Vancouver Sun

Liberals to help newspapers in upcoming federal budget

Heritage minister pledges more support as sector looks for viable business model

- MYLENE CRETE AND JORDAN PRESS

The federal government is signalling that the country’s newspaper industry is set to get financial help, with the minister in charge of the file vowing of measures in this year’s budget and officials ready to meet with publishers to talk details.

The value and details of the financing will be laid out in the budget that has been delivered in late March each of the past two years.

Expectatio­ns are high that the Liberals will allocate more money and change the rules around the Canada Periodical Fund to provide funding beyond print magazines, non-daily newspapers and digital periodical­s as the industry looks for a viable business model in the digital age.

Heritage Minister Melanie Joly discussed the matter during a meeting Thursday with representa­tives of the Federation nationale des communicat­ions, a Quebec union that represents 6,000 people who work in culture and communicat­ions.

Union president Pascale StOnge said Joly told the gathering “there would be a support measure in the next budget” without specifying the funding formula the Liberals would use.

Last week, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told the newspaper Le Soleil that he was preoccupie­d with the financial crisis facing media in Canada and that a decision on federal funding would come in the next budget.

“We’ve had an indication from the prime minister’s mouth and from the minister’s mouth that there will be help for newspapers, so both of those are very encouragin­g,” said Bob Cox, chairman of News Media Canada, a trade associatio­n representi­ng almost 1,000 newspapers in the country.

The government said an announceme­nt will be made in the coming weeks or months about the $75-million periodical fund to help.

“Journalism is critical to a healthy democracy. We have always supported local journalism and will continue to do so. We have been clear: we will not bail out models that are no longer viable,” Joly’s official Twitter account tweeted Friday afternoon.

“We are currently reviewing the Canada Periodical Fund to make sure it can support magazines and local papers to innovate, adapt and transition to digital.”

The government has been bombarded with ideas on how to help the industry that has watched mounting layoffs in newsrooms as companies look to cut costs and shutter publicatio­ns.

A 100-page report from the Public Policy Forum last year called for a sales tax on foreign companies selling digital subscripti­ons in Canada, a “Future of Journalism and Democracy” fund to help finance reliable news and informatio­n with $100 million in federal seed money, a new “local” mandate for news agency The Canadian Press and changes to the CBC’s online advertisin­g.

The Quebec union and News Media Canada have called for changes to the fund. “When we looked at this, the periodical fund seemed to be the best vehicle for introducin­g an emergency measure in the next budget that would be able to administer funds for the daily and weekly news media, ” St-Onge said.

Joly, she said, “seemed to agree that the periodical fund is certainly the easiest way to support print media.”

Changes to the periodical fund were of particular interest to Joly’s officials when she met with Cox and other publishers in midSeptemb­er. A briefing note for the meeting mentioned that News Media Canada’s proposal to morph the periodical fund into a $350-million journalism fund to, among other things, provide rebates on newsroom salaries and expenses, would require about $275 million in new federal spending.

The Canadian Press obtained copies of the documents under the access-to-informatio­n law.

“The goal is to maintain the journalism through transition,” said Cox, publisher of the Winnipeg Free Press.

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Melanie Joly

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