CCR Short Takes

Bell BDUs ask for local avails relief as well
As anticipated after the CRTC gave the green light to three BDUs applying to use a portion of local avails for cross-promoting non-broadcast services, more distributors have stepped forward asking for similar permission. Both Bell Canada and Bell ExpressVu have asked for their conditions of licence to be amended to allow for more liberal use of local avails – the approximately two minutes per hour of airtime set aside on certain American satellite programming services for use by distributors in the US. The current conditions for both the cable and DTH BDUs require that at least 75% of the avail time be used to promote licensed Canadian programming services or to distribute unpaid Canadian public service announcements and community channel promotions. Up to 25% – the portion in question – may be used by BDUs to promote programming services and packages, customer service information, channel realignments, cable FM service and additional cable outlets. In Public Notice 2006-69, Rogers Cable Communications Inc., Shaw Communications Inc. and Bragg Communications Inc. were given dispensation to use a share of that 25% of local avails more broadly, beyond just promoting programming-related products, services and information. Now, the three BDUs can use part of that 25% to promote their own or third-party high-speed Internet services, wireline and wireless telephony, and other non-programming offerings. Bell is asking for the same treatment for both its national satellite DTH BDU, and the cable BDU it operates serving areas in southwestern and eastern Ontario, as well as four cities in Quebec – Montréal, Gatineau, Sherbrooke, Québec City – and their surrounding areas.

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Go places with a universal story – and marquee talent: co-pro panel

International co-productions can be a boon to producers looking for capital, but Canadians should pick their partners with care if funding is a top priority. That was the consensus among members of a panel at the Banff World Television Festival last month.

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International TV success first requires a strong domestic market: AA’s Bolen

Digital distribution, the export of Canadian programming and progressive policy directions will intertwine to shape The Future of Television in Canada, according to a green paper of that name prepared by Nordicity Group Ltd. for the Banff World Television Festival. While a Town Hall discussion of the paper took place last month, its assertions remain a topic of debate – and they should for some time.

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Transitional licensing, genre protection tools to speed HD uptake

Drawing heavily on earlier policy documents, the CRTC released a framework on June 15 for the migration of Canadian television to high-definition standards.

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Pay and specialty TV posts the most impressive numbers in CRTC report

The CRTC’s 2006 Broadcasting Policy Monitoring Report released on Friday June 30 will add more debate to the policy hearings for commercial radio and over-the-air television currently underway.

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BBM-Nielsen TV ratings merger can proceed: Competition Board

After several years of negotiations – and more than 20 years after a similar yet ill-fated attempt – Canada’s two main broadcast audience measurement firms are ready to merge their television ratings services.

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Telemanagement: July 1, 2006 – Volume 1, Issue 237

HOW CANADA AVOIDED THE PHILADELPHIA WI-FI CURSE

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Locals Put Free Hotspots on the Front Burner

Grassroots technology takes on big guys

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Great Opinions on Terrible RFPs

Three principles for effective requests

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Enterprise 911: Better Safe than Sorry

Many businesses still fail to provide effective emergency calling

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