promote the sale of Canadian
programs. We have those assets in our archives because
they were our programs that we produced and we own the
intellectual property there.
11133 Increasingly in the future, we will
be renting that intellectual property as opposed to
owning it, which changes then the nature of the asset
that we possess and also may affect our ability to
re-use the asset in different ways.
11134 COMMISSIONER GRAUER: Right. If I
was going to be the devil's advocate here, I would say
that the way -- if I can look at the broadcasting and
production industry together, what we have is
diversified ownership of intellectual rights in
different segments of the overall industry?
11135 MR. BEATTY: Yes.
11136 COMMISSIONER GRAUER: So you still,
though, own the rights to your news and public affairs
programming in those archives, which presumably could
be of some value to you, is that right?
11137 MR. BEATTY: Except where it may be
commissioned from an independent producer.
11138 COMMISSIONER GRAUER: Right.
Absolutely. Okay. Thank you.
11139 THE CHAIRPERSON: Vice-Chair Wylie.
11140 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: Mr. Klymkiw,
while I was listening to the answers to your questions
today, you planted the seeds of a new role for me, a
new career as a recalibrator.
--- Laughter / Rires
11141 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: Would you agree
that the Broadcasting Act gives the Commission the
mandate to participate in the recalibration?
11142 MR. KLYMKIW: I think that we have a
joint responsibility to recalibrate together.
11143 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: Because when you
say that it is very difficult to tell us what things
are going to look like in seven years, within limits,
that is of course true. It is true for private
broadcasters as well but I always thought that the
Commission has a role in examining plans and to decide
in its wisdom, as it discharges its mandate under the
Act, whether or not new directions or some
recalibration is necessary and then setting up
mechanisms that ensure that after it has made that
decision there is something there to measure it.
11144 Of course, seven years is the longest
term possible, but where that is not possible and
judged to be necessary, you can always give a shorter
term and test whether your redirection or recalibration
is working.
11145 You would agree we have a role in
trying to establish these tests after discussing the
possible need for a redirection or a recalibration?
11146 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes, I said that. But
the question that was asked me was: What would the
schedule look like in seven years?
11147 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: No, but it
raises nevertheless the whole question of the extent to
which measures and measurements that go beyond "Trust
us, it will be good" are part and parcel of our
responsibility and I suppose we will discuss that
further next week.
11148 MR. KLYMKIW: I think we will but we
went beyond that. We have shown you by the pipe we
have laid in the schedule that we want to do more arts
performance. We want to do more youth programming. We
want to do more amateur sports. We want to participate
in Canadian feature films.
11149 There are a lot of signposts, very
strong signposts of the directions in which we are
going to go.
11150 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: Yes, and then,
the clearer the signposts, the better, of course.
11151 Commissioner Cram referred to the
Cogeco intervention last week. It also mentioned it
was speaking about the French side of the equation but
I am sure it would also have some appropriateness or
relevance to the English side of more transparency.
11152 We have heard that from a number of
intervenors and during the consultations, in the sense
of having an accountability somewhere in one's
performance, and I suppose the best way to do that is
to establish mechanisms that direct the recalibration
so that there are guideposts then to test whether that
is indeed what has happened over periods of time.
11153 They were suggesting something as
elaborate as an annual report. I asked them
particularly what was meant by that and what was meant
was some measure of testing to what extent the
recalibration or the new directions, if there are any,
are actually occurring.
11154 Do you have any comments about the
appropriateness of such measures, which would, if you
backtrack from the report -- I am not suggesting
annual, semi-annual, every two years, whatever, but if
you backtrack from the report, it speaks to setting
goals that are quite precise at the beginning of the
period in as many areas as possible: commitments,
conditions of licence in measurable, quantifiable
amounts, once a direction is set upon and then having a
means then to test whether you are still going in the
same direction or recalibrating with the same compass?
11155 MR. REDEKOPP: Perhaps I could just
make a comment before Slawko speaks. No one is
challenging the Commission's role. We certainly
understand and accept that role.
11156 I was reminded earlier today by the
Senior Vice-President of Resources of the CBC, Louise
Tremblay -- and she was reminding me -- that we have an
obligation under the Act to balance every year and I
think we all at this panel take that very seriously,
looking ahead at an uncertain future, wanting to make
commitments, knowing that under the Act we have to
balance and knowing at the same time that 40 per cent
of English Television's costs are fixed, infrastructure
across the country, regional operations and so on.
11157 If we are a little tentative here
about agreeing to new levels, it is because we want to
be prudent, Commissioner Wylie. It is not that we are
being resistant. We take all of these things very
seriously. We have to obviously balance them at the
end of the day and that is why I make the comment that
came from Louise Tremblay, just to remind us that we
have an obligation to balance, that we do have these
fixed costs, and until we can do something significant
about them, there are certain constraints we will have
to live with and they have to guide us in terms of
commitments.
11158 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: But there are
choices to be made and the Commission has a role as
well to look at what those choices are. If it is too
difficult to predict what the recalibration can
accomplish, obviously it may be necessary to have not
an annual report but a shorter period of time allowed
to see whether it's working or whether it's not.
11159 It is simply to verbalize my sense
that we do have a role to play and there aren't that
many mechanisms to play that role, both on the
commercial side and on the public side and perhaps even
more on the public side. Whether or not that role is
played requires measurements and tools for
measurements, within limits, without undue
intrusiveness, et cetera, but as many mechanisms as
possible.
11160 Recalibration, if I remember my days
as a gofer in a lab when I was student, requires a
number of mechanisms and measurements and so on.
Otherwise, you get an explosion instead or an
implosion.
11161 MR. BEATTY: I wonder whether I could
attempt to respond to that. Can I just get some
clarification from you first? When you say a shorter
period, are you talking about a shorter licence period
or are you talking about other --
11162 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: Whatever would
allow -- if it is too difficult, once a direction is
decided upon and discussed with you -- there have been
a number of subjects and areas raised to try to move
towards it.
11163 If it is too difficult to make
commitments that can be expressed in terms of
measurements that allow some transparency or testing,
if it is too difficult because the time frame and the
buoyancy of the industry is too high, it may well be
that that is the only answer because otherwise it
negates the ability to recalibrate and leaves it
completely to you.
11164 We trust Michael intrinsically,
but --
--- Laughter / Rires
11165 MR. BEATTY: We are prepared to leave
Michael as hostage if that would be helpful.
--- Laughter / Rires
11166 MR. BEATTY: Let me deal first, if
I --
11167 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: But I believe
you know -- what I am saying is there have to be tools
to test where we are going. Otherwise, it is a "Trust
us" mechanism which doesn't make me feel that I am
discharging my mandate as a member of the Commission.
I'm sure it is true of other commissioners as well. We
wouldn't have this process otherwise.
11168 So it has to be a meaningful process
that ends up with as many of these measurements as
possible. The public asks for it and it is our
responsibility to establish them with you and in a
reasonable fashion, and reasonableness may indeed
require shorter periods if that is what is necessary.
11169 MR. BEATTY: Let me try to respond on
that, starting first with the issue of the importance
to us of the seven-year licence term. It is important
to us. It allows us to do long-range planning and it
gives us some degree of certainty that you are not
simply working -- I can remember very well what the
cycle was when I was in Parliament.
11170 A majority government gave you the
ability to take long-range decisions as opposed to
worrying about where you were going to be three months
from now down the road. It is important to have
sufficient stability to be able to do long-range
planning and this is why the seven-year licence term is
very important to us.
11171 I also understand where you are
coming from. The Act is very clear. There is a role
for both the Commission and the Corporation. Both of
us have our statutory responsibilities. We are not
attempting to go back to the 1950s when we were both
regulator and public broadcaster. Those days are gone.
We don't seek to go back to that and there is an
appropriate role for both of us to play there.
11172 On the issue of transparency, we
expect to meet a level of transparency that goes beyond
any other broadcaster in the system. We do today, we
will in the future, and we are looking for what other
mechanisms we can put in place, whether in consultation
with you or other ones that we can take unilaterally
ourselves to ensure greater transparency and
accountability.
11173 One of the commissioners -- I am not
sure whether it was the Chair or Commissioner
Colville -- referred to the annual reports. The only
annual report that we have instituted within the last
couple of years, where the Chair and I will go on air,
I then subsequently did phone-in programs on French
radio, French TV, English radio, English TV.
11174 We also have had -- and Harold has
participated very extensively in these in his previous
capacity -- in a series of forums called "Take It To
The Top", particularly in radio, where anybody was
welcome to come in, make a complaint, hold us to
account, ask questions. We have done that across the
country and we are looking for other ways to do that as
well.
11175 We will be instituting something
which I consider very exciting and important with an
annual statement of promise of performance directly to
our audiences and saying: These, in a detailed way,
are the sort of engagements we are making in our
contract with you, our audiences, this year. We will
both give you a report card at the end of the year and
are open to be scored both on your assessment of how we
did and on your assessment of how honestly we have
scored ourselves in the report card.
11176 I would invite you if you haven't had
a chance yet to take a look at how the BBC does that
because it would be based on the model of the BBC and I
think you will be struck both by the degree of detail
that they have in setting objectives but also with the
honesty and openness with which they score themselves.
11177 There are many other mechanisms in
mid-course as well, whether it is the ability within
the parliamentary committee to examine our estimates or
our annual report. Our corporate plan is tabled in
Parliament -- a summary of it annually. That provides
another opportunity as well.
11178 You undertook an innovation which I
felt was a very constructive and positive one in going
out across the country and having hearings, inviting
people in to comment on the Corporation before going
into these hearings. It is a process which I am very
open to seeing us look at either ourselves or in other
ways in collaboration with others to provide fora in
which the Corporation will be accountable, in which
people feel that they have a direct opportunity to be
heard. I am certainly open to seeing us looking at
ways of ensuring that we are able to report on the
progress we are making and answer questions that you
have with the Commission as well.
11179 The reason why we are operating with
an abundance of caution in terms of commitments that we
make -- and we have made a whole series of commitments
to you as it relates to English Television and
Newsworld, but in every instance, these are minimum
commitments that we make because the uncertainty that
we have is what the performance will be with the
Canadian Television Fund under the new rules that
Commissioner Cram was talking about or the uncertainty
that we may have with regard to the parliamentary
appropriation.
11180 But these are minimum conditions that
barring force majeure we will meet and our full
expectation is to be able to go beyond that. What I
felt was important as we prepared to come in to meet
with you is that we be absolutely straight and honest
with you, that my successor not find himself or herself
here, seven years from now, explaining why we made
commitments that weren't met, that any of these
commitments would have to be realistic and achievable,
even if ambitious.
11181 What we would like to do is to find
with you engagements which are reasonable and
responsible and achievable, and our goal will be to
exceed those undertakings that we give to you and to
Canadians as a whole, and we will hold ourselves to
standards of transparency and accountability that go
well beyond that of any other broadcaster in the
system.
11182 The only other thing I would say is
that you correctly say, if we ask you to trust us that
you have a right to ask us: On what basis?
11183 MR. BEATTY: My response to that
would be that we have gone through the most serious
challenge to the corporation in its history over the
course of the last four years with massive reductions
to our budget. And yet, we are able to come to you now
and able, I think, to demonstrate our sincerity in
trying to achieve those commitments that we made to you
last time, even when we could not have anticipated a
budget reduction on the scale.
11184 And we can demonstrate to you that
even with all the strains on the corporation, we, in
good faith, are making commitments today and changing
directions in a way which I think are in line with what
you are looking for and which represent an attempt to
make this the most successful and most relevant public
broadcaster that Canada's ever had.
11185 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: I just have one
more comment, Mr. Klymkiw.
11186 I do understand that a schedule is
only a snapshot of what is being done now and that you
can't tell me what it is going to look like in seven
years.
11187 But it brings to mind the Christmas
cards you get where people choose to put a snapshot of
their family as a Christmas greeting. And to the
extent that some choose to be in jeans in the forest,
as opposed to in shirts and ties including the five
year olds in front of the museum, I conclude that they
are trying to give me a picture of their family and
what direction they wanted to take and I can take a
fair amount from that. Would you agree --
11188 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes.
11189 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: -- that we are
entitled to look at the schedule and have an idea that
this is what you would like it to look like and
continue, unless there are other commitments made that
will change it.
11190 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes, and I think we
have been very clear about that. I mean, to repeat we
want to do more arts performance; we want to do more
youth; we want to do more programming from the region.
11191 But we want to be -- I want to echo
what Perrin and Harold have been saying all day. We
want to be as honest as we can with you about what we
can accomplish. And we have, I think, foreshadowed
very clearly the areas that we think we want to do more
in. And that is beginning to show up in the schedule
now and will continue to evolve that way in the process
that we have talked about.
11192 And you know, I hope we have been
very clear about those areas.
11193 COMMISSIONER WYLIE: Thank you very
much.
11194 Thank you, Madame Chair.
11195 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you.
Commissioner Langford?
11196 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: I will move
into the sick bay here.
--- Laughter / Rires
11197 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: My
questions -- there are not many of them and they arise
mostly from the consultation process that Mr. Beatty
just referred to.
11198 I am conscious though that that
consultation process, just by the nature of it, had a
very strong regional focus and if any of you feel that
the answers might be appropriate in the next set,
that's fine, too. I'm fine with that. So I don't want
to overstep the jurisdiction. But with the CBC it is
tricky, you cover so much of the world, nationally,
regionally.
11199 The first piece of feedback that came
to me from these consultations over and over, I was in
four of the cities, three in the Maritimes and one in
Edmonton. And what I heard over and over, and I don't
say this to make you feel bad, but unfortunately what I
heard over and over is "We love the radio. We love the
radio. We love the radio and the TV is okay, too. But
we really love the radio".
11200 I was thinking of this when I was
listening to Mr. Redekopp just a few minutes ago speak
about how to measure audiences and obviously there is
reach and there is numbers and there is statistics and
then he spoke rather eloquently, I thought, about
loyalty. And I thought you might be able to help us a
little here because you have been on the radio side, as
well. You are kind of a rare commodity here. You have
got the heavy background in this wonderfully successful
area of the CBC and now you are setting out into the TV
area.
11201 Are there any lessons that you can
bring that you are now bringing or are they just
totally separate and it is just the way it is and we
all love the radio and the television will just have to
struggle to keep up? Are there lessons that you have
learned from radio that you are going to bring to
broadcasting?
11202 MR. REDEKOPP: Well, first of all
radio and television are very different media for sure
and people use them differently. But I would say the
thing that CBC Television and Radio have in common and
if we want to build loyalty, this will be the key fact
or idea, is connection with the community.
11203 You know, in 1990 when we made the
decision to take the cuts, we took it largely out of
regional television, regional radio was spared. The
networks, both radio and television were spared. And I
think this time around with this last cut, I think
there were all kinds of parties, newspapers urging us
to get out of the regions in television, at least,
entirely. And we didn't.
11204 But I think the area in which we have
to make connections and we will be talking about that
in the next panel is precisely in that area. I think
the people who did have some affection for television,
and there were a number of them that I heard, want more
of it. They want to see themselves on the screen more
often. Our frustration will be deal with it within the
constraints of our budget.
11205 But the loyalty and affection starts
with a local and regional connection. There is no
question about it.
11206 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: I think on a
similar vein another one of the themes that were struck
over and over again -- and again I want to try to walk
this fine line between the network and the regions and
not step over it yet. But one of the things that we
heard, particularly in the Maritimes, I think, and Mr.
Harris was there and he, I'm sure, would corroborate
this, was that a lot of the rural community there, and
they have a very large rural base still get only CBC
and if they are lucky and the bounce is right,
something else occasionally on the rabbit ears or
whatever.
11207 But quite a few people who came to
our hearing still get only the CBC, which brings me to
a kind of a question you may find strange coming from
this side of the table, but have you, for this
audience, gone too far into Canadian content? Is it
conceivable that by locking in your prime time into
this wonderful, laudable Canadian presence that you may
deprive these people who depend solely on the CBC of
some wonderful foreign broadcasting, the sort of thing
that the CBC traditionally has brought Canadians?
11208 MR. REDEKOPP: Well, let me make a
start on that, Commissioner.
11209 I think that we have always tried to
include the best of the world and Slawko is certainly
programming that into the schedule and into his future
thinking. I think as the present has said and others
at this table have said, our first obligation though is
to program Canadian, distinctively Canadian,
attractively Canadian and we wouldn't back away from
that.
11210 I do think that a full and bound
schedule also sets Canadian in the best of the world
context. So I think to that extent we want to always
maintain some best of the world.
11211 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: And are there
holes for that? As a programmer how do you find holes
for that if something extraordinary comes up and you
want to run it?
11212 MR. KLYMKIW: Well, generally, we buy
special series or limited series, we buy one-offs, we
buy movies so that they are easier to schedule. And we
try to buy them so they are in line with both our core
program activities and that they make sense in terms of
their quality and their subject matter and the kinds of
things I think that they add to the richness of our
schedule.
