Local Radio Lab acquiring three stations in Ontario

Local Radio Lab Inc. will be picking up three stations near the Greater Toronto area following approval of its application Friday by the CRTC. 

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Quebec union wants more Telus jobs at home

A workers’ union in Quebec claims Telus Corp. has broken a “moral contract” with the people of the province by opting to hire more outside of Canada, rather than at home. 

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TekSavvy adds evidence of ‘bias’ to its petition to cabinet  

TekSavvy Solutions Inc. has provided the Liberal Government with what it says is “clear evidence” of CRTC chair Ian Scott’s bias, and doubled down on calls for the government to remove him from his post. 

In a Thursday release, TekSavvy said that it had filed “additional evidence” in support of a May petition to the governor in council over the regulator’s reversal on rates for wholesale internet access. 

In submitting the evidence to the government, TekSavvy pointed to “numerous ex parte meetings with litigants with open CRTC files,” including some 11 solo meetings with BCE Inc., Rogers Communications Inc., and Shaw Communications Inc. following challenges to the CRTC’s August 2019 rates decision

Specifically, TekSavvy called out a reported December 2019 meeting between Scott and then-chief operating officer of Bell (and now CEO) Mirko Bibic in an Ottawa bar. The meeting, TekSavvy pointed out in its release, is said to have occurred just a week after the regulator opened a file to hear Bell’s application to review and vary the 2019 wholesale rates. The meeting was first reported by the Toronto Star. 

“TekSavvy submitted that Mr. Scott’s ex parte meeting with Mr. Bibic is also clearly offside the standards of conduct required by the Governor in Council for its appointees to the CRTC, as confirmed by Cabinet’s termination of one Commissioner’s appointment for far less egregious conduct in 2017,” the company wrote in its release, referring to the termination of Raj Shoan. 

“The CRTC’s role is to be an independent arbiter. The 2019 Final Rates Order, which was based on years of process and mountains of evidence showed the CRTC had the independence and expertise to set proper wholesale rates,” Andy Kaplan-Myrth, TekSavvy’s vice president of regulatory and carrier affairs, said in the release. “Now they’re having beers with Bell and making up numbers, while completely undermining this government’s promises to Canadians. It’s an outrage.”

Yesterday, the advocacy group OpenMedia launched a tongue-in-cheek campaign requesting its own opportunity to meet Ian Scott for a beer.  

“It’s unfair and ridiculous — but if heading to the pub is the only way to get our voices heard at the CRTC, then we’re game. Here’s our proposal for Chair Scott: Meet us and a handful of OpenMedia community members for a beer, and hear directly from the folks he’s been screwing over with the CRTC’s recent decisions,” OpenMedia said in its campaign release. 

Google signs licensing deals with multiple Canadian news outlets

Following a similar announcement from Facebook Inc. and promises from Heritage Minister Stephen Guilbeault to introduce legislation requiring compensation for news organizations’ content appearing on online platforms, Alphabet Inc.’s Google announced Thursday it has signed agreements with several Canadian news publishers for a new program. 

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Senate begins C-10 analysis with broad debate 

Senators are looking beyond the free speech issues raised by critics of the revised Broadcasting Act and instead are focusing on what some senators say are other problems arising from the bill, as C-10 crawls its way to the finish line.

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FCM rejects Telus complaint of regulatory uncertainty in wireless review appeal

Rather than creating a “lacuna in the federal regulatory scheme,” causing uncertainty when it comes to access to municipal rights of way for wireless technology as Telus Corp. argues, the CRTC’s decision not to create a regime for that access correctly leaves the matter up to Parliament, according to the Federation of Canadian Municipalities. 

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Wireless Code, home Internet, helping with data overage fees: Research

Fewer Canadians are paying for data overage fees and fewer are complaining about their wireless service charges. Whether or not that has to do with the COVID-19 pandemic is to be determined however, according to research commissioned by the CRTC and released Wednesday.

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OpenMedia wants its shot at a beer with CRTC chair Ian Scott

An organization advocating for an open and surveillance-free internet is fishing for a beer date with CRTC chair Ian Scott in response to claims that he met with BCE Inc.’s CEO weeks after the company filed an appeal of the commission’s 2019 wholesale rates.

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Industry Committee calls for stricter timelines on CRTC rate-setting procedures 

The House of Commons Industry committee is recommending that the government direct the CRTC to revise its process for the implementation — and subsequent appeals — of new rates so incumbent telecom companies “stop using the appeals process as a delay tactic.” 

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House passes controversial Bill C-10 through limited debate

The revised Broadcasting Act is finally on its way to the Senate after the House of Commons passed Bill C-10 in a vote of 196 to 112 through a time allocation motion.

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