Gov. issues new CRTC policy direction with guidance for wholesale regime

The federal government is seeking to issue a new policy direction to the CRTC, ordering the regulator to promote, encourage, and foster competition, affordability, consumer interests and innovation. 

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ITPA wants national NG911 rate; incumbents tell CRTC not to use, or to limit, funding

The Independent Telecommunications Providers Association (ITPA) is suggesting to the CRTC that it establish a single low national next-generation 911 (NG911) rate for all Canadians, because having different rates between service providers competing for the same customers “will have a detrimental impact on competitive market forces.”

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On Rogers-Shaw, focus shifts to network sharing agreements

As the Competition Bureau takes Rogers Communications Inc. and Shaw Communications Inc. to the Competition Tribunal to block the merger of the companies, conversation on what will be required to get the deal done has shifted to whether or not a network sharing agreement is a central component of any possible remedy that would mollify the bureau’s objections . 

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Scott is wrong to think the CRTC can handle C-11: former CRTC vice-chair; Unifor wants local news fund added

Former CRTC vice-chair Peter Menzies has claimed that it “makes no sense” for the CRTC to regulate content on the internet through the Online Streaming Act, despite claims by the current chair Ian Scott that the commission is fully equipped to do so. 

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Regional wireless carriers seek review of incumbents’ roaming rates

A consortium of regional wireless competitors have filed an application with the CRTC seeking a review of the wholesale roaming tariff rates of the big three national carriers. 

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Network sharing deal with Telus strengthens Globalive bid for Freedom: analysts

The reported network sharing deal inked between Freedom Mobile-hopeful Globalive and Telus Corp. would strengthen the former’s bid to pick up Shaw Communications Inc.‘s mobile assets should the Competition Bureau mandate their divestment as part of the approval of Shaw’s acquisition by Rogers Communications Inc., according to telecom industry analysts. 

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Bill C-11 could be fully implemented within two years of receiving Royal Assent: CRTC chair

The CRTC will take at least two years to fully implement the government’s Online Streaming Act, Bill C-11, once it receives Royal Assent, according to the commission’s chair who spoke to committee members in a heated discussion of the bill.

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BREAKING: Feds ban Huawei from 5G networks

The federal government Thursday announced that it would be banning equipment from “high risk vendors”, including Chinese telecom companies Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. and ZTE Corp. from the country’s 5G telecommunications systems.

In addition, the government will also introduce legislation aimed at beefing up cybersecurity across the nation’s communications infrastructure and key industries. 

“Cybersecurity is national security,” Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino told reporters Thursday afternoon in a press conference. The development of 5G wireless networks represents an opportunity for competition and growth, Mendocino said, adding that “with this opportunity also comes risks.” 

The review of Huawei’s presence on Canadian networks has been ongoing for some three years. 

“This has never been a race, this is about making the right decision,” Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne said in response to a question about the delay in making the decision. 

Most of the biggest telecom companies in the country – including BCE Inc., Rogers Communications Inc., and Telus Corp. – have already sought to use other vendors like Nokia Corp. and Ericsson AB for their 5G rollouts. The last holdout on using Huawei was Telus, which ultimately decided in Nov. 2020 that it would use other vendors. 

The order will also require telecom companies to rip out any existing Huawei and ZTE equipment from their 4G LTE networks, and Champagne said the government would not be compensating any telecom companies for their trouble. 

The move aligns Canada with other countries in the so-called “five eyes” intelligence sharing partnership countries, which have made similar moves to ban Huawei’s gear from their networks. 

More to come.

Canadian politicians condemn Russian shuttering of CBC Moscow bureau

Canadian politicians were quick to condemn Russia’s move to close the CBC/Radio-Canada’s bureau in Moscow in retaliation for the removal of RT, the state-sponsored Russian network, from Canada’s airwaves. The CRTC removed the Russian network in March. CBC said 10 employees, both Canadian and Russian nationals, were affected by the decision.

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Telus backs Rogers paper billing cost complaint against Bell

After Rogers Communications Inc. complained to the CRTC that it had incorrectly determined the cost awards in a decision mandating paper billing for certain customers, Telus Corp. has filed an intervention in support of the complaint. 

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