11213 But, you know, you raise a good point
through the hearings. I heard stuff like what you just
said and we hear many different things about what CBC
English television ought to be. And I would just like
to repeat what I have probably said a couple of times
already: We made some very difficult, but I think
important choices about what that schedule is today.
And I think it is a place of departure for us now.
11214 We have very, very strong drama and
very, very strong information and sports and we believe
that the next step for us is to make sure that our
regional, our arts performance, our youth components,
our amateur sports components grow, because I think
they can add distinctiveness to the network.
11215 So I think it is important again to
reinforce what we have been, for the most part, more
than foreshadowing most of the day.
11216 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: Just a couple
of more areas where I am still a little vague and you
have been very clear, so there aren't many left.
11217 But with the sense and a couple of my
fellow Commissioners have tried to get at this as well,
and you have answered, I think, as forthrightly as you
could, but it still bothers me a little bit about the
sense of looking forward. And I am not trying to nail
you to any kind of commitment here, but I too, I am
seeing the progress, I am seeing the movement and I am
seeing this wonderful swatch of red here and the pride
that you rightfully take in being able to accomplish
this and hopefully to maintain it.
11218 At the same time, I do want to look
forward two, three, four years -- I don't want to push
you all the way to seven perhaps, but just to kind of
get a sense. I have heard Mr. Beatty speak eloquently
about the power of repeats and when he spoke at the
very beginning about constellations and how repeats can
be used in that way. But still, when I look at the
handout that you gave us showing us CTV's schedule and
Global's schedule and your schedule, they didn't have
repeats, or if they did, I missed them, but they didn't
have many. You have a lot of them.
11219 In an ideal world, would you have
fewer and though there is -- and I take Mr. Beatty's
point -- some benefit to them and new audiences, in an
ideal world, would you have fewer of them and is that
something that you are hoping -- is that a goal that
you are hoping to attain?
11220 MR. KLYMKIW: First on the repeats.
And you know I am loathe ever to speak about our
competitors, but they repeat a lot and they do it for
the same reasons we do it. You can see "Frasier" on
several channels and on the same channel many times and
they spread their repeats out through the year. So we
all do that for economic reasons. We also do it for
the reasons I have detailed about audience flows, how
people watch television.
11221 My sense is that becomes partly an
economic issue and it also becomes an issue of how
people's viewing habits are changing. And it is what I
said earlier. When we look in the mirror about how we
want to change the service, we would be irresponsible
not to look at how people are using the television set.
11222 And they are using it differently,
they are not using it in an appointment way like they
did in the past. There are not that many appointment
television programs that we all gather around. They
want a schedule that is convenient, that is
user-friendly and that they can find their programs.
11223 So you are going to see a certain
level of repeats for that reason. But I would argue --
and again I leave some of this to Perrin -- in an age
where the world is fragmenting the way it is, an
over-the-air broadcaster -- to be simply an
over-the-air broadcaster is a very difficult way of
extending our value. And that's why we have worked
hard on constellation, if you want to call it that.
But the shelf space issue is an important issue for us
and it is one way that we can deal with the repeat
issue. It is also a way we can deal with getting more
value back to audiences, which is the business we are
in.
11224 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: So if money
weren't a factor we would still be seeing this. And
there is no trick to this question, I am just looking
for some guidance.
11225 If money weren't a factor, is this
the modern face of prime time television?
11226 MR. KLYMKIW: You know it depends if
we had specialty channels or not. If we didn't have
specialty channels or accompanying channels or
associated channels of some sort, we would look at what
our viewers needed. And our sense about our viewers,
about the citizens who watch our network is that on
Monday night at eight o'clock they all can't get to one
of our most popular shows. So we decided that we would
put it twice a week and it has been very successful in
terms of how the demographics have come to us. And I
think we will look at that all the time.
11227 I think the snapshot is an
interesting one and I think you have to work toward
goals which we have laid out. But I think as the world
changes, we simply as a public broadcaster have to be
able to react to those changes and the question you
have asked about audiences and repeats has a lot to do
with that. It has to do with viewing habits and how
they used their public service.
11228 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: So the answer
is "yes"?
11229 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes.
11230 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: I just want
to be sure. I mean, you speak so eloquently all of
you, but sometimes it is good to get a "yes" or a "no"
on that.
11231 And if this is the modern face of
television, I take your expert advice on that. I am
simply looking for information here. It is certainly
different, it is new and it is a new look. I am not
here to judge it, but I do want to learn from you
folks.
11232 I have one last question. We did
talk, as well, in the regions when we went out on these
consultations, we heard from a number of independent
producers and Commissioner Grauer referred to the
rights issue, as did Commissioner Cram earlier. And I
confess a little ignorance on this, but some of the
independent producers talked about their hopes that the
CBC would enter with them into an agreement modelled on
what they call the Australian/British model.
11233 I confess, I don't know what that
model is and I am not asking you to give me a Ph.D.
course in this precedent. But what is it that they
want? What does that model mean to them in a few
minutes or less and are there any problems with it that
you have?
11234 MR. REDEKOPP: Well, I think we were
speaking about that to Commissioner Cram earlier.
11235 We call that generically terms of
trade and the model that the CFTPA has put out is both
the British model, the BBC model, and the Australian
model. And we are, in fact, looking at it now. We are
meeting with them at the Banff Festival and we hope to
conclude our own terms of trade, as it were, by the end
of the calendar year.
11236 And as Slawko and Phyllis were
defining it, it talks about how we -- it is a
transparency mechanism so that people know how we make
decisions about projects, how they are funded. And I
can let the others speak a little more about the
details. But it really talks about the whole business
of commissioning, financing projects so that people
understand the decisions that are taken when we go to
do in-house as opposed to independent production.
11237 Slawko?
11238 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: And does it
deal with rights, with the rights issue?
11239 MR. KLYMKIW: I believe there's a
section -- there is a list of six or seven issues that
we are going to talk about and rights is one of them.
11240 It's what Phyllis said earlier, it is
to formalize a very, very important relationship that
has grown. It has exploded in the last couple of years
and it is to find a way of formalizing it so everybody
understands the goal posts or the field we work in,
understands how we make decisions, understands how we
deal with disputes if we have them. And begins to work
together to both help the CBC and at large help the
industry grow.
11241 And I think we are all quite excited
about it. I think it really formalizes a very
important partnership for the CBC.
11242 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: And what are
the stumbling blocks? I got the impression from some
of these independent producers they are ready to sign
on now, this sort of model agreement. Are there
stumbling blocks from your point of view?
11243 MS PLATT: I think the independent
producers are particularly interested in clarity. I
think they have concerns about additional rights and
how that will work between the CBC and themselves in
the future. I think that we, as stewards of public
money, will certainly be discussing with them our need
to negotiate proper agreements with them and what we
believe that that means.
11244 But what we have said to them is that
we will look at the BBC and ABC models. They have
agreed to come to us with a model that they feel is
particularly relevant to Canadian producers because the
circumstances vary from country to country, in some
cases quite significantly. So what we are trying to do
is work together toward terms of trade that are
appropriate for Canada, appropriate for the independent
production sector and appropriate for the CBC.
11245 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: And are you
close on that? I mean, are you confident?
11246 MS PLATT: We have begun the process.
We received the information from them about a week ago,
and as Harold mentioned, we are meeting with them in
Banff. So we have had several discussions with them to
date about how to approach this issue and we have
agreed with them that a date of the end of this
calendar year is realistic in terms of coming up with a
final agreement.
11247 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: Those are my
questions.
11248 Thank you very much.
11249 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you.
11250 Commissioner Pennefather.
11251 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: Thank you.
11252 I would like to briefly pursue the
programming questions which Commissioner Cram and
Commissioner Wylie raised, and Commissioner Langford
just touched on one of them.
11253 A couple of questions to clarify two
areas which you have mentioned as important components
of your strategy, and one is features, feature film.
It is not clear to me exactly how that is going to work
and where these features will end up on the schedule.
11254 Now, I take the conversation that we
have had regarding snapshot, but it is a guide to your
approach to beyond Canadian, or Canadian plus more, as
Commissioner Cram put it, what this translates into as
an initiative. We see money going into features to
do -- how will it work? Are these features you are
acquiring? Are these features you are producing?
11255 Secondly, where will they end up on
the schedule?
11256 MR. KLYMKIW: If I could just talk a
little about our scheduling philosophy -- this won't be
long.
11257 I think I said earlier that we really
look at counter scheduling everyone else, which means
that we look at three seasons or four seasons, and in
those we can divide up, for instance a Thursday night,
into two or three blocks.
11258 To begin with, with feature films,
the reason we began the hour Thursday experiment is
that we think we can expand that block to two hours
next year. So we think that there can be a period of
time of 13 weeks or 16 weeks or 15 weeks that can begin
to accommodate feature film.
11259 But we are going to begin looking at
the schedule that way because, you know, with the
limited shelf space we have one of the things we have
been trying to do is look at scheduling differently and
looking at these distinct periods of time that we can
change some of the programs, create new streams, put
new programs in them. So the foreshadowing that we
have done on Thursday is that that could become two
hours and that could become, for part of the season, a
feature film strand.
11260 We can also look -- and this is where
it becomes difficult. I could easily say to you
"Friday night will become feature films". Well, I
don't know if that is true. It is a very, very popular
comedy night for us right now. It partly depends on a
whole bunch of decisions we have to make about what we
are going to do less of. We haven't quite made those
decisions.
11261 What we have decided is, we obviously
want to do more in arts performance, regions, youth,
children's, and we have to come to some terms of where
we are going to find shelf space.
11262 But I just want to make the shelf
space point. The way we have dealt with that without
more shelf space is to carve up the schedule into kind
of four blocks and try to find fresh ways of putting
fresh programs in.
11263 It does a couple of things. First of
all, it is completely different than what any other
network does.
11264 Second, it helps us create more
program time for different genres.
11265 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: What I am
trying to understand is not just on the feature area,
and I will come back to that in a second, but also your
overall programming strategy. It is at a level where
we can translate what you have described as a
television, which is conventional television; and what
Mr. Redekopp said must meet a first criteria of
audience size, share and reach.
11266 Secondly, impact. I think those were
the criteria you laid out.
11267 As you know, we had a fairly
extensive discussion with your colleagues on the French
network on getting a better understanding of how the
strategy of -- in this case English television, in
their case French television, obviously, fit with the
overall corporate strategy and the objectives in that
strategy.
11268 Secondly, how your going forward
strategy translated. In this case they are translating
into initiatives. I think earlier this afternoon
Mr. Redekopp called them priorities of programming.
They are children and youth, performing arts, regional
roots and amateur sport. So one would assume that we
would see, over the course of the period of time of the
licence, shifts in terms of more presence for these
genres in the scheduling, and it is in that nature that
we are looking at what these words mean in terms of the
commitment.
11269 There is only so much time in the
schedule and there are only so many choices that you
are making. As a public broadcaster you are saying
what all the words translate into is more of this, more
of this, more of this and more of this.
11270 So as we look at the layout of
percentages in the prime time hour and news, public
affairs, sports, movies as they exist, are you telling
us that this is the basic balancing act that will go
forward, and, if it is, we have 3 per cent for movies,
which doesn't leave a lot of room for the features
which have now become a major portion of your strategy.
11271 The features is interesting because,
as you yourself say in your application, this is an
area where the CBC has called upon itself and, as you
say, has been recognized in some ways -- you say "at
last" -- as a major cultural player in terms of dealing
with the constant and ongoing challenge for feature
film making in this country. It is a level of
discussion around not just another program in the
evening but a whole genre of cultural programming --
and I don't mean that in an elitist sense -- for this
country.
11272 So how does feature commitment
translate into a real shift in terms of the space, the
promotion, the scheduling, the acquisition and the
production of feature films? To take the words and put
them into specifics is what I'm after and I'm using
features as an example.
11273 MR. KLYMKIW: Well, I guess maybe I
just haven't been clear enough. We have this year
created an hour of prime time real estate on Thursday
night. Next year that will go to two hours.
11274 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: That will
be feature film?
11275 MR. KLYMKIW: That will be partly
feature film. As I was trying to point out, I am
trying to look at the year in a different way, partly
to counter program and create a distinguishable
scheduling philosophy, but partly to create space to do
more things. So that is how we are partly dealing with
the shelf space problem.
11276 Also, to go back to Commissioner
Langford's question, we have this year run a comedy
strip at seven o'clock, partly because of the nature of
what happens between 7:00 and 8:00. Most of that is
repeat right now, so we have done that partly to extend
our brand. We are very proud of what we have done in
comedy, we think it works well at seven o'clock because
of what audiences want, but it is a whole strip in the
schedule that we can re-look at in terms of what we put
in there.
11277 We have also laid the pipe on Sundays
and we have Sunday nights where, you know, obviously we
do a lot of miniseries and made for television movies.
All of that is the discussion we are having in terms of
the balance of those things. But I think we have been
fairly clear on the shelf space side because we have
actually created those pride of place points in our
schedule for next year and we have already said that we
are going to expand some of those for the year after.
11278 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: I
understand what you are saying. It's just that when it
comes to what our role is, as Commissioner Wylie was
saying, it is important that that translate at some
point into specific expectations that we can in fact
look at where we are heading in those directions, and
we had this discussion at length with your colleagues
in French television.
11279 If I may move to one other area, and
that is the diversity question, gentlemen and Ms Platt.
We talked about multiculturalism and programming, and I
asked Newsworld this question as well: If you could
give us a better sense of the specific steps you are
taking to invite, to offer access -- I know you are
discussing with the independent production community in
fact a number of major issues -- the whole matter of
diversity in terms of the product you have access to,
the product you are producing, the staff, the training,
the accessibility to programs placement at CBC.
11280 What specific plans you have over and
above the employment equity steps which are repeated in
each application here for the main network in terms of
increasing the diversity, which you have said is not
appropriate yourselves, increasing diversity. I know
it's good to have -- it is absolutely essential,
particularly for a public broadcaster, to have that
goal but there have to be some steps to get there.
11281 MR. REDEKOPP: Perhaps we could start
with the training, Commissioner Pennefather, and start
with one of our key assets, and that is news and public
affairs.
11282 I think we have said a little bit
about it, but perhaps Bob Culbert could start there and
we could talk about all the other areas, training that
first of all makes it possible for young, first-time
broadcasters to join the CBC. We had some of that
discussion with Newsworld, but we probably haven't had
enough with the main channels.
11283 So, Bob, could you start?
11284 MR. CULBERT: Yes. I will repeat the
new internship program I spoke about this morning. I
think of the nine candidates chosen for the first pilot
three are one aboriginal and two other categories.
11285 We, I think, have three or four
different types of internship programs at the
corporation, including the one we talked about at
Newsworld yesterday. Some are just summer programs for
students through their education. All of them are
highly sensitive to this issue.
11286 I think it's the way we are at the
very starting point of identifying potential young
journalists, because it is always difficult to get
people into a position in sort of -- especially a
network show, but also our regional shows that have all
the expertise that they can immediately start work on
certain skills. We certainly seem to get them in early
to the intern programs to identify it. Then it is a
matter of sensitizing, as best we can, all our hiring
boards and all the people responsible for hiring to,
whenever possible, find the people to meet these
categories.
11287 MR. REDEKOPP: Can I speak a little
bit about the hiring boards? We have in fact an
expectation of all major hiring boards to identify
candidates, appropriate gender balanced candidates and
certainly from the visible minority community as well.
11288 The other thing that I would say --
we will get more into this when we get into the
regional panel -- that the greatest point of entry, or
the best point of entry is often usually at the
regional level. That is another reason for maintaining
those very strong regional roots.
11289 I think you heard from Mark Bulgutch
yesterday, I mean the number of people who have come
into the system from any one of our regional stations
is truly remarkable. In fact, people join up knowing
that that is the route in. That is also where we have
put expectations on every one of those regional
directors -- and you will be seeing them and meeting
them in just a moment -- to make sure that we had that
entry line absolutely full of diverse candidates.
11290 Did you want to add anything to this?
11291 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: It's
what's on the network. I understand the mechanism, and
we can come back to that, but it's how the network ends
up with a reflection of diversity.
11292 MS PINSKY: In terms of our
departments, we are not doing much hiring. When we do
we certainly look for a strong representation,
multicultural representation when we do hire.
11293 But, as I said, we are not in hiring
mode. So we depend far more on our independent
production partners and what they are bringing to us to
try to advance these various issues.
11294 I think I mentioned earlier that we
have encouraged the inclusion of diverse representation
in terms of the actors who portray roles in a very wide
variety of what we do. If you watch a CBC series you
will often see -- unless it is completely
inappropriate -- faces who are not all white male.
11295 So that has been a priority for us
for a number of years. We continue to push on that
front. We have several series in development that are
very strongly rooted in multicultural themes and we
have programming either on the air or coming to air
that speak again very strongly to that initiative.
11296 COMMISSIONER PENNEFATHER: Thank you
very much.
11297 Thank you, Madam Chair.
11298 THE CHAIRPERSON: Legal counsel.
11299 MS PINSKY: Thank you, Madam Chair.
11300 I just have a couple of questions of
clarification.
