Thank you very much.
If I might say at the outset, I just want to thank Mr. Cash for clearing that up for us on the issue. I'd just like to expand a little bit on the clarification, if I could.
There's a very important relationship between radio broadcasters and the music industry, a critical one, I would actually argue. Their industry relies on music to gain listeners, and the music industry depends on the radio broadcasters to disseminate the content. We could argue about whether that's less important today than it was 20 years ago, or what have you, but the bottom line is that they could also make the argument that their focus and part of how they reinvented themselves was to really nail down and focus on local markets, because ultimately every radio station in this country can be replaced. There's no need to go to a radio station on the dial; there's no need for a radio station in Peterborough. If you just want to listen to music, you can buy a satellite subscription and listen to music. The value is in the other things that radio stations are doing. The local content really matters, and it's why radio is popular.
I think in the argument we're hearing here today, both sides have set aside the fact that they're in a necessary relationship. It's a marriage, and it may not be a perfect marriage—and I think that's what we're hearing today—but it's a very important marriage.
What I heard from the broadcasters, and what I continue to hear from them on this—and this, Ms. Shepherd, is what I would like to get an answer on—is they are indicating very clearly that they do pay rights for music, so they're not getting anything free. They pay performance royalties in excess of $60 million, and they also pay in excess of $30 million through a CRTC fund that nobody acknowledges at the committee, but they do pay it, and that goes into FACTOR, a very significant fund for the Canada Music Fund, and then we have the broadcast mechanical. What they're arguing on the mechanical or ephemeral rights is that they don't want to make copies; they'd like to buy the music in the format they use in the first place, but nobody will sell it to them in the format they use.
Mr. Cash used the example of a car. If Mr. Cash wants to buy a car, we don't make him buy a city bus first and then tell him that if he would now like a car we'll sell him one. He can go out a buy a car.
What the broadcasters are saying is that they would like to buy the music in the format they use it in. They don't want to make copies, they don't want to have to re-record things every 30 days, they just want to buy the music in the format they use it in, but the industry isn't providing it to them in that format. Can you tell me why that is the case?
Frankly, if that were the case, the Copyright Board would simply look at the entire issue, ephemeral and performance royalties, and suggest the value of that single payment. It would then be adjudicated as to the fact that they used to have 60 plus 21, and we now have a situation where they're buying strictly in the format they use, and the value is X. I think that's just a simpler system for everyone.