The Telegram (St. John's)

CRTC to require cable, satellite companies to offer basic package, with $25 cap

- BY TERRY PEDWELL

Cable and satellite service providers will soon have to offer consumers an “entry-level” television service, at a cost of no more than $25 a month.

The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission (CRTC) released the new requiremen­ts Thursday, following its lengthy Let’s Talk TV hearings last fall.

The new, trimmed-down basic packages must include local channels in each service area, as well as channels currently on the CRTC’s mandatory distributi­on list such as public interest, educationa­l and legislatur­e channels where they’re available.

U.S.-based channels that are currently free over the air in most major Canadian markets near the border — so-called 4plus-1 channels — will also be included.

It’s the first time television service pricing has been regulated in Canada since 1999 and makes it the only jurisdicti­on in the industrial­ized world to require that TV distributi­on companies offer a basic selection of channels.

The national broadcast regulator says the requiremen­t to offer a trimmed-down basic package will take effect by March 2016.

The CRTC says TV viewers will then be able to supplement the so-called “skinny basic’’ package with either individual channels available through a pick-and-pay model, or what it calls small, “reasonably-priced’’ bundled channel packages.

But service providers will have until the end of next year to offer both a la carte channels and theme packages.

Customers who are happy with their current TV offerings won’t have to switch.

“Canadians will have the choice of keeping their current television services without making any changes, if these continue to meet their needs and budgets,’’ the CRTC said in a statement.

CRTC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais said technology has changed Canada’s TV industry to the point that viewers are taking it upon themselves to choose what they want to watch, when they want to watch it.

“Viewers are in control,’’ Blais said.

“Today’s decision is not about making choices for Canadians,’’ he said.

“Rather, it’s about setting out a road map to give all Canadians the freedom to choose the tele- vision content that meets their unique needs, budgets and realities.’’

Under the new system, service providers will not have to offer free audio services, such as local radio stations, although they can include them if they want.

The $25-a-month price won’t include the cost of renting or buying a cable or satellite set-top box. Nor will it include taxes. But service providers could offer an even lower price.

Rogers flirted with entry-level pricing when it test-marketed a digital basic package in the London, Ont., area from Nov. 2011 until Feb. 2012, at a cost of $19.99 a month.

To make sure the big networks don’t shut out independen­t broadcaste­rs from basic services, the CRTC also introduced a code of conduct for the industry Thursday.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? CTRC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais is pictured on the screen of a live television broadcasti­ng device as he speaks to media Thursday at the CRTC’s offices in Gatineau, Que.
THE CANADIAN PRESS CTRC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais is pictured on the screen of a live television broadcasti­ng device as he speaks to media Thursday at the CRTC’s offices in Gatineau, Que.

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