11301 First with respect to your Canadian
content commitments. You have set them out at page 158
of your application, and you have set out two levels of
Canadian content commitments, one for the period
between September and February and the other for March
to August. The period for March to August would have a
10 per cent lower level of Canadian content. Could you
please first explain why you have set out this
different level of commitment for two time periods?
11302 MR. REDEKOPP: Michael?
11303 MR. HARRIS: Essentially, the issue
has been in the summer and is less acute now. But it
has been that we have had large positions of American
inventory with the network and as we went to an
all-Canadian schedule we had inventory left that we
played off, and that was largely played off in the
summer so that the Canadian content levels in our peak
season over the winter were higher than they were in
the summer. Now we are pretty much playing through
that inventory at this point.
11304 MS PINSKY: When we look at the new
fall schedule that you have filed with us there doesn't
seem to be a problem any more. Is this still an issue
that you need to address?
11305 MR. HARRIS: We are well into
discussion. We are prepared to move this up higher.
We are in a better position than we were. We have
written off some inventory and the problem isn't as
acute as it appeared to be.
11306 MS PINSKY: To what level? You said
you are prepared to move higher. What are you looking
toward? The higher level for September to February,
then, for the entire year?
11307 MR. HARRIS: We are looking to
average over the whole year. We would move to the
75 per cent Canadian content over the broadcast --
11308 Similarly, while we are there, in the
evening broadcast period we are prepared to move to
80 per cent over the full year.
11309 MS PINSKY: Thank you.
11310 Now a very specific question. With
respect to your commitment to air in prime time a
Canadian sports documentary series with respect to
amateur sports, is that the type of program that would
fall within the category of information programming or
would this fall within the category of sports
programming?
11311 MR. HARRIS: Within sports
programming.
11312 MS PINSKY: Again, if I look to your
fall 1999 schedule, in your presentation you mentioned
that you have expanded the CBC playground from two to
three hours. Just to clarify, when I look at the
schedule I see two-and-a-half identified for
children's, followed by a half hour for family and
youth. Could you just clarify with regard to the
indication in the presentation you intend to, in the
future, increase to the full three hours, or did you
want to make that distinction between youth and
children's?
11313 MR. HARRIS: It's my understanding --
I'm looking at Phyllis here -- that the full period
from 8:30 to 11:30 is preschool programming, children's
programming.
11314 MR. REDEKOPP: It should be three
hours a day but weekdays.
11315 MS PINSKY: Okay. So from 11:30 it
should indicate otherwise.
11316 MR. KLYMKIW: The children's block is
from 8:30 to 11:30.
11317 MS PINSKY: Okay. It is just that it
is indicated here "family and youth".
11318 Just with regard to that coding issue
that arose when you rescheduled "Degrassi" from later
in the evening to earlier in the afternoon, and that
may arise again in relation to "Road to Avonlea", can
that simply be remedied by recoding? Is there a
problem?
11319 MS PLATT: I'm assuming that that is
a discussion with the CRTC. I guess our sense is that
a program like "Degrassi" or like "Odyssey" is clearly
designed for a youth audience. "Odyssey", for example,
had virtually no adults in it. It seems to be a coding
issue rather than a substantive issue, but we would
want to discuss that with you.
11320 MR. HARRIS: Yes. One of the things
that we would like to engage in at the conclusion of
these hearings is we would like to schedule a meeting
with the CRTC to talk about coding issues we have to
make sure that we can be on side and that we don't get
into fights over things that aren't really issues.
11321 MS PINSKY: Another specific
question.
11322 On page 92 of your application where
you set out your specific commitments with respect to
drama you identify as number 5 specifically that you
would intend to:
"...work closely with regional
stations to develop two new arts
and entertainment series in each
region over the course of the
next licence term." (As read)
11323 Just to clarify what that commitment
is, when I read the regional applications you speak of
two either arts and entertainment or information
programming. Are we speaking of the same regional
programs here so it is not necessarily two new arts?
11324 MR. REDEKOPP: Correct. We are
speaking about those two programs. There are two half
hour programs that are going to be introduced in the
next licence period in nine of our regional areas in
the country.
11325 MS PINSKY: Okay. So with respect to
this, this is set out as a drama commitment, it is
possible, then, that in several of the areas there
could be two information depending on the particular
circumstances of the --
11326 MR. REDEKOPP: I think the emphasis
would be on light information. We will get into more
detail into that in the next panel. But it could also
have dramatic material and comedic material.
11327 MS PINSKY: Again, just to clarify
the specific commitment being made with respect to
regional programming, you set out in your presentation
that you would have one hour prime time allocated to
regions for a 26-week period to present programs and
variety drama and information. Then you say you would
broadcast the best of those regional programs on the
network: one 13-week series in the first part of the
licence term and two in the later years.
11328 I wanted to clarify whether that was
a specific commitment that of these regional programs
that would be developed that one in the first part of
the licence and two in the second would be broadcast on
the network.
11329 MR. HARRIS: Not the particular
regional series but repurposed versions of them. So it
is not as if we would take a show out of a region and
put it on the network but that we would use the
material to repurpose them for network play.
11330 MS PINSKY: At the risk of beating
this one to death, I do want to just clarify what the
specific commitment is with respect to performing arts.
11331 When we look at page 53 of your
application -- and we spoke earlier that you had
extensive discussions about the different
interpretations that you have given to the concept of
performance -- I just wanted to clarify, at page 53,
paragraph 169, you have identified five different types
of programming that you would consider to be under the
rubric of performing arts, and with respect to the
commitment to broadcast the 24 performances, would
those only relate to the first of the two which would
be arts performance specials and significant arts
performance within the larger context as opposed to the
three latter ones which include arts journalism, arts
documentaries and award shows?
11332 MS PLATT: That's correct.
11333 MS PINSKY: Okay. Then just with
respect to the undertakings that you have made earlier
today, I believe there were four, I wanted to clarify
when you would be in a position to fulfil them and file
the information with the Commission. Could you do that
by tomorrow afternoon?
11334 MR. BEATTY: Specifically, which
undertakings?
11335 MS PINSKY: There were four. There
was one outlining the ratios of the CTF funding and the
CBC licence levels reporting back on whether you had
reported back to the Heritage Committee, the third one
was providing an analysis of the contribution of each
sport to the overhead, and the fourth was hours of
exchange programs on the network.
11336 MR. HARRIS: The first three we can
have by tomorrow. The fourth one may take a little
longer, but certainly by Friday.
11337 MS PINSKY: Friday morning?
11338 MR. HARRIS: Sure.
11339 MR. BEATTY: Remind me, Madam Chair,
not to make any commitments.
--- Laughter / Rires
11340 MS PINSKY: Okay.
11341 Finally, I just wanted to note for
the public record that the CBC has filed two documents
in response to the undertakings that they have made.
The first is entitled "CBC Television Network and
Stations Overall Canadian Production Volumes", a
document of three pages; and the second is a document
entitled "Distribution of CBC Canadian Broadcast Time
According to Program Type".
11342 Thank you, Madam Chairman.
11343 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you.
11344 About the broadcast centre, it is not
clear. Did we agree on the first day of the hearing
last week -- it seems like months ago already -- that
we would have further information to kind of clarify
the cost allocation there? I don't have the transcript
from last week.
11345 MR. BEATTY: I don't recall that. I
don't know whether Louise Tremblay is with us.
11346 MS TREMBLAY: This was not discussed
at the hearing at all, but it had been questioned in
the deficiencies process and we provided the answer.
11347 THE CHAIRPERSON: It was in the
deficiency and we were satisfied. Okay.
11348 I'm sorry. It's just that I had a
note here.
11349 I think that concludes this part of
the hearing.
11350 I would like to say that the same
kind of areas of concerns and preoccupations we raised
since last Tuesday are still there on the table and
there was some similarity, though recognizing that
there is a difference: a difference in terms of the
public and the citizens that are served, a difference
in markets, also different approaches. The questions
are concerns and preoccupations and we hope that in the
rebuttal phase we will have a chance to pursue them.
11351 There is a general discomfort, I
would think, because of the stability of the revenues
and the costs. It is in discussing this with you that
there are trends that are kind of design in terms of
where you are going to go, but it is not apparent when
we look at the forecasting you are doing in terms of
figures.
11352 For example, you talk about getting
some new agreement with the independent producers
vis-à-vis the distribution rights in order to allow
some new revenue stream to allow for new development.
Well, it is not apparent at all in your figures here,
except for in the olympic years where everything is
pretty much stable in terms of figures.
11353 So it may be out of prudence and
caution and certainly we can relate to that and
understand that, but it is very difficult to see the
real push and the passion behind it that will really
kind of come alive. We get it when we talk to you, but
it is not there.
11354 Maybe when we get together again at
the end of the hearing those are areas where --
although we understand the necessity of not promising
something you cannot deliver, for which you don't have
any guarantees in terms of what you can produce, you
have a sense of firmer commitments in terms of what are
the real directions -- whether this is a snapshot, it
still shows, as other Commissioners were pointing out,
the trends you are trying to push and to kind of infuse
into a new way of doing things, a new way of providing
the public service to Canadians. I think we need that.
11355 In terms of also the idea about
independent producers, I think it is important. The
idea of getting more transparency -- we will be talking
about that again -- it's there and I suppose it exists
also at other levels, so anything you can provide us
with in the rebuttal phase that is more precise, more
clear, in terms of what are the commitments and the
goals so that, as Commissioner Wylie was saying
earlier, we can really, with you and with all
Canadians, kind of see the progress from year to
year --
11356 MR. BEATTY: Madam Chair, we have
noted all of those. We would be pleased to come back
on any of them and to try to provide you the greatest
precision that we can.
11357 If I can, let me also just briefly
make a comment with regard to what Commissioner
Colville said when he first started this morning. He
prefaced his comments by saying that because he was
getting back into sports that we might see him as
anti-sport and he pointed out that the Commission has
an obligation to pursue a whole range of issues, the
sports advertising or any other.
11358 Let me make it clear from our side,
that there are no illegitimate questions at all. We
are here to account for our activities. We want to
maintain the highest possible level of transparency.
We welcome the opportunity to have the exchange with
you. We will do our best to supply any information
that we can.
11359 At the end of the day, our only goal
is to ensure that any commitment we make to you we are
able to deliver on that so that if there is any
uncertainty that you have about what our good
intentions in terms of the directions in terms of the
directions in which we want to go, simply out of
prudence that we will be cautious where there are
variables such as the Canadian Television Fund where we
simply don't know at this point what access we will
have.
11360 But on any of the issues that you
have raised, on other issues of concern to you, we will
do our level best throughout to be as transparent and
responsive on each of those.
11361 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you very
much. We appreciate it.
11362 Before I forget, there was one last
thing about sports. It would be interesting to know if
those are --
11363 MR. BEATTY: Did that comment just
incite this --
--- Laugher / Rires
11364 THE CHAIRPERSON: No, no, no. It's
just that I was looking at my note here.
11365 MR. BEATTY: So I take it back.
11366 THE CHAIRPERSON: Sorry.
11367 It is in-house productions most of
the time, isn't it, the sports, whether it is
professional or amateur? If we could get some
comparisons there with genre that would be helpful
because when you are saying that you are not making
much profit on those types of programs, at the same
time it allows to free up some kind of money in order
to do other things and investing in development or in
drama or arts and entertainment, because you are
ensured of really getting the proper level of work so
that you can really make good use of all the resources
you have, so that would be helpful.
11368 MR. BEATTY: (Off microphone).
11369 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you very
much. Thank you to all of you. We will see some of
you just after the break.
--- Short recess at / Courte suspension à 1520
11370 THE CHAIRPERSON: With the next step
of the Hearing, I am sorry that Mr. Beatty has left
because we have just learned that it was his birthday
today, so we want to extend our nos meilleurs
anniversaires, bon anniversaire and it is his last year
in the forties. Lucky him, he hasn't reached that big
five yet.
11371 Madame Bénard?
11372 MS BÉNARD: Thank you, Madame Chair.
The presentation will be for the renewal applications
of the CBC owned and operated television stations
across Canada.
PRESENTATION / PRÉSENTATION
11373 THE CHAIRPERSON: Hello again.
11374 MR. REDEKOPP: Hello again, Madame
Chair, Commissioners.
11375 I would like to introduce three of
our Regional Directors of Television from across the
country. Two from my right, Fred Mattocks from the
Maritimes, Jane Chalmers from Manitoba and
Saskatchewan, and Rae Hull from British Columbia.
11376 Behind us are some people you have
already met. Our Program Director, Slawko Klymkiw.
Our Executive Director of News and Current Affairs in
"Newsworld", Bob Culbert.
11377 In the audience --
11378 THE CHAIRPERSON: Somewhere.
11379 MR. REDEKOPP: It doesn't match my
script. And our Director of Finance and
Administration, Bill Atkinson.
11380 Joining them for this presentation
are two new faces, Gino Apponi who is sitting to my
left in the rear is our new Director of Regional News
and Information and the person responsible for the
redevelopment of our supper hour programs. And to his
right is Judy Fantham, Director of Regulatory Policy
for English television. She is also a former Regional
Director.
11381 And at our side table we have,
starting from my right, Directors Ron Crocker from
Newfoundland and Labrador and Bruce Taylor from
Ontario, Dave Knapp from Quebec, Joe Novak from Alberta
and Marie Wilson from the North. And we have Christine
Wilson at the table as our Legal Counsel.
11382 So I think I have introduced the
whole side table.
11383 THE CHAIRPERSON: Welcome.
11384 MR. REDEKOPP: Commissioners, I have
spent a large part of my career at the CBC working in
and for the regions. I believe deeply and passionately
that strong regional roots, meaningful regional
presence and effective regional reflection are the very
heart and soul of what the CBC is all about.
11385 It is through our local stations that
we connect with Canadians at the communities where they
live. Without them we could not provide a valuable
service to our citizens, nor could we share their
stories and their talents with the rest of the country.
11386 The past few years have required us
to make extremely difficult choices about the
allocation of resources across our system. They have
also challenged us to become even more creative and
innovative about how to use the resources we do have.
11387 So I want you to hear today from some
of the people who are doing that work in our owned and
operated television stations. I believe you will be as
impressed as I am by their determination and commitment
and by the results they have achieved.
11388 And I will return at the end of the
presentation to summarize how we plan to build on this
strong regional foundation in the coming licence term,
but first, let's hear from Canadians.
--- Video presentation / Présentation video
11389 MS HULL: Part of the family right
there in the neighbourhood.
11390 Madame Chair, Commissioners, that is
the kind of affirmation we all heard about the
importance of strong local roots during the
Commission's public consultations. It was a privilege
to listen to our viewers and many of them have very
personal stories to tell about the impact CBC
Television can have in the community.
11391 Shirley Young spoke of a hospice that
recently opened its doors in Vancouver and she credited
CBC Television's local news with its existence. Over a
period of two years we developed and broadcast a series
of essays by and about a young doctor coping with a
diagnosis of Aids. It went on to win an Academy Award
nomination. But equally important, the response in the
community was so incredible his legacy continues today
with the opening of the Dr. Peter Centre(ph) through
funds raised locally and nationally.
11392 At the consultations Shirley Young
wondered out loud how many lives were spared because
CBC had the gumption to air the diaries. Shirley Young
spoke with the passion of a mother, Dr. Peter was her
son. Now, I don't know if we saved lives, but I do
think that we open hearts and minds.
11393 And I like that word "gumption". I
think it describes what I have seen at CBC Television
since I returned from the independent sector a year
ago. And it certainly describes the commitment by all
the regions and my regional colleagues to discover
creative and inventive ways of remaining connected to
our communities.
11394 CBC Winnipeg, for example, is home of
the Pan-Am Games this year. Taking the initiative the
local station has leased some of its building space to
international broadcasters. Now, the revenue from that
has been turned into a licence fee for an independent
production, a series called "Pan-Amania", ten
half-hours celebrating the colour and the culture of
the games.
11395 CBC Regina has opened its doors to
new tenants. Saskatchewan's educational broadcaster,
SCN, moved in three years ago. And SCN has just rented
a studio and control room to provide a long distance
classroom. Two local independent producers rent our
facilities to produce a youth entertainment program and
from that CBC receives equity and revenue that we can
use to generate more programming.
11396 In Vancouver, the local leading
newscast, "Broadcast One" has just become a partner
with Simon Fraser University in the creation of an
educational website which uses the scripts and video of
the nightly newscast in a media literacy project
accessed by B.C. schools and B.C. students.
11397 In Alberta, CBC supports the National
Screen Institute with an annual drama prize for up and
coming filmmakers. This February, CBC Alberta
broadcast the 1998 winner of that prize, "Samurai
Swing". This week, "Samurai Swing" airs nationally on
"Canadian Reflections".
11398 CBC Manitoba and Manitoba Film and
Sound provide similar support with a project called
"Prairie Wave". We hold a script-writing competition
for a 30-minute drama and produce the winning entry.
11399 And if you watched CBC's coverage of
the visit of Nelson Mandella to Toronto last September,
you saw the anchor of our Toronto supper hour right
beside him. Suhanna Meharchand hosted the Canada -
South African Economic Summit and MC'd a gala luncheon
in President Mandella's honour.
