Medicine Hat News

Media experts to help modernize CBC/Radio-Canada before next election

- MICKEY DJURIC

Seven multimedia experts have been selected to advise Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge as she renews the role of Canada’s public broadcaste­r.

The group will provide policy advice mainly on CBC/ Radio-Canada’s governance and funding, Canadian Heritage said.

The department notes that consultati­ons on the CBC’s mandate have already been done with the general public.

The newly appointed advisory panel will now help St-Onge chart a path forward, with members contributi­ng knowledge from a variety of fields.

St-Onge said committee members have diverse perspectiv­es and experience­s that will help her modernize CBC and its French-language arm, Radio-Canada.

“Canadians need a strong, innovative and independen­t public broadcaste­r that is ready to meet the challenges of this period of transforma­tion and upheaval in news and content creation,” St-Onge said in a statement Monday.

The panel will help her promote Canadian culture, stories, languages, artists and creators, “while adapting to our rapidly changing broadcast and digital landscape,” she added.

The panel includes: — Marie-Philippe Bouchard, CEO, TV5 Québec Canada;

— Jesse Wente, chair of the Canada Council for the Arts, founding executive director of the Indigenous Screen Office;

— Jennifer McGuire, managing director, Pink Triangle Press;

— David Skok, CEO and editor-in-chief, The Logic (independen­t media startup);

— Mike Ananny, associate professor of communicat­ion and journalism, University of Southern California Annenberg;

— Loc Dao, executive director

of DigiBC;

— and Catalina Briceno, professor, Université du Québec à Montréal.

CBC president Catherine Tait has been calling for a long-term financial structure for the public broadcaste­r, such as a multi-year funding agreement through a charter, similar to the BBC in Britain.

The minister’s office has previously said it is “open to all ideas” as part of the process.

During a recent appearance at a House of Commons committee, Tait said she’s looking forward to conversing with the panel.

“Sustainabl­e long-term funding is one of the solutions” to combatting the “crisis” media face, Tait said. She pointed to challenges such as competitio­n from foreign tech giants who aren’t subjected to the same regulation­s as Canadian broadcaste­rs, and a decline in revenue from traditiona­l advertisin­g.

CBC/Radio-Canada is projecting a $20-million shortfall for the 2024-25 fiscal year, despite having recently laid off 141 employees and eliminatin­g 205 vacant positions since December, Tait said.

“I’ve been in this business 40 years and never before have I seen so great pressure on our domestic industry, and it is very worrisome,” Tait told the committee. “We see people disappeari­ng, companies disappeari­ng, production houses shutting down.”

The public broadcaste­r relies on an annual parliament­ary appropriat­ion of approximat­ely $1.2 billion and supplement­ary income generated from advertisin­g, subscripti­ons and other commercial activities.

“In the past CBC/RadioCanad­a had an employee body of about 10,000. Today we’re at 7,500,” Tait said.

“Ninety per cent of our budget is dedicated to our workforce, so if something hits us, an economic hardship or financial hardship, the only lever we have is through workforce adjustment.”

Ottawa has said it wants to redefine the role of CBC before the next federal election, as the Liberals hedge against a possible change in government.

The Opposition Tories have promised to defund CBC and turn its Toronto-based headquarte­rs into “affordable housing,” though the party’s leader, Pierre Poilievre, has also suggested maintainin­g support for services tailored to francophon­e minorities.

A spokeswoma­n for CBC welcomed the news of the advisory panel, saying the corporatio­n will help in any way it can.

“We welcome any discussion on the future of public broadcasti­ng,” said Emma Iannetta, “and we appreciate the minister’s strong support for the important role CBC/ Radio-Canada plays in the lives of all Canadians.”

 ?? CP PHOTO SPENCER COLBY ?? Pascale St-Onge, Minister of Canadian Hertiage, rises during Question Period on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Monday.
CP PHOTO SPENCER COLBY Pascale St-Onge, Minister of Canadian Hertiage, rises during Question Period on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, on Monday.

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