Consumers wooed over fee-for-carriage issue

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/tv/story/2009/09/14/fee-for-carriage.html


This fall's battle over fee-for-carriage — a fee that cable and
satellite companies would pay to broadcasters to carry their signals —
has begun.

The major conventional broadcasters, including CBC-TV, have created a
new alliance to gain public support for fees to underwrite the cost of
local programming.

CTV, Global, CBC and the A channels, all networks that provide
over-the-air broadcasting, are forming Local TV Matters, which will
back their individual efforts to set up a system that will see cable
and satellite firms pay into a local programming fund.

The federal regulator, the Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission, plans a hearing this fall to work out a
framework for such a fee.

It already has created a $100-million fund for local programming,
after local stations in Hamilton, Montreal and Victoria changed hands
for only a few dollars because the big networks did not want to keep
them going. Another local station in Red Deer, Alta., closed at the
end of August.

The cable and satellite companies are vigorously opposed to paying any
kind of fee towards local programming and say they will have to hike
prices to consumers.

Rogers Cable opposes fee-for-carriage "as an unnecessary bailout for
over-the-air broadcasters and an unfair tax on cable and satellite
television subscribers," Rogers said in its brief to the CRTC, made
public Monday.

"Canadians do not want to pay additional charges for services that
have always been available over the air for free," Rogers
vice-chairman Paul Lind said.

If cable and satellite firms pay for Canadian TV signals, they might
get U.S. broadcasters demanding a fee for their signals, further
raising fees for consumers, he said.

But Local TV Matters argues on its website that Canadian cable
companies already pay in excess of $300 million a year to U.S. cable
channels, but nothing to Canadian over-the-air stations.

"Over the past five years, cable bills have gone up more than twice
the cost of living and their profits have grown by more than a billion
dollars," said Steven Guiton, CBC/Radio-Canada's chief regulatory
officer.

"At the same time, we have had to reduce our people, programs and
services, especially given the extremely difficult economic conditions
over the past two years."

He said Local TV Matters was formed to address a need to inform the
Canadian public ahead of the CRTC hearing in November.

The cable companies have already launched a campaign to engage
consumers in the debate, with letters in their bills warning that what
they pay could increase because of the CRTC initiative.

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