Montreal Gazette

Court rejects Quebec’s plan to ban online gaming

- EMILY JACKSON Financial Post ejackson@nationalpo­st.com

Quebec’s controvers­ial attempt to get internet service providers to block online gaming sites that compete with Loto- Québec has been deemed unconstitu­tional by the Quebec Superior Court.

In May 2016, the province passed Bill 74, a consumer protection law that empowered it to order internet service providers to block a list of its competitor­s’ websites under the guise of protecting consumers from problem gambling.

The Canadian Wireless Telecommun­ications Associatio­n challenged the law in court, arguing Quebec doesn’t have the jurisdicti­on to dictate to internet providers.

That power, it said, falls to the Canadian Radiotelev­ision and Telecommun­ications Commission under the Telecommun­ications Act, which explicitly states carriers “shall not control the content or influence the meaning or purpose of telecommun­ications carried by it for the public” unless the CRTC says otherwise.

In a judgment delivered last week, the court agreed with the industry associatio­n. It ruled that a section of Bill 74 was invalid because telecommun­ications falls exclusivel­y under federal jurisdicti­on. It had “no hesitation” coming to that conclusion, according to the ruling by Justice Pierre Nollet.

The court also concluded the pith and substance of the law was to prevent online gambling sites from setting up in the province, not to protect consumer health.

Quebec’s minister of finance had estimated the law could add up to $27 million per year to the coffers of provincial­ly owned gambling site Espacejeux. The minister is analyzing the court’s decision and would not comment on the judgment or whether the province plans to appeal, a spokespers­on said in an email Tuesday.

The wireless associatio­n, however, said it was pleased with the decision.

“We have always been clear that Canadians are better served by a proportion­ate and symmetrica­l set of federal regulation­s than a patchwork of provincial regulation­s,” CWTA’s manager of government relations Tiéoulé Traoré said in a statement.

The associatio­n had contended the Quebec law would be difficult and expensive to implement, as many internet providers don’t have the capability to block content by province.

“This decision is important as we feel it will help send a strong message of regulatory certainty, and increase the incentives for facilities-based investment in Quebec and elsewhere in Canada.”

The industry associatio­n wasn’t alone in its opposition to the bill. Consumer groups opposed it too, arguing it violated net neutrality, the principle that all content be treated equally. The CRTC also got involved, penning a letter that asserted its jurisdicti­on on the file where it said it only grants permission to block websites in “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.”

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