11400 Further east today, in the rain, the
anchor of CBC Montreal is scheduled to host an annual
golf tournament for literacy. In fact, I think they
are on the links right now. CBC Montreal is very
proactive in the promotion of literacy, winning
accolades from the literacy partners of Quebec.
11401 CBC Montreal also has a special
connection to the Anglophones of the Eastern Townships.
We broadcast live from the Annual Townshippers Day,
this year celebrating its 20th anniversary. And in
fact, CBC Montreal's news makes a habit of getting into
different neighbourhoods and broadcasting live from
there once every six weeks.
11402 New ways of doing business apply to
internal relationships, as well. We restored local
news programming in Windsor through innovative thinking
and job redefinition founded in a strong partnership
between management and union. Our Windsor news team
won a valued internal award for this achievement, a
fitting tribute to their flexible, creative and
progressive solutions.
11403 Back in my home station, British
Columbia, the story is now of building back. This
fall, the network schedule will reflect a 40 per cent
increase over two years ago in the amount of network
programming originating from British Columbia. That
includes two of the network's prime time drama series,
"DaVinci's Inquest" and "Nothing Too Good for a
Cowboy". And a new daytime talk show, "In the Company
of Women", which grew out of one of the regional
projects developed a few years ago.
11404 "In the Company of Women" is the kind
of development you will see percolating in our regions
later this year because of new initiatives touched on
earlier and which Harold will outline later.
11405 But first, I turn to my colleague,
Fred Mattocks, the community efforts of CBC Halifax
have won international recognition there.
11406 MR. MATTOCKS: Thank you, Rae, and
good afternoon, Commissioners.
11407 In 1997, our station in Halifax was
awarded the North American Gabriel Award for TV station
of the year for reflecting the values and creativity of
its communities by the analysis of issues and the
celebration of its talent and culture.
11408 The award recognized a contribution
to and a connection with our communities through our
programs and our activities that moves well beyond the
traditional image of CBC Television. Let me give you a
few examples in and around my region.
11409 Canada's vibrant East Coast music
industry has deep roots in our culture and our
communities. We have contributed to the growth of that
industry through a long-standing tradition of high
quality programming activity and partnerships. The
East Coast Music Awards started as a partnership in
1994 between the East Coast Music Association, CBC
Newfoundland and CBC Maritimes. It has grown to become
a major network broadcast and a major industry event
and it reaches more than a million Canadians each year.
11410 East Coast culture has many
manifestations. We are a significant partner in the
Celtic Colours Festival held in Cape Breton Island each
fall. We produce the Halifax Comedy Fest in
partnership with Brooks, Diamond Productions, one of
the Maritimes more significant talent promoters and
agents. Our production was the third most popular
Canadian program on television this year.
11411 We have a unique project called "Art
Spots". "Art Spots" are short programs produced in
collaboration with Maritime visual artists. They are
the result of a seminal partnership involving
ourselves, the visual arts community and the Nova
Scotia Arts Council. And I am happy to tell you that
we were joined last year in that project by the Canada
Council for the Arts and the CBC Television Network.
11412 This kind of outreach and recognition
is not unique to the Maritimes. CBC Newfoundland found
corporate sponsorship to produce a five-hour
documentary project which chronicled the history of
Newfoundland to commemorate Newfoundland's 500th
anniversary. The series was launched with a gala
hosted by Lieutenant-Governor of Newfoundland. It went
on to play both locally and on the network.
11413 The University of Western Ontario and
the Canadian Journalism Foundation honoured CBC
Newfoundland for the journalistic excellence of their
three local information programs, "Soundings", "Here
and Now" and "Land and Sea". They join the Toronto
Star and Maclean's magazine as honorees of that award.
11414 And this brings me to the cornerstone
of what we do, news and current affairs.
11415 The Atlantic provinces are Canada's
most rural provinces. We are committed to continue to
provide rural issues and rural people a voice with our
documentary series, "Land and Sea" which is produced in
both the Maritimes and in Newfoundland. We also
support a "Country Canada" bureau in Halifax to serve
that rural constituency.
11416 Finally, I am extremely proud of our
three Maritime supper hour programs which have
successfully undergone significant challenge and change
through the licence period. For more on that story, I
pass back to Gino Apponi, the Regional Director of News
and Current Affairs.
11417 MR. APPONI: Thanks, Fred. Good day,
Commissioners.
11418 As Fred said, there has been some
significant changes in how we produce our regional news
and current affairs programs across the country. Rae
mentioned the restoration of our news program in
Windsor and that is something that we are especially
proud of, especially since it was in response to a
grassroots community effort.
11419 The other thing we are extremely
proud of is the restoration of an hour-long news
program in Calgary, which I am happy to say we will be
launching in a new exciting format in a couple of
weeks.
11420 Also, since the last licence renewal
we launched two daily shows in the North. This morning
you mentioned "North Beat", that is one of the shows.
The other one is a show in Inuktitut called "Eagle
Act". Both those shows were a major expectation of the
Commission the last time we appeared before you and of
course they were a long-standing priority of ours, as
well.
11421 That rebirth of our regional news and
current affairs programs has happened across the
country, not just in those markets that I have
mentioned.
11422 Over the last three years we were
forced to look at everything we do in the regions, how
we did it, whether we wanted to continue doing it, what
order of priority we should scribe to it. The
broadcast world has changed so we were going to change
with it.
11423 So we put all those shows under the
microscope and what we found surprised even us. We had
to admit that by the mid-nineties we were losing sight
of our mandate as a public broadcaster. Our shows
looked less like the CBC and probably more like their
competition.
11424 So through an effort we called the
"supper hour project", we systematically examined each
program. We redefined what each community and those
stations what they needed, what their audiences needed.
We redesigned the shows to meet those needs and then
re-engineered our work methods so that we could
actually deliver it and do it more cheaply as well.
11425 We had to become innovative in job
descriptions and we also had to become innovative in
how we covered the news and how we did our
storytelling.
11426 I am happy to say that all the hour
long shows we do now deliver the essential news of the
day like they used to, but they do much more than that.
On a daily basis they deliver context and analysis to
those stories in a full menu of treatments which can
include vibrant political panels, satire by local
commentators, by artists, and of course, something that
the CBC specializes in, documentaries.
11427 Over the past month we monitored the
CBC supper hours in four markets, in Vancouver, in
Winnipeg, in Toronto and in Halifax and we compared
them to the top-rated private sector newscast in each
market. And our shows are measurably different.
Overall the CBC supper hours spend more time on locally
produced stories consistently. As I said earlier, we
do documentaries which is a mainstay for those supper
hour programs and seldom, if ever produced by local
broadcasters.
11428 We featured double the volume of
local arts coverage, again another CBC public
broadcasting value. And we do half the volume of
coverage of petty crime stories, traffic accidents,
building fires, those kinds of things.
11429 Let me translate that into some
specific examples. CBC Ottawa produces a column
featuring investigative consumer journalism. One
recent viewer tip about sport utility vehicles led to
investigation by the National Transportation Safety
Board.
11430 CBC Regina recently aired an
outstanding emotional documentary about child
prostitution in Saskatchewan that was singled out by
the Canadian Association of Journalists as the best
regional documentary last year in a field, which I
might add, only featured CBC regional productions.
11431 CBC Manitoba, CBC Edmonton, CBC
Calgary were the only stations in their markets to
pre-empt prime time programming for coverage of
municipal election night, ongoing coverage of that.
11432 The staff at CBC Manitoba, CBC Ottawa
and CBC Montreal also have to be singled out for their
public service programming during the Manitoba floods
and the ice storm. Those people were living that
story, and yet, they were able to provide an essential
service to their audiences.
11433 Those events, when I mentioned
earlier the storms and the flooding, led to awards for
those programs, but more importantly, what they did was
they led to some community fundraising efforts, a
couple of videos that raised thousands of dollars for
victims, and a concert, the Red River Relief Concert,
which raised $2 million. So there are also many awards
that help us to measure our success.
11434 CBC Vancouver was just recently named
best local newscast in that city. Our maritime
stations won several RTNDA awards a couple of weeks
ago. There is a whole list of them. I would probably
be here all day if I went through them all. So I will
stop at that.
11435 Let me finish by saying that our
supper hours are the top-rated CBC shows in St. John's,
Charlottetown, Sydney, and Windsor, and that means
local shows that are more popular than anything else we
do at the CBC, including hockey and "Air Farce". They
are close seconds in markets like Winnipeg and Halifax.
11436 So clearly, we have lots to be proud
of but we also have a lot of work to do, especially in
stabilizing those programs. But I am excited about the
future.
11437 Harold will continue with an outline
of that future.
11438 MR. REDEKOPP: Commissioners, CBC
Television remains committed to regional presence,
regional service, regional programming, and regional
reflection.
11439 I would like to clarify the blue bar
graph we were discussing with Commissioner Cram
yesterday. It shows that 38 per cent of English
Television's budget is spent in or for the regions;
65 per cent of our total production hours are produced
in the regions in all locations. On the schedule, in
any one location, 41 per cent of what you see is
produced in the regions for either regional or network
broadcast.
11440 Much of that programming is highly
reflective of the place where it is produced. Some is
less so. But when you look at all the programming we
produced, whether in Toronto or in the regions, 51 per
cent of it consists of true regional reflection. I
believe we have now tabled with you back-up sheets that
give you the details of those calculations and examples
of the shows that fall into each category.
11441 During the coming licence term, we
will invest more resources in our regional stations and
we will distribute those resources more appropriately
across the country.
11442 Our regional programming commitments
fall into two categories: news and other programming.
11443 First, news: We will maintain our
present levels of regional news production. We will
continue to develop and strengthen those programs to
ensure that they offer a distinctive alternative and a
real and valued service in each of the markets.
11444 We will use new standards to measure
our success at doing this, including both audience
impact and content analyses like the one Gino was
sharing with you just now.
11445 Thirteen of our stations are each
committed to providing at least 7 1/2 hours a week of
regional news programming. That includes weekday
supper hour programs and late night newscasts. Four
smaller centres each produce five hours a week. That
is a cumulative total of almost 6,000 hours of regional
news and production a year across the system.
11446 We are also in the process of
carefully examining whether or not we can reinstitute
regional newscasts on weekends. That study is not yet
complete and I undertake that as soon as it is we will
share the results and our decision with the Commission
and the public, and that will happen before the end of
this calendar year.
11447 Let me now turn to programming other
than news. While it is of prime importance, news alone
does not make a television station. We intend to
connect CBC Television more closely with its
communities, their issues and concerns, their creative
and performing artists, and their independent
producers.
11448 To accomplish that, we are making a
brand new commitment of more than 1,000 hours of prime
air time and approximately $25 million over the coming
seven-year licence term for new regional programs in
the areas of non-news information, variety programming
and comedy and drama programming. Those programs will
be produced in nine separate locations: Newfoundland,
the Maritimes, Quebec, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan,
Alberta, B.C. and the North.
11449 That process begins this year with
the investment of development seed money. Next fall,
the first series of 26 half-hour programs will hit the
airwaves in each of those regions and continue each
year thereafter. By the fall of 2003, a second 26-week
series will be added.
11450 We also intend to showcase the best
of this new regional programming on the full national
network. We are committed to broadcasting one 13-week
prime time network series from the regions each season
beginning next fall and two such series starting in
2003.
11451 Commissioners, we make these
commitments with confidence and commitment: commitment
to the communities and regions of Canada, to their
people and to their CBC Television stations. We are
determined to do everything we can to serve and reflect
those communities, both to themselves and to Canadians.
11452 That concludes our presentation. My
regional colleagues and I are happy to answer your
questions. Thank you.
11453 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you very
much. I would ask Vice-Chair Colville to address the
questions of the Commission.
11454 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Thank you
very much.
11455 So about sports --
--- Laughter / Rires
11456 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: No, I am just
kidding. I think we have had enough of that.
11457 I just want to pick up perhaps by way
of starting this comment in your comments that you have
just made now at page 10. There is a statement that
Mr. Apponi made. It is at the bottom of page 10. Two
things sort of struck me.
11458 I am a little surprised at what
surprised you on two issues over the CBC's licence
renewal. One was the surprise about when the CBC
dropped American programming, how the Canadian
programming that replaced it was able to sustain
audiences. In this particular one, you talk about when
we put all our shows under a microscope and what we
found surprised even us. We had to admit that in the
mid-90s we were losing sight of our mandate. Our shows
looked too much like their competition.
11459 I guess, to start this discussion
perhaps at a more philosophical level, when you talked
about this in terms of losing your mandate and your
shows looking too much like the competition, when you
put the shows under a microscope, what did that mean to
you and what was it that really surprised you, and why
did you really find that surprising?
11460 MR. REDEKOPP: Perhaps I could
actually start with Bob Culbert who is really the Head
of News and Current Affairs and in fact has really
driven this project.
11461 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: You thought
you were going to get away for the afternoon.
11462 MR. CULBERT: This actually is a
labour of love for me. So I don't mind.
11463 I think what surprised us was that
some of us, myself included, spent a lot of time in the
supper hour system, the regional system. I was
personally in Winnipeg and Halifax. I think we almost
had fooled ourselves into believing that our shows,
because we were the CBC and CBC journalists, that our
shows were different and differentiated from the
privates.
11464 When we put them under the
microscope, as Gino said, in the mid-90s, we were
surprised to find that that wasn't as much the case as
we would have liked to think. Our analysis was that
after what happened in the 1990 cuts when a number of
shows were cut and cancelled, I think a number of the
people involved in the shows had convinced themselves
that the way to survive in the future was to be like
whatever program is deemed to be the most popular
program in its market, and by definition, that meant
"become like them", and that that trend had set in.
11465 What we discovered was that we had
moved in that direction too much and what we asked our
programs to do, and it was a huge kind of cultural
change for some of the units that had become like news
hours, which was to start producing the programs
against the values of CBC journalism, which Gino has
laid out and which no doubt we will discuss further
today.
11466 That was what the surprise was, that
I think we had kind of fooled ourselves a bit up until
then that we were different. Yes, we were, but in some
cases, not different enough. It was also not the case
in every market. We discovered that some shows had
kept their mandate more than others and you could see a
trend of sort of patterns where people were sort of
trying to compete by being like whatever the most
popular show was, and we decided that was a mistake.
11467 We had once and for all, I think, to
decide what kind of programs we wanted from our
regional programs and I think we made the right
decision because they are different and they are CBC
programs relecting CBC values.
11468 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Your comments
just now, I take it, are relating -- and I guess here,
because it was Mr. Apponi who made this statement --
are largely relevant to the news programming. Does
this statement apply to the non-news too?
11469 MR. CULBERT: The study I sort of
headed up, the study of the regional supper hour shows,
was strictly based on those programs. We spent months
looking at those in great detail. So I really can only
claim expertise to those.
11470 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I guess what
I am getting at is the comment that in the mid-90s we
were losing sight of our mandate.
11471 MR. APPONI: That was very specific
to those news programs, as Bob said. It was looking at
each show individually, market-by-market, and doing
content analysis similar to the ones we are doing now.
11472 At the time, it was specific to the
selections made for the stories we covered, how we
covered them, how we lined them up in the show, the
reliance on American feeds. It was very specific to
that hour. It did not include -- at the time, I think
there were in most markets half-hour programs in each
market as well. It was not related to those programs.
11473 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I take the
point that this particular study was looking at that.
I guess I am asking the more general question: Do you
think -- maybe Mr. Redekopp is the more appropriate one
to answer this or any of the regional people -- whether
you felt that you were losing sight of your mandate in
the non-news programming?
11474 MR. REDEKOPP: I will let my regional
colleagues speak to that. I think the fact that they
disappeared did not speak to the content nor their
connectedness to the community. In fact, it was a huge
loss when we had to take those cuts.
11475 If you will recall, Commissioner
Colville, in 1990, we did a similar thing. We closed a
number of stations or at least reduced a number of
stations and we reduced our programming to news
programming and late night news programming, after
which we built back -- and we built back because we
felt it was absolutely essential to have that contact
with the community in the non-news area. With this
last budget reduction, this enormous reduction, we had
no choice but to cut back in that area again.
11476 So I don't think that is a comment on
the kinds of programming we were doing but rather on
the financial imperative. But I would invite my
regional colleagues to speak to those non-news
activities.
11477 MR. MATTOCKS: If you go back to the
early part of the licence period, we had just actually
reinstated a number of non-news programs in the
regions -- in our region, "Up On The Roof", which was a
music program for developing artists, and "Land and
Sea", the rural documentary program. Those were very
much centred in the public broadcasting mandate.
11478 I think the problem for the supper
hours was, at that time, they were under some very
unusual pressures. Not only had they been cut quite
dramatically but there were shifts in philosophy about
the kinds of service they should be providing and the
kinds of material they should be doing. There wasn't a
clear strategy at that moment, at least in the area I
was working in, about how to deal with those pressures.
