Mr. Chairman, honourable members of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, my name is Robert Fontaine, and I am outgoing President of the Syndicat des communications de Radio-Canada, which represents nearly 1,500 Radio-Canada employees in Quebec and Moncton.
I would like to introduce the people here with me: Alex Levasseur, the union's president elect, and Wojtek Gwiazda, our union's delegate to Radio-Canada International and spokesperson for Radio-Canada International's Action Committee.
Our committee is aware of the importance that the members of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage attach to the role that Radio-Canada should play in order to reflect and better serve the various regions of the country. That concern is not new. It has been conveyed for years by parliamentarians concerned with Canadian Heritage, and our union shares it entirely.
On March 22, the President and CEO of Radio-Canada asked you to determine as precisely as possible the priorities that you would like to see the public broadcaster meet in a contract that it proposed to establish for the next 10 years. He asked you to set priorities, but, when you questioned him about the way in which Radio-Canada could be more present in the regions and you told him your wish that Radio-Canada would open more to the regions that serve them better, Mr. Rabinovitch systematically took refuge behind the corporation's budget constraints.
Don't go thinking that the union is unaware of our employer's financial problems and that it does not support its demands for increased funding, particularly for the funding it says it wants to allocate entirely to increasing its regional budgets. The Syndicat des communications is pleading in favour of granting those additional votes, but given Radio-Canada's current centralizing tendencies, it is also arguing that those additional votes be combined with a rigorous form of control, so that you and Canadians have assurances that that special budgetary envelope will actually be spent for the benefit of the regions.
While the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage reaffirms the importance it attaches to the need for Radio-Canada to better reflect the regions, and Mr. Rabinovitch does his utmost to convince the committee that its priorities are or will also be his, Radio-Canada's regional stations are constantly make cheese-paring economies in order to make ends meet.
Last month, Radio-Canada Atlantique decided to stop broadcasting a regional newscast on statutory holidays. However, in the week preceding the Easter holiday, seven soldiers from the base in Gagetown, New Brunswick, were killed in Afghanistan. The reactions of the families and other soldiers on the base were widely covered. They made the headlines on the ATV and CTV news broadcasts, but not Radio-Canada. Radio-Canada Atlantique had decided not to broadcast a news program on Good Friday or Easter Monday. Our journalists in New Brunswick are wondering whether Radio-Canada's decisions for the Atlantic Region are not designed to assimilate the Acadians.
The Syndicat des communications de Radio-Canada would also like to make you aware of the fundamental changes that have been made on the sly at Radio-Canada International. When the Broadcasting Act was amended in 1991, the CBC's obligation to provide international service was one of its conditions of licence. That amendment became law just after the virtual disappearance of Radio-Canada International, which was ultimately saved thanks to Canadian parliamentarians. The future of the CBC's international service is still under threat. The Radio-Canada International Action Committee sounded the alarm in 2002, and it was sounded again the following year in the report of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage.
Until the Broadcasting Act has been amended to protect RCI's mandate, which is to present the Canadian reality to foreign audiences, there will be nothing preventing the CBC from changing its international service. In fact, that has already started. In 2005, the CBC's board repealed all its policies requiring Radio-Canada International to present a program designed for a foreign audience. Last fall, the resources and priorities of the international service were amended mainly in order to serve newcomers to Canada.
That was a break with an information and public affairs tradition that had made the reputation of Radio-Canada International for more than 60 years. On the RCI Web site, for example, instead of finding new background items for foreign users, as used to be the case, you now see links to other CBC news sites intended for Canadians. We think that the erosion of the CBC's international service must stop and that the original mandate of Radio-Canada International must be reinforced.
The Cree-language northern service is another component of the CBC that seems to be going to the dogs. Its employees are already overworked, and the CBC tells us that it is abolishing the position of the only journalist who writes the news broadcasts for the radio programs broadcast in Cree. You must decide whether CBC/Radio-Canada's mandate in the twenty-first century should be a second class mandate for the country's Aboriginal communities.
Despite the little time at my disposal, I cannot pass over in silence the other important points that we have shed light on in the brief that we submitted to the committee. As you will see, if you have not already done so, we are very much concerned, as are our colleagues, with the virtual almost disappearance of programs other than information programs by CBC/Radio-Canada television and the increasing privatization of the content of public affairs programs. CBC/Radio-Canada programming currently includes only one drama which it produces itself and four entertainment programs. Even excluding the information programs, that original production does not even represent 15% of the public broadcaster's programming schedule.
CBC/Radio-Canada management recently stated that it was going to give renewed prominence to youth programs, a sector in which original in-house production clearly distinguished Radio-Canada from other broadcasters, but which has since been abandoned. Will Radio-Canada be producing these new youth programs itself, or will it contract them out to independent producers, who offer their concept to both public and private broadcasters?
Without questioning the promotion of private production that was decided on in the late 1980s, we consider the system to be in need of rebalancing. This private production is very expensive for taxpayers. As you know, independent producers in Quebec are reinvesting only 3% of their own funds in production.
Furthermore, the exodus of advertising revenue to the new media and the imminent massive arrival of high definition television via the Internet are threatening the funding of our broadcasting system and the country's cultural sovereignty. In this context, a reaffirmation of the crucial role of the public broadcaster is necessary.
The way the CBC operates must also be reviewed. The members of the board, holding no real power over the administration of the day, are chiefly persons appointed on the basis of political considerations. Furthermore, these persons are rarely known for their personal commitment to the public mission of the broadcaster. We unreservedly support the following recommendation made by the Heritage Committee four years ago, and I quote:
In the interest of fuller accountability and arm's length from government, nominations to the CBC board should be made by a number of sources, and the CBC president should be hired by and be responsible to the board.
Lastly, the Syndicat des communications de Radio-Canada believes that the public broadcaster's presence in new media should be part of its mandate in the twenty-first century. In this century, it is likely that the Internet, which is not regulated and the Canadian content of which is beyond any control, will replace television as Canadians' main source of information. It is high time the competent authorities realized this and provided the CBC with the means to distinguish itself on these new platforms without jeopardizing its other services.
Thank you.