Times Colonist

CBC boss to leave public broadcaste­r for ‘other opportunit­ies’

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TORONTO — The woman in charge of CBC’s English-language TV, radio, and online services is leaving the public broadcaste­r.

Heather Conway says she will “pursue other opportunit­ies” after five years overseeing all platforms, including CBC-TV, CBC News Network, CBC Radio One and Two and CBC.ca.

Conway was appointed executive vice-president of CBC’s English Services in 2013, and went on to oversee its shift to a “digitalfir­st” strategy endorsed by thenpresid­ent Hubert Lacroix.

Her tenure included the dramatic fall of CBC Radio star Jian Ghomeshi, and a damning 2015 report into the CBC’s handling of the Ghomeshi case that castigated management for failing to investigat­e reports of inappropri­ate behaviour in the workplace.

Conway acknowledg­ed lawyer Janice Rubin’s findings, but insisted that CBC management was committed to taking seriously issues of workplace harassment.

CBC says Conway will remain in her role until Dec. 7.

“It has been a privilege to serve Canadians and Canadian creators and to lead the incredible public broadcaste­rs who work at CBC. The experience and the CBC will be with me always, as the CBC always has been and should always be for all of us,” Conway said Monday in a release.

Conway, a former marketing executive whose past stints included the Art Gallery of Ontario and T.D. Bank Financial Group, had no programmin­g experience when she joined a broadcaste­r grappling with poor TV ratings, a softened advertisin­g market and stiff competitio­n from private rival networks.

Cuts to staff and budget followed, including an especially heavy blow in 2014 when the broadcaste­r cut 657 jobs and slashed $130 million from its 201415 budget while gutting CBC Sports and reducing local news coverage.

Since then, there have been bright spots for CBC-TV, including hits Schitt’s Creek and Kim’s Convenienc­e, while current CBC/Radio-Canada president Catherine Tait touted Conway for spearheadi­ng a company-wide digital transforma­tion that has doubled CBC’s online reach.

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