11479 So we, I think, naturally ended up
looking at the kinds of strategies that programmers
generally apply, which is: How do you make your show
popular?
11480 MR. REDEKOPP: Ms Chalmers, do you
want to comment?
11481 MS CHALMERS: Well largely, I agree
with what Fred said. We were producing a program, sort
of a -- if I can liken it to "On The Road Again",
except it was just in Manitoba. It was extremely
popular and the ratings were just about as good as the
supper hour. I think it did a lot to explore the rural
life in Manitoba, which we felt was a very important
role that we had within our station.
11482 We also did a series of music shows
that Phyllis was referring to earlier, which really
served to help these people in the early part of their
careers. We obviously are -- the doorways into our
buildings is the place for people to begin their
careers. We nurture them and we work with them, with
the idea that they are going to move up, many of them,
hopefully to the network.
11483 So we felt at the time, for some very
hard financial realities, that we lost something that
was valuable.
11484 MR. REDEKOPP: Ms Hull.
11485 MS HULL: I think in fact when it
comes to non-news programming the regional directors
have done quite the opposite of losing sight of their
mandate. I think, in the face of cuts and really not
many opportunities in program interns, they have
determinedly maintained a connection with the
community, and when possible, saw pre-emptions from the
network in order to create local specials.
11486 This year, we broadcast two hours of
the West Coast Music Awards and went to the network in
order to get a pre-emption for that. There are
examples across the country. Again, in B.C., we
produced a series, booked on Saturday nights, which
airs after the hockey game on Saturday nights.
11487 So I think that we have maintained a
connection. We have maintained a connection with the
arts communities, with the independent communities, and
I think what we are really looking to now with this
opening of extra regional time is the chance to make
good on that determination to continue that connection
during a period when, in programming terms, it was
difficult to see those results on air.
11488 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay. I want
to just explore two issues really. They are the two
issues that were the focus of the presentation, that
being news and then the non-news programming, which I
guess you could say: Well, that's everything.
11489 But I want to focus on the regional
for the regions. We have already explored earlier
today, with Commissioner Cram, regional programming for
the network and I think it has been acknowledged that
the CBC is doing a great job in various parts of the
country and getting more regional programming, and
certainly from the region that I come from in Halifax,
I think it has done a great job, and as you heard me
express yesterday, I guess it was, if I have a concern
at all, it is that some of the activities may
jeopardize some of that. Witness what is happening
with Newsworld and so on.
11490 But I don't want to talk about that
this afternoon. I just want to talk about the regional
news and the non-news regional programming for the
region, some of which may get on the network.
11491 So starting with the news, and I
leave it to whoever is most appropriate to speak -- I
guess Mr. Apponi may want to speak to some of this or
each of the individuals, as you feel is appropriate.
11492 As you noted in the statements in the
renewal application, you have not, for budget reasons,
been able to maintain the commitments for news over the
last licence period. At page 17 of your application,
you talk about:
"The Corporation makes a
commitment to maintain at a
minimum the level of local news
and information programming that
is set out in each of the
promised performance of the
regional stations."
11493 (As read)
11494 This minimum commitment is seven
hours, 30 minutes, for local regional news, Monday to
Friday in most of the stations; then it is five hours
in a couple of others.
11495 I guess what I would like to do is
get a sense of what do we mean by minimum here? Again,
we have talked about these minimums in other
programming issues, but I would like to get a sense of
what this means in particular here.
11496 MR. REDEKOPP: I think what we are
committing to is, first of all, examining the whole
issue of weekend news from which we had to retreat
regrettably. We are examining our ability to reinstate
those and we will get back to the Commission, as I
said, before the end of the calendar year, with our
decision and the reasons for it. But that is what we
are doing at the moment.
11497 So at a minimum, at this hearing, we
are saying, in the news area, seven hours and 30
minutes in the stations you have mentioned, and five
hours in the others.
11498 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay. I have
a few questions on that weekend proposal. We will get
to that in a minute.
11499 You also refer to -- and this is at
page 16 of your application -- to "building back
audiences and underperformance". I guess I am thinking
of this question as much in the context of the
discussion that we just had a few minutes ago about we
had to admit in the mid-90s that we were losing sight
of our mandate. Our shows looked too much like the
competition and I guess that speaks to the point that
Mr. Culbert was raising a few minutes ago.
11500 My first question would be: What
markets do you consider to be underperforming? What do
you mean by underperforming?
11501 MR. REDEKOPP: I think when we look
at markets, I would say, in Toronto, Ottawa, and a
number of our western markets, I think we are
underperforming in terms of the intended audience we
think we should attract. If you are going to ask me to
put a number on that, I don't think that I can. But as
you have heard us say elsewhere in this application, we
want to optimize the audiences for the programming we
offer.
11502 Since we are differentiating
ourselves in our supper hour programs, it doesn't mean
that we have to be the market leader but we ought to
have, I would say, respectable, decent numbers, and
there should be impact. Those are the two indicators.
11503 I will let Gino speak a little more
about it, but we are concerned that with the awards
that we are winning with a number of our programs,
including "Broadcast One", there ought to be more
people tuning in as well. I think, obviously, impact
is terrific and we would like to increase the number of
people who actually come into that. But perhaps...
11504 MR. APPONI: I think it goes back
to -- and there are reasons, I think Harold mentioned
the places, and clearly we are doing much better in the
east than we are in the west. There are reasons for
that. They are obviously historical reasons.
11505 What Fred was saying earlier, in the
early 1990s I think there was sort of a loss of focus
after the cuts. There were some decisions made in the
west that I think we all regret right now in terms of
losing our station in Calgary and how the audience
reacted there. There was a change in focus also in
terms of whether these shows should be provincial or
local, and I think we have sort of stabilized that now.
That is what the last three years have been about.
11506 In markets like Vancouver where we
started this whole process -- I was just there recently
in fact for a program review which we will be doing
across the country that is among our better shows --
and the word isn't getting out. I think that there is
now a next step to this where we have to clearly
communicate that we are doing these kinds of shows and
we are doing them across the country and we build
that way.
11507 Calgary is another place we are, like
I said earlier, relaunching a program and we need to
make it clear to Canadians that we are in the new game
in Calgary, which is all part of our plan over the next
three years. So the west is the priority.
11508 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So when you
look at one of these markets that is perhaps "under
performing", be it Toronto, Ottawa or a number of the
western stations, what will you look for to satisfy
yourself that you have achieved your objective and that
it is in fact now performing.
11509 Perhaps put another way, do you
report to Mr. Redekopp?
11510 MR. APPOINI: I report to
Mr. Culbert.
11511 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Oh. So when
the end of the year rolls around and Mr. Culbert is
doing your personnel performance review and he is going
to measure whether you have achieved the objectives,
what are you going to say to him that you have done in
terms of achieving the performance with those stations?
11512 MR. APPONI: Clearly, as Howard
mentioned, numbers are important. It is not going to
be our only criteria.
11513 We have now designed these programs
so that we are not only going after numbers. We have
designed them against some really core CBC values that
we are measuring, like I said earlier, across the
country -- we started in Vancouver -- that Bobby has
been involved in. In fact Bobby is the one who started
this whole process. So we will be measuring the shows
against those.
11514 We will be measuring them also in
terms of how they have impacted in their audience in
terms of kind of audience reaction they have gotten
outside of ratings.
11515 We will also be measuring them in
terms of how they service the rest of the network. It
is important that those stories be seen by other
Canadians, and it is important that we be able, through
those stations, to develop talent that moves on in the
network as well.
11516 MS HULL: If I could just add to
that, Commissioner?
11517 I think that with local evening news
one of the things that counts most is consistency, and
when you make a dramatic change, as I think the supper
hours shows have done, it does require time for the
audience to become acclimatized. I know in my own
market that Global television, it has taken them
15 years to make the kinds of gains that they had set
out to make. So I don't think that it happens in one
year.
11518 What I think we have done is achieve
the recognition of our peers. I was very interested
just a few days ago to attend an industry conference
and they had a media panel and it was to help them
discuss how better to get their story out. On the
media panel were reporters from the private stations,
and they quite openly admitted that if you want a story
done with any kind of analysis, with background, with
context, then the only place that that can happen is
the CBC locally. They would like to be doing it but
they are not.
11519 I think that we are achieving the
recognition. We are certainly achieving the awards.
11520 Certainly in a grass roots effort --
now the number of times that community groups phone us
for a copy of our cover story. I know there were a
group of girls on Denman Island, part of the Gulf
Islands, who called because we had done in-depth
stories on girls and violence and bullying. We sent
them a copy of the show. They were inspired and they
created their own video that went on to win an award.
So I think it's a grass roots thing.
11521 I think we are getting there, but I
think that we really just -- Broadcast One just marked
its two year anniversary and I think it is a process
that is going to take some time to exact the kind of
ratings increase that we would like to see.
11522 MS CHALMERS: I think it is important
to note, I guess, to speak globally about what these
shows are.
11523 It is about a depth and analysis and
an intimacy with the subject matter that you won't find
in any other shows. These shows devote enormous amount
of time to answering the question "Why". That is why
we are into long form and investigative journalism in a
way that I think other programs are not.
11524 We have broken huge stories using
this method which is absolutely going back to the heart
and soul of what CBC journalism is all about. We have,
I guess, gotten married again, gotten married to our
values again and, you know, put on our true colours and
"This is who we are" in recent years, and it is
starting to really produce journalistic results.
11525 We also, from the point of view it
has become really, I guess, feeding ground for our
network shows because more and more you are seeing the
stories, the breaking stories and current affairs that
we do appear on the network.
11526 Recently, with the troubles plaguing
the farmers we did extensive coverage in Saskatchewan
on that. "The National" didn't send anybody out. That
whole story was done by our Saskatchewan newsroom, and
we are very proud of that. That meant that those
stories were told from the perspective of the people
living in that community.
11527 CBC Manitoba broke the vote-rigging
inquiry, scandal, story that led to the Monin Inquiry.
We also did an investigative piece that was on "The
National" about a scientist up north who in fact had
been convicted of sexually assaulting a minor and was
allowed, instead of going to jail, to go and finish his
research? That raised a lot of, obviously, legal kinds
of questions.
11528 We do not go to the press conferences
or every fire or every car crash. We do have fewer
resources and it is imposed on us, quite appropriately,
a discipline to absolutely focus our energies on the
kinds of journalism that we think is important to our
communities.
11529 In that light too, you will notice
when you watch our shows -- and I hope you do, or
will -- across from coast-to-coast, we do a lot more
time and effort on political coverage, questions about
public policy, political debate.
11530 The other intriguing thing to me
about our programming, it's not black and white: He
says yes, she says no. There, I have balanced the
story. We try to explore the grey. We try to pose the
questions and take time in our program for the debates
to allow people to actually think about it as they are
formulating the decisions that they make in their own
communities.
11531 These are the kinds of things that we
are trying to do. These are public service things and
totally appropriate to a public broadcaster.
11532 There are many people who will say it
is not the most popular kind of programming, but I want
to also flag to you that well over 600,000 people watch
our shows every night. We will do a piece in Manitoba
two or three times a week and we will get calls from
people, over 200 calls -- this is just on our phone
line, that is not even e-mail -- who want to debate the
issue that they have seen that night.
11533 Because we invest the time and the
research and provide the context into those specific
issues and questions within our community, I think that
we provide a distinctive service.
11534 Is that going to make us No. 1?
Well, in Winnipeg we are No. 2, but we are climbing.
11535 I also think that we are a positive
influence, as other broadcasters and media look for in
the community. We are presenting -- trying to take the
high road in terms of the journalism we are trying to
do.
11536 The same can be held true for Regina
who has just launched their show. We are going exactly
the same track. So that is who we are now.
11537 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Mr. Mattocks,
did you want to add anything?
11538 MR. MATTOCKS: That is a hard act to
follow.
11539 Only that the supper project wasn't
just about shows that were having audience problems.
Our show in Charlottetown has -- I think it is the
highest rating or highest share of any CBC supper hour
show, a 78 share, and yet when we went to the
principles of the supper hour project and looked at the
show and looked at those principles, we found there was
room for adjustment and that show is now a changed show
and a better show for it. That is true of all of our
programs, supper programs.
11540 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Ms Hull, your
comment about this seminar, or whatever it was that you
went to, and this discussion about an approach to
dealing with news and how some of the private broadcast
people were indicating about if you want that kind of
depth of analysis it is going to be done by the CBC.
11541 I guess it raises an interesting
challenge for you and Mr. Apponi in terms of how to
deal with this thing, because -- I don't want to sound
like a criticism -- it seems to me it has been a fact
traditionally that the CBC is not -- with a few
exceptions, not led in terms of audience in the markets
that you serve. In fact, I guess probably what drove
you as a part of this review was the lag in some of
these numbers.
11542 So you have again this trade-off,
this balancing act to try to make between what is a
performing audience, if you will, in terms of numbers,
and this ability to do the in-depth political
reporting, the kind of journalistic research that
perhaps the others don't do, and it doesn't seem to
result in the numbers. Yet there is a certain amount
of integrity that the CBC feels that it is your role to
do that job.
11543 How do you make this trade-off, then,
between how much of that you do versus the numbers. It
goes back to this first question again about re-looking
at your mandate.
11544 MS HULL: It's always a question of
balance if not recalibration.
11545 I think that it's essential that we
provide a newscast that is different from what our
private colleagues already in many markets
competitively do.
11546 BC TV has a huge market in Vancouver
and they do what they do well. I think that there is a
market for a more thoughtful kind of journalism, but in
dramatically altering our newscast -- we are only two
years old and I think that people are beginning to find
us.
11547 I think that there is a larger
context in the media universe these days where people
are really hungry for something that does provide more
thoughtful analysis, but again it is taking some time
for them to find us.
11548 I think that while we would always
want the most number of people to watch, the kind of
flexibility with a public broadcaster -- in Ottawa, for
example, I know that the local evening news here, when
there was a controversial appointment of the CEO at the
Ottawa hospital, the coverage of the local news here
made a decision that they were live -- there was no
other private stations there -- and they decided to
extend their coverage by 20 minutes. That is the kind
of commitment that a public broadcaster can make when
we are not most consumed with the bottom line.
11549 I think in the long run, if we are
consistent, if we are devoted, if we are loyal to that
mandate, then I think that the audiences will grow to
be loyal to us.
11550 But you are right, it is always a
challenge, and it is one that we have to continue to
examine and find new ways of making sure that we are
being as entertaining as well as enlightening as
possible.
11551 I know Broadcast One does a nightly
state of the arts feature. That has increased our
connection in the local arts community in ways that I
think come back to reward us in ways that aren't just
ratings.
11552 Finally, I think it is important to
re-emphasize what has been said about these shows being
the backbone of a new service that goes across the
country. Over 1,000 items go from Broadcast One on a
yearly basis to Newsworld. We take part in about
50 co-productions with "Venture", "Undercurrents", the
"Magazine", "Mid Day". These are stories that are
fuelled in the local market. The spark occurs when
people are driving to work. Those stories wouldn't
happen and they wouldn't get the larger audience if we
weren't doing what we are supposed to be doing.
11553 MR. APPONI: I would like to
underscore what Rae said, both in terms of there is a
market out there for this kind of programming and also
in terms of the fact that I think stability will find
that market if we continue to do these programs.
11554 Also, I don't want to harp -- I know
that there are some markets where we do have some
serious challenges ahead of us. As Jane said, in some
markets we are second. Every night, though, there are
over 600,000 Canadians; every week 3.5 million
Canadians watch these shows. As we have gone through
these changes, and as fragmentation has changed the
landscape in broadcasting, these programs have
maintained their share since 1992 of about 10 per cent
of the audience at that time.
11555 So the news is not all bad. The fact
that we haven't lost an audience is actually goods news
as well. The fact that we are going to keep stable and
we are committed to being stable with this new format,
as we have been over the last two years, will only help
us to increase that audience and for people to find the
programs.
11556 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Recognizing
that you might always want to have more numbers -- and,
Ms Hull, maybe I can put this question to you -- how
would you look at your supper hour program next year,
the year after, and say: In spite of the fact that we
are not No. 1 in the market I think we have made it.
We are doing a good job and I think we have achieved
what we set out to do.
11557 You have pointed out a couple of
times already that it has only been two years. What
would be the factors that you would look at to say: I
think we have reached a reasonable level here.
11558 MS HULL: I think I would look to
community recognition not just awards, although I
hasten to add that I think probably Broadcast One is
one of the most decorated newscasts in the country,
winning international awards as well as national
awards, and certainly the most coveted to local awards
that can be won in the local market. That is one way.
11559 I think community recognition is
another. I am enormously heartened when people knock
on CBC's door and say "I would really like a copy of
that 8 to 10 minute report that you did the other night
because it has some real meaning in my life, it has
some real meaning to a community issue that is going on
on our doorstep." So I think that that is another
marker.
11560 Certainly I would hope that we will
continue to increase our ratings, and certainly prior
to the strike that was the trend.
