Thanks very much.
We talk about the various inputs to the broader film, and the role of fiction and documentary film—and Charlie mentioned the various programs that exist and talked about consolidation. Would they require consolidation? As many witnesses have suggested, one of the things we have to do, in terms of the role of the CBC into the next century, is to see it as a leader among players, rather than, as was historically the mindset, a player. Part of the problem that exists right now perhaps stems from the fact that we haven't figured out how to be that leader among players.
I would want a reaction to that. But I want to go back, very specifically, to the reference to the local support for the ACTRA position nationally around the mandate, and whether the mandate is sufficient.
Could I suggest perhaps the need to offer some clarity, then, to that sufficient mandate, because it's read differently? When I asked the question last night, and again today, people do react here to the fact that when I ask what the region is, they say Newfoundland and Labrador. I don't think that's the way the CBC in Toronto views the regions, because I've had the experience of being told to be satisfied with Halifax. As an Atlantic Canadian, you can appreciate how offensive that is to a New Brunswicker.
Each of us will argue in the regions—and we should, and when I say “regions” I'm talking about regions—about the unique nature of the jurisdictions. In our case, it's the only bilingual province, and we coexist. That's the story in and of itself, and we have all kinds of stories to tell about that.
It may be necessary to simply offer more clarity to the mandate. I don't think that is necessarily the overall thing, but I think it may be necessary. My fear is this. I think there is a resource problem. I think that the CBC has changed. No fault to the CBC; they've been forced to change. Unfortunately, it might very well be that we would be surprised to find out that if we restored the funding to levels that we believe to be necessary to offer what you seek from 20 years ago, we'd restore the funding but we wouldn't get that back.
Now, in some ways we're not going to get it back anyway. But even to the extent to which we think, at this moment, if there were a significant amount of money made available, I'm not convinced that it would change, in terms of the interventions that I get in my constituency, in Fredericton, or that we're getting here about the nature of what they expect of the CBC. I'm not sure it would necessarily come, and I'm trying to figure out how to get it.
I would be fearful that we would make the resources available, but we would be surprised with the outcome. It may very well be that the institution has changed—no fault to the institution—because of the cutbacks.