The Prince George Citizen

Bell Media cutting radio, TV staff

- Dan HEALING

CALGARY — Bell Media is laying off employees, including prominent on-air personalit­ies, at radio and TV stations across Canada.

However, the company won’t say how many, who or where.

Unifor, the union representi­ng on-air and broadcasti­ng technician­s at 17 CTV stations, estimates 50 jobs are being eliminated at Bell Media’s TV network alone in the latest round.

It says CFTO sportscast­ers Joe Tilley and Lance Brown, along with on-air personalit­ies such as BNN host Michael Kane and Ottawa CTV 2 hosts Melissa Lamb and Lianne Laing, are among those affected.

The union said the cuts mean the end of local sports broadcasts as of Dec. 27 at CTV’s flagship station CFTO in Toronto, a move it claims has already been made at CTV stations in Edmonton, Calgary, and Montreal.

In an email sent Monday, Bell Media spokesman Matthew Garrow confirmed a union report that a number of employees were told last week their jobs would end due to a reorganiza­tion designed in part to address declines in revenue.

“Like other Canadian broadcaste­rs, we are confrontin­g rapid change in the media marketplac­e including new broadcast technologi­es and viewing options and fast-growing internatio­nal competitio­n,” he said. “As the media marketplac­e evolves, local radio and TV stations are facing significan­t declines in advertisin­g, their only source of revenue. We need to reorganize and reduce costs to manage the impact.”

Garrow said Bell is cutting its local sports presence but will continue to have sports in its local newscasts.

“With respect to sports, I can confirm that we are phasing out specific sportscast­s and anchors wholly dedicated to sports as an editorial decision to transition sports coverage in response to evolving viewer behaviour,” he said.

Last January, Bell cited similar factors as it confirmed it was cutting an unspecifie­d number of jobs at 24 of its locations across Canada.

Howard Law, director of Unifor’s media sector, said the Canadian RadioTelev­ision and Telecommun­ications Commission, the federal broadcasti­ng regulator, must take partial blame for the cuts because it has been issuing fiveyear broadcast licence renewals without imposing strong conditions to ensure quality local news continues.

“What the CRTC did not do, despite our urging, was to set regulation­s that enforced ‘quality’ over quantity, meaning that networks can continue to cut corners on staffing...” he said in an email.

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