11561 I also think that we have to examine
our success internally in that we need to be looking at
the shows and comparing them with our peers across the
country and saying: Are they are bright as they can
be? Are they as innovative as they can be? If
Newswatch in Montreal is getting out into the community
once every six weeks, well, why aren't we doing that in
Vancouver.
11562 So I think that we need to have
constant internal yardsticks of success that will keep
us pushing for a level of excellence and examining what
our peers do across the country.
11563 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: If the
numbers don't come, what do you do?
11564 MS HULL: I think that there has to
be a place where people who want a different kind of
newscast can find it. I think there has to be a place
where if people want informed debate about municipal
politics, about the arts community, about what is
happening with the academics in the universities, that
it is a disservice if we can't offer that to them.
11565 So I am confident that we will
continue to grow, but I think that we have to stand
firm and say for the people of Canada in order to grow
informed citizens that this is a service that is a
bench mark, that it has to be there. It further has to
be there because without it the entire rich fabric and
tapestry of the network news service begins to unravel.
11566 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So you have
discovered your soul and you don't want to compromise
that no matter what happens with the numbers? I'm not
trying to sound critical here, I guess it's just to
kind of test how far do we go with this. Because I
think you are correct in the statement that you made in
your opening comments here today.
11567 Ms Chalmers, did you want to make a
comment?
11568 MS CHALMERS: Thank you.
11569 I would like to. I think that if our
brand stands for anything in this country it is about
integrity and trust, and there is a huge
responsibility, having been a journalist myself. The
impact sometimes of your stories and the way you might
even structure a piece and being accountable for that
in terms of people's lives. It is an enormous one, one
that I have laid awake at night and I know our
journalists struggle with all the time.
11570 Our culture is such that our people
truly discuss what they do and critique hard and take
the phone calls and take the heat in the press, and we
talk about it. We have our ombudsman process.
11571 We take our jobs very, very
seriously. Especially in most regions what we are
trying to do is the hardest kind of journalism
possible, it is the type of journalism that isn't
handed to you in a press release. It is the type that
takes enormous amounts of research, I would call it
investigative, and it questions -- it raises questions
that many powerful people generally don't want to have
answered.
11572 We have to be so careful at the end
of that to make sure that we are right, and that
constantly questioning: Don't let your thirst for the
story get in the way of your search for truth. This is
a constant discipline that we are always -- we live
with every day.
11573 That is who we are. That is what we
try to do. I think, as Gino was saying, if we stray
off the way and try to copy some of our competition, we
are wearing the wrong clothes. This is where we have
immense amounts of training and immense amounts of
effort.
11574 In Winnipeg we are not the number one
newscast, but we have broken the stories of the biggest
consequence that have led to judicial inquiries and
other kinds of events in our society. Those are the
things that we put our efforts into. That makes us
valuable in that community in the fact that we are
always there doing those things. In fact, in turn,
enriches the network because we are constantly the
incubator of the stories that go up to the national
stage.
11575 MR. APPONI: I would like to add --
and I don't want to leave the impression that we have
done this and now we are just going to wait for the
numbers.
11576 This is part of an ongoing process.
These shows are evolving. As I said earlier, we are
looking at them all again this year to see if they have
met those original criteria and probably establish some
more criteria for them for the future.
11577 We are also checking with our
audiences to make sure that we are on the right track
with that, not just terms of numbers but in terms of
what they want to see on these programs and whether we
are connecting with them.
11578 So I think it is a long road and at
some point we will have to regroup under Harold and
decide whether we have gotten there, but I think that
is still far in the future.
11579 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Let me switch
to the weekend issue.
11580 You have noted that you are studying
this question and you hope to conclude that, I think it
is later this year, and you have offered to submit your
report to the Commission when you have concluded with
this. I guess my question really is: What are the
factors that you are considering that are going to
influence your decision as to whether or not you
reintroduce news on the weekend and how you go
about it?
11581 MR. REDEKOPP: I think the issue is
very simply sustainability, Commissioner Colville. We
didn't lightly get out of weekend news. We considered
the kind of cut that we had to sustain. We looked at
where we would be best to place our resources. We
considered that the weekend had a lower available
audience and therefore we should invest weekdays.
11582 Recognizing if we are going to be
relevant we ought to be there seven days a week we are
looking at it again. But the issue very clearly is
sustainability, and that is over the next seven years.
11583 I think that you have heard all of my
colleagues talk about stability consistency is what is
most important now to rebuild these programs. So I
think that we want to be absolutely clear, if we are
going to build them back we are going to stay there for
at least the licence period.
11584 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I'm not sure
I understand what that means though, "sustainability".
11585 MR. REDEKOPP: It means enough
resources. You know, with everything else that we are
hoping to do to transform, to recalibrate, to transform
the English television service, looking at available
revenue and looking at all of it, I think what we are
saying is: Let's take the time, let's do the analysis,
let's look at where we can find more efficiencies and
have greater partnership with Newsworld, if that is
possible, with the main channel news service.
11586 But before we commit to weekend news
let's do that full analysis. Let's make sure that we
have costed everything else that we are going to
promise to the Commission that we in fact can deliver
so that when we come back in whatever licence period
you give us we have delivered at at least the minimum
expectation.
11587 So that is really the issue. The
issue is about when I say "sustainability" can we
afford it for the licence period.
11588 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: But I guess
in this case you would be into the licence period
before you even make that decision, so I guess it
wouldn't necessarily be an expectation coming out of
this licence process in any event.
11589 MR. REDEKOPP: No, but I think we are
conscious of the fact that we have not always delivered
on expectations, and I don't -- quite frankly, not one
of us who has ever worked in the regions want to be in
that situation again. So that is the issue.
11590 Believe me, when these people on the
front line have to go and tell the communities they are
backing off again, that is the hardest thing. It
really is. I don't think anybody at this table or at
my adjoining table have an appetite to ever do that
again.
11591 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: On that
issue, you did refer, I think it was on page 18 of the
submission that you talk about:
"We will continue to seek means
to enhance the supper hour show
budget ..." (As read)
11592 And I presume this might apply to the
weekend one:
"... through sponsorships."
11593 I was wondering what the nature of
those sponsorships were. I presume it's not the same
sort of thing we talked about in radio.
11594 MR. REDEKOPP: No. I will let Gino
speak to that.
11595 MR. APPONI: Yes. As it stands now
some of our programs are managing to enhance their
budgets with sponsorships of non-news parts of their
programs. Things like the weather cast is sponsored,
the closed captioning is sponsored.
11596 We have some strict guidelines about
how we do that, that obviously we can't sponsor any
parts of the newscast itself, that there can't be any
perceived conflict with the newscast and with a
sponsor, and we receive the right not to accept any
sponsorship as well. It is that kind of thing I think
that we have done a bit in the supper hour newscasts
already.
11597 I know that we have set limits on how
many we can do in one show and it is very seasonal. So
some we will get for 13 weeks and then some we won't
have at all. So they are doing that at different rates
across the country right now.
11598 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So what is
your view in terms of that to try and sort of maximize
that within those limits, that it wouldn't be
associated with news, it would be weather cast, sports,
public service features, that sort of thing? Is that
what you are --
11599 MR. REDEKOPP: Closed captioning.
Exactly.
11600 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Yes, that
sort of thing. Okay.
11601 MR. MATTOCKS: I have a slightly
different take on this, too, which is that sponsorships
enable you to do a kind of community contact you can't
do otherwise, particularly with the business community.
We found in our region that sponsorships are in high
demand, even given the limitations of what we can put
into the sponsorship market, and you end up in
relationships with commercial operations that you
wouldn't otherwise because they wouldn't consider
normally a CBC supper hour as being an in player in the
market. So it just leads to other things, both in
terms of direct programming and in terms of the
sponsorship itself, but also in terms of relationships
down the road.
11602 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I'm not sure
I understand. Could you explain that a little more?
11603 MR. MATTOCKS: It has long been a
conundrum for me in terms of thinking about how the
public broadcaster relates to the business world.
11604 Our programs and, in particular, our
journalistic programs, the supper hour program in this
case, has existed in a world where the only contact
between it and the business world, other than being
covered in stories, was in terms of commercial airtime,
which is very finite and delineated.
11605 Sponsorships gives you an opportunity
to go out and talk in the business world about your
program, about what its values are, about why you do
what you do, about how a business can participate if
they share values, if it is appropriate. It is just
another line of communication. It is another way of
opening the doors. It's a very small door, but it is
another one and it is an important one.
11606 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay.
11607 Just finishing up on the news aspect
of this, then.
11608 Mr. Redekopp, given the comment you
just made about expectations and so on, is the CBC then
prepared for the regional stations to take as a
conditional licence the seven and a half hours in the
stations listed and the five hours for Charlottetown,
Fredericton and Windsor?
11609 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes.
11610 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay. Let's
switch to non-news.
11611 I guess this is one of the areas that
really comes under the heading of roots, being in the
regions that people certainly identify with, although
certainly along with the news and -- again, I want to
focus on the non-news regional programming largely for
the region, not the network stuff. I guess I would
note, just by way of introduction, that I think it was
actually the TV policy hearings when Commissioner
Pennefather and I were in Halifax and were doing the
regional town halls or consultations for the broad TV
policy. I think it was Anne-Marie Verner from the Film
Development Corporation who was expressing the view of
the corporation and through the corporation the
independent producers there about how important this
sort of regional programming was, particularly in their
terms for being able to work with independent producers
and how in many cases this was an opportunity for
people to get their start in the business.
11612 So not only are the regional stations
important for your employees, in many cases, to get
their start as journalists or camera people or
whatever, or other artists/entertainers who may get on
a CBC-produced show, but also independent producers to
get involved and get a start in the business. Largely,
this starts at the roots and I guess this case is a
place where the roots, for the last while at least,
have been pretty shallow and perhaps hasn't gotten as
much nourishment. Maybe there has not been enough rain
or whatever to try and help those roots to get as firm
a foothold in the ground as even the regional
programming for the network has gotten, which I think
the corporation has done a fairly good job over the
last while.
11613 So let's focus on this new initiative
that you are proposing. Just to be clear, I just want
to clarify one element. If I look at the chart on
page 20, and just to be clear that I understand how
this is working here, I think there is a mistake on the
chart and perhaps you can just help correct that for
me.
11614 In 1999-2000, the chart shows
$400,000, which is the $50,000 for eight regions. You
today have mentioned nine. Everywhere in the
application it talks about eight and you added in the
north --
11615 MR. REDEKOPP: That's right.
11616 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: -- which
wasn't in the original proposal.
11617 MR. REDEKOPP: Correct.
11618 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: If we just
stick to the eight and then we will come to that.
11619 MR. REDEKOPP: Excuse me. I'm just
not sure I'm working off the same sheet you are.
11620 MS FANTHAM: Perhaps it might be more
helpful if you refer to your media kits that you
received today that has the updated information.
11621 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: It's always
hard for us to refer to stuff we just get today --
11622 MS FANTHAM: I know.
11623 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: -- when we
are preparing our --
11624 MR. REDEKOPP: We tried to make it a
little easier. That is why we prepared this new sheet.
I hope it helps.
11625 MS FANTHAM: I would draw your
attention to two. Yes, that's the chart that you have
that has the projected regional broadcast hours. That
would be helpful. And the main difference is, yes, we
have added in CBC North. It is not part of this
licensing process, but we felt obviously it is very
important to us as a region.
11626 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay.
11627 Can I go back to the chart on
page 20, though, in spite of the proposal, just to
clarify?
11628 In the first year the chart shows
$2,400,000, but I don't believe that is correct. The
$2 million which represents $250,000 times eight
doesn't appear until the second year, I don't believe.
11629 MS FANTHAM: No. Absolutely right.
In fact, we did correct this in deficiencies, so that
is a typo in the original submission.
11630 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So absent the
north, the money we are talking about isn't
$25 million, it is actually $22,400,000, right?
11631 MS FANTHAM: I'm going to turn this
over to the money man.
11632 MR. ATKINSON: It's $22.4 million is
the commitment.
11633 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Right. So
now you have added in the north. Does that add more
money to this proposal, then, or are we spreading the
existing money across?
11634 MR. ATKINSON: No. The $2.8 million
is added to that amount to bring it to a total of
$25.2 million now.
11635 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So the north
gets the same amount of money that the other eight do.
Is it just one more?
11636 MS FANTHAM: No. Absolutely the same
amount as the other regions. Yes.
11637 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: It's, yes,
absolutely the same.
11638 MS FANTHAM: Yes, absolutely.
11639 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay.
11640 I appreciate this proposal was
probably written by a number of different people or at
least the individual station applications were, but I
was struck by the difference in language through this
and I guess it lead me -- and let me just pick snippets
out of the quotes.
11641 From Montreal, the reference to this
proposal was:
"... intends to create two new
regional series." (As read)
11642 For Halifax it was:
"... is keen to provide overtime
and seed monies to Halifax ..."
(As read)
11643 For St. John's:
"... it is the hope of ETV
through the creation of ..."
(As read)
11644 For Ottawa:
"... is determined to expand the
quantity if budgetary levels
remain stable." (As read)
11645 For Toronto:
"... two series could be
developed." (As read)
11646 For Winnipeg:
"ETV looks forward to
providing ..." (As read)
11647 For Regina:
"ETV is determined to
enhance ..." (As read)
11648 For Calgary and Edmonton it was:
"ETV wishes to expand ..."
(As read)
11649 And for Vancouver:
"ETV plans to seed the
creation ..." (As read)
11650 What is the commitment here?
11651 MS FANTHAM: Could I just say that
those were all written by me, but I chose different
phrases for every region, I had so many to deal with,
but the intention is the same.
11652 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So what is
that intention?
11653 MR. REDEKOPP: The intention is in
each of these nine regions to have two half hours over
the licence period for a total of an hour, and looking
at it in prime time over the licence period. Each of
those series, when they come to air, the first I think
in the year 2000, the second in the year 2003, each of
those series would be 26 weeks.
11654 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So each of
the eight, now nine, regions will in the second year
produce a half hour of air -- produce and broadcast one
half hour show for --
11655 MR. REDEKOPP: It will be 13
originals and 13 repeats for a 26-week season, that's
correct, 2000, 2001.
11656 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Yes. I guess
you are putting up $250,000 for the program. Where do
you expect the rest of the money to come from?
11657 MR. REDEKOPP: Actually, this is
really --
11658 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Part of the
reason for my asking this about the commitment is I
guess I read this and I thought the heart and soul is
in the right place, but how can we be sure that the
rest of the money comes to allow this to actually
happen. So that is what is at the root of my question
here. It is not a lack of will on your part to be able
to do it, it is how can you be sure that the rest of
the pieces fall into place so that it actually happens.
That is what I'm asking about, where the rest of the
money comes from.
11659 MR. REDEKOPP: I think the best way
to answer that is to actually have my regional
colleagues -- because we are committing to our amount
and we have talked about precisely how this money can
be triggered and leveraged. So why don't I invite my
colleagues here at the table to speak to it. I will
start with Rae to my left.
11660 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Sure.
11661 MS HULL: I think there are a number
of models that we can use and I think that it begins
with the nature of the program so that depending on the
genesis of the idea, we may decide that it is an
in-house program. That said, you know, the $20,000 per
episode -- I think that is roughly what it amounts
to -- could be augmented by the kinds of facilities
that we could put into that, so you would end up with a
program whose bottom line was clearly greater than
$20,000 per episode.
11662 That said, even though it is in house
we would be again going to the independent community to
hire freelance writers, talent, et cetera, so we would
be developing that talent base. We may go to a
co-production model, getting the help of, in British
Columbia, BC Film or any one of the provincial funding
agencies. You know, there may be corporate
sponsorship.
11663 All of that said, I think that that
money, with the level of resources that the regions can
put into the programs, really gives us a legitimate
base to produce a program -- you can produce sketch
comedy for that amount of money, and I know it because
we have just done it. I think depending on what you
want to do the cards change slightly, but I think that
provides all that we need to provide interesting,
innovative programming even if more dollars don't come
from sponsorship or from other industry partnerships.
11664 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: What would be
the best one could hope for in terms of other funds to
partner with this $250,000 in, say, Vancouver?
11665 MS HULL: I think that you could
expect to get the tax credit. I think that, depending
on BC Film's financing situation, you could expect to
get in the neighbourhood of $20,000 up from, say,
another $5,000, $10,000 per episode on that. You may
get the independent producer making a certain number of
deferrals, expecting that they will be able to sell a
second window to another broadcaster or to sell
internationally or to sell to libraries, et cetera.
11666 Now, I hesitate to go any further
because I haven't done the maximum math that could be
achieved.
11667 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Again, what
is at the root of my question is: What do you think is
the range of the types of programs that we could be
considering for this time slot, this half hour program?
11668 You talked about sketch comedy, that
you could probably do that in house for this amount of
money. What is the other end of the spectrum?
11669 MS HULL: I think sketch comedy is
actually somewhere in the middle, and I will let my
other colleagues jump in here.
11670 I mean, I think that in Vancouver,
for example, what I might be most interested in doing
is looking at a way to better serve the Asian
community. It is certainly an ongoing concern of mine.
