Edmonton Journal

Bell’s $3.4B bid for Astral gets go-ahead

- STEVE RENNIE The Canadian Press

GATINEAU, QUE. — Canada’s communicat­ions regulator cleared the way for the country’s newest telecom colossus Thursday, approving Bell’s retooled $3.4-billion bid for Astral Media and its coveted TV specialty channels and radio stations.

Bell’s original bid for Astral was rejected by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission last fall because it wasn’t in the best interests of Canadians.

But the regulator said the revised bid, in which Bell agreed to sell some of Astral’s specialty TV channels and radio stations, satisfied its concerns that the company would be too dominant in the market.

“I would like to emphasize that the CRTC’s approval of this transactio­n, with the measures we have imposed, is in the public interest,” said CRTC chairman Jean-Pierre Blais.

“It serves the objectives set out by Parliament in the Broadcasti­ng Act for the Canadian broadcasti­ng system.”

Bell had no immediate comment on the decision.

“We’re assessing the details of the CRTC’s decision and will issue a detailed statement before markets open tomorrow,” spokeswoma­n Jacqueline Michelis said in an email.

Bell’s parent company, BCE Inc., has said it wants to buy Astral to put its content across traditiona­l TV, computers, smartphone­s and tablets. Astral’s English pay TV service, The Movie Network, and French-language pay TV service Super Ecran would be key providers of shows and movies.

Bell is trying to compete with the online streaming service Netflix — which has more than one million Canadian customers who pay for its offering of television shows and movies — and YouTube, which launched its pay channels last month.

However, Bell’s competitor­s — notably Rogers Communicat­ions, Quebecor, Telus, Cogeco Cable and Eastlink — voiced their concerns during CRTC hearings earlier this year about getting deals for content on digital platforms if the BellAstral deal went ahead.

Rogers also asked the CRTC to force Bell to sell The Movie Network as a condition of approving the revised deal, saying it would take a look at buying the pay TV service itself. But Bell threatened to drop its offer if forced to sell The Movie Network because that would cripple the strategy behind the bid.

“We thought that it would play out roughly the way it has. Not everybody gets everything they want,” said Rogers executive Phil Lind.

“But the commission has decided, so we’re going to play by the rules that have to be played by.”

The Public Interest Advocacy Centre, which acted as counsel for a number of consumer groups and opposed the bid, said it was disappoint­ed by the CRTC’s decision.

“Canada will now have an unpreceden­ted level of media concentrat­ion and vertical integratio­n and a weaker diversity of voices with the loss of Astral, a strong independen­t broadcaste­r,” said Janet Lo, a lawyer for the advocacy group.

“Consumers should brace themselves for less competitio­n for television services — and consumers will not only pay the price but they will face less choice and flexibilit­y in the market.”

As a condition of the CRTC’s approval of the deal, Bell must sell a number of Astral’s English and French specialty TV channels, including the Cartoon Network, Disney DX and Teletoon, along with some of its English-language radio stations. Bell must also keep a number of English-language TV stations in operation for at least four more years.

When the deal is finalized, Bell’s share of the Englishlan­guage market will grow to 35.8 per cent, while its share of the French-language market will be 22.6 per cent.

Bell must adhere to the CRTC’s code of conduct for commercial arrangemen­ts that limit anti-competitiv­e behaviour and treat independen­t programmer­s and distributo­rs fairly, the CRTC said.

Bell must also give its competitor­s “reasonable access” to advertisin­g opportunit­ies on its radio stations.

The CRTC is also requiring Bell to spend $246.9 million on “tangible benefits” over the next seven years — $72 million more than the company proposed. Some of those tangible benefits include paying for initiative­s in the radio and television sectors that are meant to create more Canadian programmin­g, and spending on Canadian films and festivals to promote them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada