Thank you, Tony.
Mr. Chairman and members, thank you for the opportunity to be here today.
I'd like to speak briefly to two specific issues. First is how the CBC is financed. Second is a question that I know is of interest to many MPs, and that is the CBC's legislative mandate to serve the needs of Canada's regions.
In terms of finances, as members know, CBC Television and Radio-Canada depend on commercial revenues to meet up to 40% to 50% of their operating budgets. The result of this reality means that raising those revenues becomes de facto the number one priority facing the corporation. If you don't get the advertising revenue, the entire budget collapses.
The impact of that on its programming is inevitable. That's why we have such a heavy reliance on professional sports. That's why we have commercials inserted into virtually every program, even into flagship newscasts--an unusual practice for a public broadcaster, in my experience. That's why, protestations to the contrary, much of the CBC is taken up with ratings chasing, because that's what advertisers are interested in and that's what the CBC feels it has to deliver.
The result of all of that is to end up with what someone has called a “subsidized commercial network”. In fact, Mr. Rabinovitch himself, at a speech in Toronto, said, “How can you call yourself a public broadcaster when over 50% of your budget comes from competing with the private sector?”
Members, and indeed Canadians, in my view, should be under no illusion. As long as CBC Television and Radio-Canada have this kind of dependency on commercial revenue, you're going to have what you have now--a subsidized commercial broadcaster.
But if you want a more genuine public broadcaster, one that meets the kind of definition the CBC itself offered in its brief to this committee last week, there's no alternative but to lessen that commercial dependency. And again, there's no use kidding ourselves. While in our brief we've suggested some ways that the CBC could add non-commercial revenues, in the end you're talking about increased public financing. That's the reality.
In that respect, I refer you to the Nordicity study that shows that compared with virtually all other countries that are in public broadcasting, we in Canada have not been known for our over-generosity in terms of support for public broadcasting.
In terms of regional programming, the corporation's mandate, as set forth in the Broadcasting Act, says that CBC programs should “reflect Canada and its regions to national and regional audiences, while serving the special needs of those regions”. If you ask the corporation about its regional responsibilities, invariably the answer comes back with something about local newscasts.
Over the years the CBC has tried various formats for these--Tony and I have lived through a number of them--all of which, frankly, have been failures in almost every market in the country, and for good reason. I think I can predict, without too much cynicism, that the latest version, which was mentioned to you last week, will meet with about that much success as well--and for good reason. In my judgment, it's because the basic policy is misguided.
First, local privately owned stations dominate the supper hour news shows for a reason. It is for them, in most cases, about the only original programming they invest in. They make major investments in it. They do a good job. And they dominate their markets, with few exceptions. Just look at CJOH's position in Ottawa. That's just one example. I know there are some exceptions to that, but they are exceptions.
Second, I think it's worth pointing out that the CBC is already the local broadcaster in most of these markets. It just happens to be in radio. Its early-morning shows and its drive-home shows are the places where citizens go in most of these communities to learn about what's going on in their cities and to hear discussion about them. If you look at the corporation as a whole, it seems to me that whatever local mandate it has is being served, in fact, through its radio, which can--as the CBC mentioned--and should be expanded.
Third, even if the CBC's local TV news shows were more successful, they would not address the act's mandate to reflect the national and regional audiences--that's not what they're about--and neither by the way, does originating things like new shows from Halifax and Calgary with content that does not reflect those locations, but could just as easily have been written in Toronto.
In my view, the corporation needs to rethink its whole approach to regional programming and to go back and look at what the mandate in the act is--to reflect the regions to the country and to the regions themselves. I'm not a programmer and I don't pretend to be one, but I think there are opportunities here for more imaginative approaches. In news and public affairs, for example, what about a series of regional weekly public affairs programs that give more attention than you get in a 90-second news spot to things that are of interest in a region; and if you had a series of five regional programs, you could take the best-produced in one region and show it to Canadians in the other regions. That's how you reflect one region to the other. It might have helped all of us understand the events of Monday night, for example, if in advance of that we'd had a good background on what was happening with the ADQ in Quebec.
Similarly, I'd like to know more about why the pine beetle infestation is in British Columbia. I read a bit about what P.E.I. is doing in wind power research. There are lots of opportunities there, but nobody is really taking the time in this current system to do this. The CBC can do it, and it would be reflecting the regions within them and it would give you an opportunity to reflect regions back to other regions.
In another area, in cultural programming, I think most people believe Canada has undergone a cultural explosion in recent years in terms of the development of regional performing arts groups. When I was doing my paper for the Public Policy Forum, I spoke to one senior arts executive who said to me that he hears evidence of this explosion on CBC Radio, but he doesn't see much of it on CBC Television.
I would suggest the corporation can be and should be a television showcase for these major regional groups, both within the region and to the country, and frankly they're doing very little of that at this point. Other people may have better ideas for programs than I have, but the point and my plea is this: I think it's time to move beyond this one-dimensional view of regional broadcasting as involving local newscasts or being focused on local newscasts. Look at what the act says and try to develop an approach and philosophy that's more in keeping with it.
Thank you.