So I might be looking at a kind of series that
embraces -- a series on popular culture that embraces
as its founding principle that Vancouver is in fact a
city with two very significant vibrant communities and
experiment with languages, et cetera. That kind of
program could be done with those kinds of funds.
11671 Sketch comedy, variety -- I'm going
to hop across the country and let Fred or Jane jump in.
11672 MS CHALMERS: Part of it for me,
because I will be looking over both Manitoba and
Saskatchewan, is I have been going out already and
talking to a lot of independent producers about this
and I have to wait and see what comes back.
11673 I have a feeling you are going to be
seeing -- there is a comedy proposal from Saskatoon.
There is also in Saskatchewan one of the finest
documentary production communities I have seen
anywhere. You may see a documentary stream come out of
there. I have to see what the proposals are like.
11674 On the Prairies and in Manitoba it
might be a comedy or more of a music kind of program.
I'm not too sure yet, but we are going to be talking.
11675 These shows have to have very
indigenous qualities. They have to speak to the
community and have that sensibility. They are very,
very innovative and we have had to be.
11676 Through all the years that we really
weren't supposed to be doing much production and
interaction, we managed to pry loose resources and put
together very unconventional deals just to get these
good programs on the air. We were encouraged to do so.
It's just that during the cuts there was no money to do
it. By putting in our Avid Suite it's $1,000 a day, so
that is maybe thrown into it and so that is something
they don't have to pay for.
11677 So beyond the cash, I mean, by using
our in-house services and having them work in our
plants, we can take a lot of the overheads down so that
the most bang for the buck is going to the actual
production and we can help on the editing and stuff.
11678 It could be documentaries, it could
be music, it may be comedy. I'm meeting with people.
I tell them to look at our schedule, "What do you guys
think?" People, they say to me, "Well, what do you
want?" I say, "Watch our show. Watch our schedules.
What do you think needs to be there? That's what you
should pitch, understanding we are looking at this kind
of budget."
11679 They also know, too, that some of our
best shows have come through the door in this way,
through small budgets, and they have shown all that --
I think "Codco" is one, which I should pass that onto
you -- and grown from there.
11680 MR. MATTOCKS: Yes. I'm reminded
that the Halifax Comedy Fest I referred to earlier
which was the third most popular Canadian television
show this year was produced for a budget level that is
exactly equivalent to this.
11681 Low budget doesn't mean low quality.
We have done a couple of half hour dramas over the last
year, over the last two years. We don't have, in
theory, the money to do half hour dramas, but we find
ways to produce them at small amounts of cash, small
amounts of resources and innovative, young, first-time
producers who are hungry and who are willing to put
deals together.
11682 In the Maritimes we actually don't
know what the outcome of this initiative is going to
be. All we know is that it is going to be something
that is going to reflect our region and probably our
performance culture. But we do know, when we look at
this amount of money and this commitment, that we have
a baseline from which we work. We know that we can
produce a series we will be proud of, that will meet
our programming objectives, for this amount of money.
11683 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Will the
regional directors -- this will be money in your budget
for you to manage for this purpose?
11684 MS HULL: That's my understanding,
yes.
11685 MR. REDEKOPP: The answer is yes.
11686 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So the
regional directors will be making the decisions in
terms of the funding and the projects?
11687 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes. I think all of
this is in a collaborative spirit. But absolutely. I
mean, this is money that is directly within the
responsibility of the regional directors.
11688 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: And there is
not a shred of doubt in any of your minds that you will
have the resources and be able to put together 13
original half hour programs in each of your regions and
I guess collectively in each of these nine regions?
11689 MS CHALMERS: No, there is no doubt.
11690 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Mr. Redekopp,
I guess I should put it to you: So you are prepared to
commit to this?
11691 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes, I'm prepared to
commit to it.
11692 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: How will the
decision be made in terms of the extra half hour, the
sharing within the regions? How will that decision be
made?
11693 MR. REDEKOPP: I'm sorry. I don't
understand the question.
11694 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Well, there
are 13 original half hours here, right?
11695 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes, and then they are
repeated for a series of 26.
11696 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Oh, those are
repeated.
11697 But I understood from the proposal
here that some of these will be shared across the
regions. Is that not correct?
11698 MR. MATTOCKS: It was a normal
process when we had our own airtime before and it will
be a normal process when we have it again. We
regularly collaborate. You might remember that "All of
a Saturday Night" from Newfoundland, from Ron Crocker's
shop, ran in the Maritimes; Rae's "In the Company of
Women" ran in the Maritimes as well; so did "Coleman
and Company" from Manitoba. So we would do that as
well.
11699 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: But what I
don't understand, when we talk about the 13 hours and
then we will repeat those 13 for the 26 half hours,
then we are going to possibly share some of this
programming across the regions, so you might send your
comedy show out to Ms Hull out in Vancouver I presume?
11700 MR. MATTOCKS: Or I might send my
repeats out to Ms Hull and take hers in the Maritimes.
11701 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay. So is
that what we are really talking about here, then, that
the repeat gets done out of the region? I mean, I'm
trying to get a sense of how are you going to sit down
and make this decision about what you see where.
11702 MS HULL: I think that there is
ongoing collaboration and discussion among the regional
directors. I think what the network has committed to
is a 26-half hour season of regional reflection for the
regions, then, in addition to that the plan is for a
network repurposing of it. So there may, depending on
the programming time and the schedule, be opportunities
locally for us to take some of the projects from our
regional partners and air them regionally.
11703 But in addition to that there is a
network commitment to repurpose these local projects in
a way that is for distribution across the entire
network. Is that clear?
11704 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I think so.
11705 I guess if we are talking about
regional programs for the region that reflect the
region back to the region, to the extent you use your
repeat time slot for another region's programs, I guess
it is not necessarily that region reflecting itself
back to that region?
11706 MR. MATTOCKS: I guess all I'm saying
is that we will do what makes the most sense in terms
of our own -- at least I will do what makes the most
sense in terms of my own region, and that may be very
well playing my own repeats, but I admit the
possibility it may be something else as well.
11707 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I appreciate
the schedule that you have distributed to us today,
this fall schedule, and this program won't be until
2000-2001, but is this going to be a time slot -- the
half hour, 26 weeks out of the year -- that is assigned
to the regions for them to program?
11708 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes. I will let the
program director, Slawko, speak to where I think he
thinks he is going to put it.
11709 MR. KLYMKIW: We will probably run
them either at 7:00 or 7:30. I can't give you a day
today, but it will be between 7:00 and 8:00, in prime
time.
11710 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: And you will
pick a time and it will be the same time across the
country that the -- in the region? That time will be
assigned to the regions for those regional directors to
program?
11711 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes, absolutely. We
will create a consistency in that time block.
Obviously, we need to do it to plan everything else.
11712 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So it is
going to be either 7:00 or 7:30?
11713 MR. KLYMKIW: That's correct.
11714 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: And you will
be making a decision then.
11715 So then when the second program gets
added in 2003-2004, does that mean we have an hour now,
it will be 7:00 until 8:00?
11716 MR. KLYMKIW: Or it could be two half
hours on different nights.
11717 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Right. Okay.
Yes.
11718 All right. I think I understand all
of that.
11719 I just wanted to pursue one other
area.
11720 I was looking at the financial
figures that are shown here for each of the regions.
What you did I guess is you took each region which may
have several stations and have shown the revenues and
the program expense for that region, so in Ontario, for
example, you included Toronto, Ottawa, Windsor.
11721 I don't want to go through all of
the, but if you could just help me to understand what
is happening here over the seven-year period. Just
pick one. I mean, we could pick Vancouver, but if
another one is better -- I don't mean to pick on you,
Ms Hull.
--- Laugher / Rires
11722 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: If you would
rather I pick somebody else's, we can do it. I mean,
in a relative sense, they are all the same. The
numbers are different.
11723 If we look at revenue for example,
and what I have done is I went through the charts and
rather than taking the absolute numbers I took the
difference each year. So what I'm looking at are the
numbers that got added in for each year. So if we take
your base figure, which is the base year 1998-99, your
revenue was $33,625,000, right?
11724 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes.
11725 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So then the
next year it grows and you add -- now, here is where I
started just dealing with differences, so if you bear
with me for a second.
11726 The next year we add in $120,000,
right?
11727 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes.
11728 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Now, the next
year we lose $20,000. We actually have a decline in
revenues. The next year is an increase of $45,000, the
next year $52,000, the next year only $28,000. The
next year, 2004-2005, we lose $10,000. The year after
that we gain $87,000.
11729 What is happening? I noticed in all
of the stations that happens -- or all of the regions
that happens. So we have a moderately big increase,
1999-2000; then a fairly significant decrease; then a
modest increase; about the same increase; a somewhat
less increase; a decrease; a fairly significant
increase again.
11730 MR. REDEKOPP: Perhaps I could ask
Bill Atkinson to speak to this.
11731 MR. ATKINSON: I would have to go
back to the individual details, but basically the
revenues, they don't swing that much in totals, but I
would like to say that the revenues reflect advertising
revenue and other miscellaneous revenues that take
place in those locations, for example, tower rentals,
facilities revenues and so forth. That is very hard to
project into the future and as we get into more and
more of these arrangements in the regions, that revenue
can fluctuate to a degree.
11732 But it would be -- I don't have a --
11733 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: There seems
to be a pattern here, because it is the same -- I don't
know whether you have just taken the same rule of thumb
and just applied it right across.
11734 MR. ATKINSON: It's applied right
across.
11735 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So the
regional people don't do a budget that gets worked up
to -- I mean, Mr. Mattocks doesn't do a budget of what
he expects the regional revenues to be?
11736 MR. ATKINSON: The responsibilities
for the revenues are in two parts. The advertising
revenues are the responsibility of network sales and
they, you know, generate the revenues for right across
the country and then the sales are at the network
level.
11737 Other pieces relating to tower
rentals and so forth are through our engineering group,
which again is a centralized group.
11738 Where the regional directors get more
involved is in their actual facilities deals that they
are able to leverage programming by renting facilities.
Rae does this to a large extent out in Vancouver and
she could talk to you more about that.
11739 But I could supply additional
information afterwards as to why those fluctuations are
there but, basically, if you look at them, they are
pretty constant over the years and they are flat
projections. I will have to look at why these little
fluctuations are there, sir.
11740 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So what
happens with local ad sales, then?
11741 MR. ATKINSON: Local ad sales are the
responsibility of the marketing sales department in
Toronto. We do have a sales group in each of the
locations, but they don't report through the regional
directors, that is through the network.
11742 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So when you
actually put together these revenue figures for the
regions, how did you do that?
11743 MR. ATKINSON: Those revenue figures
were put together in consultation with marketing and
sales, with engineering and with the Regional
Controllers that have responsibility that are in each
location.
11744 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay. Let's
switch to program expense. And again, we will just
take Vancouver as an example, if you would rather take
another one that's fine, I have got them all here.
11745 In the first year the total program
expense in the base we are starting from is $5,967,000,
right?
11746 So in the next year we add $50,000
which is the $50,000 we are spending to get these
projects underway, right? And then the next year we
add $250,000 and that's the actual seed money itself
that is going to fund the program. And I note there
that you increase your broadcast hours by 13. So
that's where the 13 hours shows up.
11747 Now, the next year we add $207,000
again and then the following year we add $240,000, but
$50,000 is the next $50,000 that we are putting in
which leaves $190,000. So what are those figures for,
those program expenditure increases that we have
$207,000 and $190,000 in 2001/2002 and 2002/2003?
11748 MR. ATKINSON: You are referring to
the increase above and beyond the amount of the --
11749 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Yes.
11750 MR. ATKINSON: This relates to
inflationary increases that are built into the total
numbers in all our projections, both on the regional
side and on the network side.
11751 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So these are
inflationary increases to cover program expense?
11752 MR. ATKINSON: That's right.
11753 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: So what's
that funding? What is the inflation? What is it
funding that this is inflation for, specifically?
11754 MR. ATKINSON: Well, just the costs
of -- all our costs are going up over the period of
time. A lot of that, I would imagine in this case
would be salary increases and so forth.
11755 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay. So
those two years we are about $200,000. The next year,
the increase is $343,000 of which $250,000 is again the
seed money for the next half-hour program which leaves
$93,000. So we only have half the increase that we had
the previous two years. So what is that for?
11756 If the first two were inflation, is
inflation going down?
11757 MR. ATKINSON: No, the inflation is
not going down. It is a balance between the revenue
and the expense and the requirement to balance the
books.
11758 I would have to do a separate
schedule and give it to you separately.
11759 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: I am just
trying to get a sense of it. Is this money that is
going in to -- is this new money that is funding the
news operation?
11760 We have accounted for the money that
is funding this new initiative, correct? So this is
something else. I just want to get a sense of what
this is funding. Is it funding Mr. Mattocks' and Ms
Hull's and Ms Chalmers' news operations as an increase
in their budgets to help support these new initiatives
in news?
11761 MR. ATKINSON: Anything above the
$250,000 amount would be to help the station in total
to cover their costs.
11762 MS HULL: So in Vancouver it would be
the supper hour shows. It would also be 22 half-hours
of arts programming that we do outside this new
initiative. It would fund various specials, et cetera.
11763 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Now, if I
look -- just a couple of anomolies I picked up when
looking at this chart.
11764 If I look at Toronto -- the Ontario
Region, I'm sorry, and the hours that we are dealing
with here, the base here for hours, which is 1998/1999
was 1,610. I guess that is across three stations?
11765 MR. ATKINSON: That's right. That is
Ottawa, Windsor, Toronto.
11766 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: From the base
year to the first year of the licence term, we dropped
65 hours of local broadcast hours, why is that?
11767 MR. ATKINSON: I am not sure. I
don't know the answer to that.
11768 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Could you --
11769 MR. ATKINSON: I could get that for
you.
11770 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Then, I
notice in the next year when I would have expected to
see an increase of 13 hours where everybody is, there
is a couple there were only shown as 11 and I figured
that was probably just a clerical error there.
11771 Toronto only shows three hours -- or
the Ontario Region only shows three hours.
11772 MR. ATKINSON: I will have to get the
answer for you.
11773 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay.
11774 MR. ATKINSON: But I just want to
know where the commitment stands, we will get the right
numbers to you, Commissioner.
11775 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Now, if I
look across all the stations, I found it somewhat
intriguing to me, at least, and I am sure my colleagues
would be a little dismayed if I didn't raise this,
especially the ones from some of the other regions.
11776 I was struck by the fact that as you
would expect, the Ontario Region has the biggest
revenue and the biggest program expense and it also has
the biggest increases. But the region that has the
second biggest increases over the next while is the
Maritime Region. And I might have thought, just
looking at, say, Vancouver as compared to Halifax, St.
John, Fredericton, that if I was looking at revenue,
for example, that Vancouver being as much larger, what
is third largest city in the country now -- second, I
don't know, that it just struck me as being odd that
the Maritime Region would be second only to Toronto in
terms of revenues.
11777 Why would that be?
11778 MR. ATKINSON: Well, in Toronto we do
have a lot of revenues, miscellaneous revenues, from a
lot of transmitters in -- shared transmitters in the
Ontario Region.
11779 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Yes, as I
said I would expect Ontario to be the biggest. What
surprised me was that the Maritime one was the second
largest. I would have thought that -- I am surprised
that, for example, it is bigger than Vancouver.
11780 MR. ATKINSON: I think part of that
explanation is that in the Maritimes there are a lot of
facilities rentals because of the number of
co-productions and so forth that are taking place
there. And that is the case also in Vancouver where
there are a lot of facilities rentals in that location
also. Maybe it is not as large as the Maritimes.
11781 MR. REDEKOPP: I may be out of my
element here, but that may be a function of local
sales, the fact that the Maritime shows as you have
heard Fred say, are doing extremely well. But could I
get back to you?
11782 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Sure. I
guess I am just curious if indeed local sales in the
Maritime Region are greater than -- well, greater than
all the other save Ontario.
11783 So those were, as I say, there was a
couple of others, but as you have indicated that we are
committed to --
11784 So the dollars and the hours the CBC
commits to $50,000 for a region to start, the $250,000
the next year, the subsequent $50,000, the subsequent
$250,000 and the 13, 13 hours in the respective years
the CBC is prepared to commit to as a condition of
licence.
11785 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes.
11786 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Okay. The
only other area, just a quick thing.
11787 In terms of facilities in the
regions, what is your expectation in terms of
maintenance or upgrade of the facilities in the regions
in order to be able to sustain this increased emphasis
on news and this additional regional programming. Are
Ms Hull, Ms Chalmers, Mr. Mattocks going to have the
resources to be able to maintain and upkeep the
facilities that they need in order to be able to
respond to this challenge?
11788 MR. ATKINSON: Well, certainly the
capital plan that we have put together has to follow
the operating and programming plan. Given that this is
a commitment there will have to be the appropriate
capital in place. But I think what you have heard them
say is this is going to be a mix of programming. Some
of it independent and some of it in-house. And so, we
will make sure that they have the wherewithall to
achieve the programming plans that they put in place.
