The CRTC has given final approval for the “Journalistic Independence Code” proposed by the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, a self-regulation body of Canada’s private broadcasters.
The code is designed to replace CRTC rules about the independence of TV and newspaper newsrooms, which affect Canada’s three largest private TV broadcasters:
- Global TV (owned by Canwest which also owns a newspaper chain including the National Post and The Gazette – which includes me)
- CTV (owned by CTVglobemedia which also owns the Globe and Mail)
- TVA (owned by Quebecor Media which also owns the Sun chain, 24 Hours/Heures and the Journal de Montréal)
Currently, the CRTC has rules that the television newsrooms and the newsrooms of affiliated newspapers cannot be mixed or merged. They must be completely independent of one another.
As if to underscore how bureaucratic everything is at the CRTC and CBSC, only three of the ten points in the code actually deal with rules for broadcasters. The rest deal with how the code itself should be administered.
The new rules are:
- There must be completely independent “news management and presentation structures”
- Decisions about journalistic content must be made “solely by that broadcaster”
- TV news managers may not sit on newspaper editorial boards and vice versa (but news managers may “sit on committees or bodies intended to co-ordinate the use of newsgathering resources”)
The CRTC’s rules on cross-media ownership date back to 2001, when Quebecor Media bought Videotron, which then owned TVA. The transaction meant that Quebecor would own the largest private television network in Quebec, the largest newspaper (the Journal de Montréal) and the largest cable TV company. The CRTC decided that some journalistic rules would need to be in place to protect the diversity of voices in the newsroom.
Those rules were just as vague as the new ones proposed. Newsrooms and news management decisions must be separate.
Though they sound simple, the application of those rules is all about interpretation. For example, while newspapers and TV stations can’t decide on the other’s coverage, nothing prevents the parent company of both from dictating news. In fact, under the new rules, nothing discourages TV stations and newspapers from “co-ordinating newsgathering resources.” This could mean, for example, having TV journalists file both TV packages and newspaper articles on stories that have video, and having newspaper journalists file texts to both newspaper and TV on stories that don’t.
Journalist unions, who also protested the original Quebecor takeover, also spoke out during hearings about this code, saying it didn’t do enough to really separate newsrooms. But it seems the CRTC thinks it’s enough for them, and with the new code approved it is allowing networks to modify their licenses to remove the original rules (TVA was first off the bat)
We’ll see over the coming years how many loopholes can be found to cut down costs and introduce “efficiencies” by reducing “duplication” in the two media.
UPDATE (Nov. 25): TVA’s union has objected to the request to use the new rules, saying it threatens journalistic independence.
In other news
- Star Choice got slapped for not including RDI in its basic package for satellite TV customers. Star Choice’s defence seemed to be that it had multiple “basic” packages, one anglo, one franco and one bilingual. The CRTC saw through that silliness and ordered it to put RDI on everyone’s lineup (and pay appropriate mandatory fees, though retroactive fees will be left up to the courts). Despite this, the CRTC is asking what kind of services should be mandatory for linguistic minorities (anglos in Quebec and francophones elsewhere).
- The Asian Television Network is asking the CRTC for permission to add Indian lifestyle channel NDTV Good Times to the list of networks that cable and satellite providers can offer to Canadians
- Rogers has asked to add the Fox Business Network to the list of importable non-Canadian networks. I guess Rogers is bullish on the channel which has been cursed with low ratings even during the current economic crisis.
- Astral wants to amend the licence for the MPix movie channel to reduce the time between when movies are made and when they can air on that channel from five years to three.
- TVA has applied to create an HD version of LCN.
- MuchMusic will now be allowed to add game shows to its lineup, provided they are less than 10% of the total and are “music-related” (you know, just like Discovery’s game shows are science-related).
Oh, and Pauline Marois is flapping her gums again about creating a Quebec CRTC, further needlessly duplicating government institutions and burning through our tax dollars.
I would like to hear your opinion about the unofficial merger of Gesca and Radio-Canada (but “flagrant”).