Edmonton Journal

Exchange gets heated as Bell CEO defends job cuts on Hill

- MICKEY DJURIC

O T TAWA As members of Parliament accuse Bell Canada of corporate greed, the head of the company is defending its decision to cut thousands of jobs, citing a shift in Canadians' viewing habits away from traditiona­l TV.

Liberals, Conservati­ves and New Democrats grilled BCE Inc. chief executive Mirko Bibic during often combative exchanges at a meeting of the House of Commons heritage committee on Thursday afternoon.

Parliament­arians had ordered him to appear and answer for the cuts, which affect nine per cent of BCE Inc.'s workforce.

In February, the company announced it was cutting some 4,800 jobs, ending multiple television newscasts and selling off 45 of its 103 radio stations.

“The idea you saw fit to take substantia­l bonuses and equity packages at a time your workers, employees and journalist­s could have had their jobs saved is a bit disappoint­ing,” Liberal MP Taleeb

Noormohame­d told Bibic.

“I think it's important to think about Canadians, particular­ly those who subsidized your company for so long.”

Conservati­ve heritage critic Rachael Thomas said it's “really rich” for a company worth $40 billion that received government subsidies to lay off its workers. She accused Bibic of evading her questions, saying it made the CEO look “shady.”

“You have not been able to answer a single one of my questions directly today,” Thomas said.

Thomas wasn't alone.

Several MPs flung colourfull­y worded accusation­s at Bibic, including NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh, who appeared briefly to scold the CEO for “choosing greed” over giving consumers “a break” on cellphone fees.

Bibic defended his company, blaming factors like productivi­ty, inflation and delays in the implementa­tion of the federal Online Streaming Act — a new law meant to level the playing field between traditiona­l broadcaste­rs and streaming companies, under which Bell is benefiting from significan­t regulatory relief.

He told MPs that the media ecosystem in Canada “is in crisis.”

 ?? ?? Mirko Bibic
Mirko Bibic

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada