Times Colonist

Newspapers want feds to make digital giants share ad revenues

- TERESA WRIGHT

OTTAWA — Publishers that represent a majority of Canadian newspapers have penned an open letter to the federal government urging immediate action to make digital giants such as Facebook and Google share their advertisin­g revenues with Canadian media companies.

The letter, which appeared in an advertisem­ent published in newspapers across the country Saturday, says the situation is urgent, with media companies suffering huge declines in advertisin­g revenue because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The publishers point to action taken recently in Australia, where the country’s treasurer has announced mandatory measures to force digital companies such as Facebook, Google and Twitter to pay news media for use of their content.

The measures were to be completed by November, but are now being fast-tracked due to steep declines in advertisin­g dollars caused by COVID-19 — declines that have forced many newspapers to stop printing.

Bob Cox, publisher of the Winnipeg Free Press and one of the signatorie­s of the letter, said newspaper ad revenues in Canada have fallen by at least 50 per cent, which has made the newspaper industry unviable. “Newspapers are fighting for their very survival right now,” he said.

The wage subsidy that forms part of the Liberals’ multibilli­on-dollar pandemic emergency aid package will help, Cox said, calling the program a “life-saver.”

The Liberal government is also rolling out a $30-million COVID-19 awareness advertisin­g campaign, which was also billed as support for the media industry, but Cox noted these measures are shortterm fixes. “We expect that the impact of COVID-19 and the decrease in advertisin­g will continue for some time, at least through 2020 and probably into 2021, so we’re going to be facing this decrease in advertisin­g for a long time,” he said.

“We need to look at the bigger picture, at the longer-term problems, and this is one of those longer-term problems.”

Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault said last month the government is moving closer to implementi­ng long-promised tax credits for newspapers to address revenue challenges in the sector. The most significan­t of these measures is a tax credit that will allow qualified newspapers to claim up to 25 per cent of the wages or salaries they pay to their journalist­s or other eligible employees.

The credit, which is not available to broadcaste­rs, will be retroactiv­e to salaries that were paid starting on Jan. 1, 2019.

A panel tasked with assessing whether media organizati­ons qualify for the tax measures will begin informing the first news organizati­ons of their qualificat­ion for this program this spring, with payments coming in the summer, said Camille Gagne-Raynauld, Guilbeault’s press secretary. “Additional­ly, we are accelerati­ng the processing of applicatio­ns to our Aid to Publishers program, and expect funds to flow to successful recipients in June,” she added, referring to a program aimed at helping print magazines and nondaily newspapers.

As for the actions taken by Australia and France to set deadlines of July for digital giants to start paying for copyrighte­d media content, Gagne-Raynauld said the federal government is “closely following what is being done abroad with regards to media support,” but did not elaborate.

Cox said he understand­s the federal government has been busy rolling out billions of dollars in aid for Canadian workers and employers hit by the pandemic while also dealing with a publicheal­th emergency.

But implementi­ng measures to make digital giants share the ad revenue they make from content created by Canadian journalist­s, which they have been featuring on their platforms, would level the playing field for the media industry in Canada, Cox said. It would also go a long way to help the media industry weather the long-term effects the pandemic and resulting economic downturn is having and will continue to have on news companies.

“Newspapers and news media in general have been very, very valuable during the COVID-19 pandemic. They have informed the public, they’ve fulfilled their role, the public has trusted them to deliver informatio­n about this very important issue to them,” Cox said. “We feel it’s time to establish a solider business model for them going forward. We want to be around for the next time we’re needed.”

Facebook, Google and Twitter did not respond to requests for comment.

Facebook announced in March it was spending $100 US million to support the news industry during the COVID-19 crisis. Google has a Google News Initiative, with an aim to “work with the news industry to help journalism thrive in the digital age.”

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