11789 Right now, I don't think any of them
can say with certainty how much of this is going to
have to be in-house, how much is going to be used
in-house facilities and how much is going to be
straight facilities, but I can ask them to speak to the
range here if you would like.
11790 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Do you have
specific capital plans by region for the facilities in
the regions?
11791 MR. REDEKOPP: We do.
11792 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: Do we have
that?
11793 MR. REDEKOPP: We have a capital plan
and I will undertake to make sure that you --
11794 COMMISSIONER COLVILLE: By region,
could you file that with us?
11795 Okay. Thank you very much, those are
all of my questions.
11796 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you very
much.
11797 Commissioner Cram has a few
questions.
11798 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I was reading
your application on this and about the first of second
page it talked about, I believe it was 472 regional
employees. And that's not the question, Mr. Redekopp.
I mean, what it does is it begs the question how many
non-regional employees are there?
11799 MR. REDEKOPP: That, you mean, how
many network employees? At 3,400 people working for
English television, and so I don't misspeak I will get
you the exact number.
11800 At the network we have 2,054 and at
the regions we have -- my number here, I don't know
where your number is -- is 1,083 people working in the
regions, and 258 in "Newsworld" which gives you just
under 3,400.
11801 COMMISSIONER CRAM: No, my memory may
be faulty, all I remember is that it said regional
employees and of course then it wasn't the rest of the
sentence about non-regional employees.
11802 Secondly, I understand that a lot of
the regional budgets, the regional expenses are really
transmission expenses?
11803 MR. REDEKOPP: Well, actually there
are two parts. There is the direct responsibility that
is under the control of the regional directors and
cumulatively that is about $62 million. What we have
broken out for you is what we spend in the regions
beyond that and that figure is around, I think, $191
million. I think we have given you that in a bar
graph.
11804 And that additional spending
includes, first of all, the programming and program
resources for the network that are located in regions.
So that could be a national reporter, it could be the
programming spent in Vancouver "DaVinci's Inquest",
"Nothing Too Good for a Cowboy", that allocation. The
sports crews we have, both in Edmonton and Winnipeg and
infrastructure.
11805 I mean, what we try to do and we did
this for our board some time ago was to give an actual
accounting of where we spend money. So that would
include buildings, facilities, transmitters and so on
that you have to have in place in order to have that
kind of regional programming.
11806 And those are the two envelopes, the
$62 million is directly under the responsibility of the
regional directors and the remainder is spent there, it
is a benefit to the region, but the responsibility is
elsewhere.
11807 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I am looking at
what appears to be your page C-1-21 and you've got
"Regional Ops" there. Initially 1996 starting at $52
million and then going to $30 million in 1997 and then
going to $19 million in 1998.
11808 MS HULL: Could you repeat that page
again?
11809 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Page C-1-21.
11810 MR. REDEKOPP: Just give me a minute,
I have a book that has C-1-21 that doesn't have that.
Just a minute.
11811 COMMISSIONER CRAM: It is out of my
factum, so it is -- no, C-1-21. It is a graph showing
out costs. No?
11812 MR. REDEKOPP: Is it marked Appendix
ii, English Language Network Television Service?
11813 COMMISSIONER CRAM: No. Well, it is
a -- habitually what would regional ops be though?
Like, would that be -- when there's that definition?
11814 MR. REDEKOPP: Just a minute, I will
try to find a comparable page here.
11815 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay.
--- Short pause / Courte pause
11816 MR. REDEKOPP: I have page C-1-13, I
don't know if we can find the same page.
11817 But what it speaks to there is the
total $62 million that is under the Regional Director's
control. The programming part of it is about $42.5
million and the remainder of the -- that makes up the
$62 million, there is about $16 million in regional
operations TV services and another $3.4, $3.5 million
regional operations administration.
11818 And I should really ask Bill if he
can tell me exactly what those categories are.
11819 MR. ATKINSON: Yes.
11820 COMMISSIONER CRAM: I think what my
point really was was the cost of transmission and
taking it out of the regional expenses.
11821 MR. ATKINSON: No, that's not
included there.
11822 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay.
11823 MR. REDEKOPP: The transmission and
distribution is an entirely separate category, that's
taken away.
11824 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Okay. That was
really my question. Now my other final question is,
you talked about articles, Ms Hull, going to
"Newsworld". Do they pay you for that?
11825 MS HULL: No, in fact, they have the
right to take items from shows which they do on a
regular basis.
11826 COMMISSIONER CRAM: Thank you. Thank
you.
11827 MR. ATKINSON: Can I just make a
point there, is that if there are any incremental costs
as a result of that, "Newsworld" would pay for that.
11828 THE CHAIRPERSON: Merci.
11829 Commissioner Langford?
11830 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: I don't -- I
have been told we have very little time and I will try
to brief. And I don't in any way want to end on a
negative note. I'm credibily encouraged by what I have
heard here today. I am incredibly impressed by the
amount of energy and committment you have got under
difficult situations. And so I am in no way being
critical.
11831 I am simply asking you to blue sky a
little based again on some of the things we heard from
the consultations, Joe Novak was at the one in Edmonton
and I am referring more now to the ones we heard in
Sydney and Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown.
11832 Where the cry there -- and again I
don't want to sound like I am asking for more, I am
simply reflecting some of what we heard and asking you
to just think about it. I am not looking for any
commitments whatsoever.
11833 But the cry from the heart there was
that though there were still regional and hope for more
regional, regional wasn't always local. I think I have
characterized it correctly and that they felt they
really, you know, that "We live in Sydney, we don't
live in Halifax. You are giving us a regional show
from Halifax it is better than a show from Toronto
perhaps, or Vancouver, but it is not Sydney".
11834 Is there hope for this? Will the day
ever come, do you think, when the march you are
starting on now, the long march back to the regions
might actually lead to that sort of very localized
community reflection again?
11835 MR. REDEKOPP: I doubt it. Not in my
lifetime, but maybe my colleagues around here may have
a different view of it. But I just don't think so.
11836 MR. MATTOCKS: I think what we heard
in Sydney in particular was a reflection of a
particular circumstance. Sydney had its own supper
hour show until 1990 and until those cuts. And it
ceased to have and people there felt that loss quite
acutely.
11837 Having said that, the comments I made
in Sydney in response to that were that, in fact, about
25 per cent of our news material in our Nova Scotia
supper hour comes from Sydney. We have been able to
maintain an active bureau there and an active
journalistic and program presence, the "Celtic Colours
Festival" I have talked about is a Cape Breton festival
that the Halifax supper hour, the Halifax-based supper
hour actually moves down and spends a week in Cape
Breton doing that.
11838 At the end of the day our ratings in
Sydney and Cape Breton are quite strong. So I
acknowledge the loss but the realities are what they
are and we try, on a daily basis, to make sure that we
are reflecting that community to the rest of the
province, as appropriate.
11839 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: Another point
that was made again in the Maritimes -- this one, I
think, was perhaps made most eloquently by Premier
Binns when he appeared. It was that he would like to
get to bed a little earlier and the late night local
show doesn't come on until about -- I think it is about
11:30.
11840 One understands the reasons. There
is always a very good reason for this. So again, I am
not being critical and I don't think he was either.
Yet, he still would like to get to bed a little
earlier. Is there any hope that some adjustments can
be made to that sort of scheduling?
11841 MR. REDEKOPP: I think you should ask
Slawko to speak to this. I think we have had real
success by putting "The National" at a repeat period at
11:00. I think that is the difficulty. I think that
is probably where they would like to hear it.
11842 Slawko.
11843 MR. KLYMKIW: Well, we did it to
extend the value of "The National" news for a whole
bunch of reasons, partly because it is an incredibly
valuable part of our organization and we want to give
people another chance to see it, partly because of the
hockey discussion we had, partly because of the way
people are watching television. I can't imagine in the
next little while we are going to change that.
11844 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: Well, I bring
you this message from P.E.I. They are turning off and
turning in a little earlier and that seems to be a
fact.
11845 MR. APPONI: I was just going to
actually be a little flippant and actually maybe also
add a positive note that I don't want to deny anything
that Harold or Slawko said, but maybe Premier Binns
will be able to get to bed earlier in the future with
the newscast from Sydney that is refashioned on the
Internet or something from Charlottetown that he can
see any time he wants on the Internet, at some point.
11846 MR. REDEKOPP: Commissioner Langford,
I don't mean to make light of aspirations to restore
service in the communities where we have had to reduce
service. I really don't mean to make light of it but I
guess there is one little bit of good that comes out of
it.
11847 There is so much anti-Toronto
sentiment that on just those occasions the anger is
deflected to Halifax. So just on that occasion, there
is some good that comes out of all of that.
11848 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: I think the
other silver lining is people really want to watch and
listen to your stuff. So there must be a sense of joy
for you there.
11849 One last question and this comes out,
again, of actually the initial line of questioning that
Commissioner Colville entered into when he was
referring to your word. I think "underperforming" was
the word you used, that some of the areas were
underperforming. We heard quite eloquently from
Ms Hull and Fred Mattocks and others about the efforts
you are making to deliver what you think is relevant
and informative and necessary information, and I salute
you for that.
11850 At the same time, is it conceivable
that the kind of national planning, the national
mindset -- and I don't mean that as national versus
regional, but call it cross-country presence of the
CBC -- may work against it?
11851 Could there be a time, for example,
where some areas of the country wouldn't have local
news shows and others would have enhanced local news
shows simply because, take for example, Toronto --
perhaps there are so many other options they don't need
it, but in the Maritimes, they really want it. So you
would take those resources and target them. Is that
something that could ever happen or will it always be a
kind of uniform approach across the country?
11852 MS HULL: I think that my own
personal preference would be to continue to have a
local news presence in Vancouver, a city that has
several other options. I think that if we are going to
be good neighbours to our constituents, then I think
that we have to be there and we have to be there every
day.
11853 I think that the local news gives us
a grassroots understanding of what that community is,
that without it, I think that we would be less
effective in exploring what would be the best
performing arts to suggest to the network. I think
that we would be impoverished in terms of the kinds of
young journalists that we would be able to send on to
the network.
11854 I think those 1,000 items that come
from the local news that go to Newsworld would
disappear. I think that it is the backbone and in a
way that -- in the Ice Storm coverage, when
"Newswatch" -- they were there and they were there
every day and people counted on them, and that
flourished into the video that was then purchased by
several thousands of people. That has been used --
they just made a donation of $14,000 to a drop-in
centre that would have closed.
11855 I think that you can't begin to count
the numbers of ways that if you take out those local
news shows that you take out a really intricate
tapestry of programming that informs us about our
community but also extends our outreach to them.
11856 MS CHALMERS: Can I just add? There
is another interesting element to this. I have been a
journalist that has worked my whole career on the
Prairies. That is my sensibilities. It's my home.
It's a place I understand the history and the context.
11857 These shows, in terms of the CBC, I
guess the people sitting on this side of the desk
reflect you. You are all from different parts of the
country. You see the world through your own
experiences in your own communities.
11858 Right now, what exists within the CBC
is something very healthy. Our desk calls the Toronto
desk on stories that we think belong on "The National",
that we have the history and we have been covering for
days and we believe that this story should be seen from
the country.
11859 We are leading on the editorial
direction and advising them about why this is an
important story from the perspective of the community,
and it has created -- to remove those programs from
across the country changes the dynamic in terms of the
perspective that you look at those stories at.
11860 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: But on the
other hand -- and I promise I will not beat this to
death with a stick. This will be my last comment.
11861 But on the other hand, if for
example -- and just hypothetically -- Toronto, by its
numbers, simply had no appetite for that show, wouldn't
the resources be wisely redirected towards your area
where the appetite is huge, in your area where the
appetite is huge?
11862 MR. APPONI: I would like to step in
here. I think that if we take that argument to the nth
degree, it would mean that in some of our bigger
cities, we would be saying to Canadians, where most
Canadians live, that they don't deserve a CBC program
that is trying to do a supper hour newscast that is
completely different from the competition, all the
things we said at the very beginning of this.
11863 Even if you go with the argument of
maybe not an appetite in Toronto, even a smaller share
in Toronto, the total number of people who watch the
show is a higher share in a smaller location in terms
of total number of people watching the show. So we
would like to treat Canadians across the country fairly
equally.
11864 MR. REDEKOPP: But I would say,
Commissioner Langford, I wouldn't penalize the citizens
of Toronto. I would say: We had better do a better
job in Toronto and make sure that we do have greater
impact. There are 5 million people living in that
catchment area. That is a city-state.
11865 The thing about regional broadcasting
is we seem to identify it as far away from Toronto as
possible, but in the Province of Ontario, we have huge,
huge black holes near the Manitoba border, Southern
Ontario. There are people that really don't ever see
us. London, Ontario doesn't even know about us.
11866 So we are conscious of all of the
areas that we have to serve. We are trying to make
some sense of the resources we have and we want to
allocate them appropriately.
11867 But moving out of the big centres
should never be an option and I would say the challenge
to our programmers will be: Get it right. Get it
right in terms of impact. Get it right in terms of
optimizing the audience.
11868 COMMISSIONER LANGFORD: Thanks very
much.
11869 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you.
11870 Ms Pinsky.
11871 MS PINSKY: Thank you, Madam
Chairman.
11872 I just have two short questions.
First, I would like to just clarify that the time, as
part of the commitments with respect to regional
programming that the network will return up to one hour
of broadcast time, in network prime time, to the
regional programming, that that will be for half a year
and not the whole year, that the other half a year,
that time slot would go back to the network?
11873 MR. REDEKOPP: That's correct.
11874 MS PINSKY: Have you contemplated yet
what half of the year that you would expect to allocate
to the regions, would that be perhaps during the
fall/winter schedule?
11875 MR. REDEKOPP: Slawko.
11876 MR. KLYMKIW: We haven't determined
that yet but that would be my sense.
11877 MS PINSKY: Would you be willing to
commit to that?
11878 MR. KLYMKIW: Yes, if Harold will let
me, I will commit to it right now.
11879 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes, we will commit to
it.
11880 MS PINSKY: Then just in terms of
commitments because I don't see it in the deficiencies,
would each of the regional stations agree to adhere to
the CAB, the broadcasting codes for advertising to
children, the industry code on gender portrayal, and
the CAB code on violence, as a condition of licence?
11881 MR. REDEKOPP: Yes, absolutely.
11882 MS PINSKY: Thank you. Those are all
my questions.
11883 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you very
much. I want to kind of raise --
11884 MR. REDEKOPP: I'm sorry. Madam
Chair, I neglected to in fact make a couple of
corrections for the record. Just before we break,
could we just have a minute to do that?
11885 THE CHAIRPERSON: Yes.
11886 MR. REDEKOPP: Michael, I think you
were going to make a few corrections.
11887 MR. HARRIS: You understood that it
was a commitment that 13 regional programs would run on
the network, 13 half-hours and rising to 26.
11888 MS PINSKY: That is what I
understood.
11889 MR. HARRIS: The other one was that
the sports documentary program is more rightly in the
information and analysis, category 2 as opposed to the
sports category.
11890 MS PINSKY: If I could just then
follow up on that. If it is in the informational
category, I just wanted to be certain that that is
something other than the regional programming in terms
of light information that would be developed?
11891 MR. HARRIS: Yes.
11892 MS PINSKY: Thank you. Those are all
my questions.
11893 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you.
11894 Well, I wanted to say that there are
many preoccupations that were raised during the
regional consultations, and if some of the intervenors
have heard you this afternoon, they certainly feel that
there is a strong commitment on your part to serve well
the interest of the regions and the people in those
regions.
11895 There is still a question, though,
that we will bring back because you are definitely
committed and we can feel it, and I am sure that
everybody who has watched this afternoon can feel it.
It is on the non-news type of commitment, the money.
It is hardly over seven years, the amount that you are
prepared, as a Corporation and as a whole family, to
put on new media for a year. It raises questions and
preoccupations.
11896 I am just leaving you on that, not to
not praise the work you are doing and the commitment we
can feel, but to say, if we kind of create the
correlation, is it that significant, that kind of
investment in the new media in comparison to what the
Canadian citizens need in all the regions and that you
are definitely capable of providing? You have
demonstrated it and you are still very committed to
demonstrate it even more.
11897 So those are questions certainly that
have been on our dialogue since the beginning and will
certainly come back with this, but there is definitely
a concern there, a question and a preoccupation.
11898 MR. REDEKOPP: Noted and we will
certainly take it up with our colleagues.
11899 THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you very
much. Thank you.
11900 MR. REDEKOPP: Thank you.
11901 THE CHAIRPERSON: We will be back
tomorrow at 9:00. Tomorrow, we will pursue the work of
the Commission until 7:30, which means that we will see
more intervenors certainly than the ones that we have
scheduled to try to make sure that we really kind of
keep with our agenda and are capable of ending our
proceeding on the Wednesday night.
11902 Thank you all.
--- Whereupon the hearing concluded at 1745, to resume
on Wednesday, June 2, 1999 at 0900 / L'audience
se termine à 1745, pour reprendre le mercredi
2 juin 1999 à 0900
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