ISED failed to show reasons for Quebecor’s set-aside eligibility in 3500 auction: Telus

When it assessed Quebecor Inc. as eligible to bid on set-aside spectrum in last summer’s 3,500 MHz spectrum auction, the Department of Innovation, Science, and Economic Development (ISED) failed to follow its own rules around eligibility, failed to keep adequate records of its decision-making process, and unreasonably qualified Quebecor, Telus Corp. argued before the court.

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Gov. announces funding to connect remaining Newfoundland rural households

A cell tower with a blue sky in the background.

The federal government and the government of Newfoundland and Labrador are collaborating to bring high-speed internet to the remainder of the province.

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Tories announce changes to critics positions

Interim Conservative leader Candice Bergen shuffled her shadow cabinet on Tuesday, moving some MPs into new responsibilities.

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Telus, Blue Dot stress Health Canada never received personal data

It would be impossible for the government to re-identify mobility data of Canadians because personal information was never released to it, the House of Commons Ethics committee heard Thursday. Representatives of Telus Corp. and Blue Dot Corp. appeared before the MPs who are looking at the use of such data by the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC). Telus and Blue Dot had the contracts to provide the information to PHAC.

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ISED contributes $80M to fund cyber security project 

The Department of Innovation, Science, and Economic Development announced Thursday that it would allocate some $80 million to the  National Cybersecurity Consortium to establish the Cyber Security Innovation Network. 

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Gov. allocates $6.6 million in UBF to Saskatchewan

The Canadian government is investing nearly $6.6 million in rural Saskatchewan in its effort to connect 98 per cent Canadians to high-speed internet by 2026.

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NDP and Bloc support C-11, with concerns; Conservatives will seek to amend at committee

Members of Parliament from the Bloc Québécois and the NDP indicated that both parties will support the Liberal Government’s new effort to overhaul the Broadcasting Act as it moved to second reading, known as the Online Streaming Act or Bill C-11.

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Don’t leave local news in the hands of megacorporations, Heritage committee hears

Not-for-profit community news associations are sounding the alarm over the Rogers Communications Inc. and Shaw Communications Inc. merger, with one stakeholder saying “democracy dies in the dark without reliable and accurate local news and information”, while Quebecor Inc.’s CEO is saying the CRTC has to loosen its regulatory burdens on Canadian companies if it wants to preserve local news.

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CRTC seeks comments on telecom fees amendments

The CRTC is calling for comments on proposed amendments to the Telecommunications Fees Regulations, it announced Wednesday.

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CRTC rejects CNOC request for Scott’s recusal

The CRTC has decided that it will not consider a request from the Competitive Network Operators of Canada (CNOC) for commission chair Ian Scott to recuse himself from all matters before the regulator related to the relationship of wholesale-based internet service providers (ISPs) and incumbents.

In a Feb. 15 letter to CNOC, the CRTC wrote that the regulator will not consider the request, or post the request to the commission’s website, “as the decision of a Member of the Commission to recuse themselves in respect of a matter is a decision that only the Member can make and does not engage the Commission’s processes.”

“Accordingly, when a telecommunications matter involving service-based competition is next before the Commission for consideration, the Chairperson will consider whether to recuse himself or not, as he has consistently done in respect of all matters since his appointment,” the CRTC wrote, “and he will render a decision with respect to his participation in those telecommunications matters at that time.”

In a Wednesday statement emailed to the Wire Report, CNOC executive director Geoff White wrote that the refusal “is a disappointing, and disconcerting attempt to avoid accountability.”

“In refusing to publicly post our application and consider it, not only has the CRTC breached its own rules, but due process. Recall, a CRTC Commissioner was dismissed from his position by Cabinet (in part) because of a private meeting,” White wrote in the statement, referencing the 2016 dismissal of former commissioner Raj Shoan.

White also referenced wholesale-based ISP TekSavvy Solutions Inc.‘s ongoing court challenge to the regulator’s May 2021 reversal of its 2019 decision on wholesale rates, a challenge which cites Scott’s Dec. 2019 meeting with BCE Inc. CEO (and then-chief operating officer) Mirko Bibic in an Ottawa bar, as well as Scott’s remarks in a Canadian Club Toronto interview where the chair expressed a “personal” preference for facilities-based competition.

TekSavvy has also accused Scott of bias in a petition to the Liberal Government.

In the statement, White said that CNOC is considering its options.

Last week, Scott defended himself before a meeting of the House of Commons Industry committee, and told MPs that the barroom meeting with Bibic conformed to commission rules. “The approach the commission takes – I, fellow commissioners, staff – with respect to meetings is grounded in well established rules,” Scott told MPs last week, and added that “I meet with everyone pursuant to the rules.”

“I meet with consumer groups, with individual Canadians, with small broadcasters, with members of parliament. We meet as we must as a public body, and we follow the rules,” Scott said last week.

 

— Reporting by Michael Lee-Murphy at mleemurphy@thewirereport.ca and editing by Paul Park at ppark@thewirereport.ca