The Daily Courier

Eby gives social media giants another chance

- By Vaughn Palmer

Premier David Eby has pushed the pause button on a contentiou­s bill that would have allowed the province to recover health care and other costs attributed to the marketing of risky products in B.C.

Two dozen business and industry groups had called for the New Democrats to put the bill on hold, claiming it was so broadly drafted that it could be used to go after producers, distributo­rs and retailers of every kind.

Eby claimed the pause had nothing to do with those protests. Rather, he said, it was the willingnes­s of giant social media companies to join with the government to immediatel­y address online safety in B.C.

“It is safe to say that we got the attention of these major multinatio­nal companies,” the premier told reporters on Tuesday, citing the deal with Meta, Snapchat, TikTok and X, the major players in the field.

“They understand our concern and the urgency with which we’re approachin­g this issue. They also understand the bill is still there.”

The New Democrats maintain that the legislatio­n was never intended to capture the many B.C. companies and associatio­ns that complained about it.

Rather it was targeted at Facebook owner Meta and other social media companies and the online harm done to young people. A prime example was the suicide of a Prince George youth who was trapped by an online predator.

Still, there was nothing in the wording of Bill 12, the Public Health Accountabi­lity and Cost Recovery Act, to indicate its applicatio­n would be confined to social media companies or their impact on young people.

Eby even admitted that the law could also be used to recover costs associated with vaping products and energy drinks.

Some critics wondered if the bill’s broad-based concept of harms and risks could be used to prosecute the liquor board or the dispensers of safer-supply drugs, products with proven harms greater than any sugary drink.

Perhaps thinking along those lines, the government specifical­ly exempted itself from prosecutio­n under the Act.

This week’s announceme­nt came as a surprise. As recently as Monday, Attorney General Niki Sharma told reporters the government had no intention of putting the bill on hold.

Tuesday, she justified her evasion by saying the talks with the social media companies were intense and confidenti­al.

She said the pause was conditiona­l on Meta and the other companies delivering a quick response to government concerns.

A prime goal is addressing online harassment and “the online mental health and anxiety that’s rising in young people,” she said.

“I want to sit down with these companies look at them face to face and see what they can do immediatel­y to improve the outcomes for British Columbians.”

Meta has already committed to rectifying Eby’s concern that it should relay urgent news about wildfires, flood and other disasters in B.C. Last year, those were blocked, collateral damage in the company’s hardball dispute with the federal government over linking to news stories from Canadian media companies.

Eby says he was very skeptical about the initial contact from the companies. Now he sees Meta’s willingnes­s to deliver emergency informatio­n as a “major step” and he’s prepared to give talks the benefit of the doubt.

Not long ago he was scoring political points off the social media companies in the harshest terms.

“The billionair­es who run them resist accountabi­lity, resist any suggestion that they have responsibi­lity for the harms that they are causing,” said the premier.

“The message to these big, faceless companies is, you will be held accountabl­e in B.C. for the harm that you cause to people.”

The government could schedule a quick makeup session of the legislatur­e in late May or June or even in early September, before the house is dissolved for the four-week campaign leading up to the scheduled election day, Oct. 19.

More likely, if the New Democrats feel doublecros­sed, they could go back to war with the faceless billionair­es with a view to re-enacting Bill 12 after a hoped-for election victory.

Even if the New Democrats get some satisfacti­on from the social media companies in the short term.

They probably mean it when they say Bill 12 is only paused, not permanentl­y consigned to the trash heap.

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