Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Good morning, everyone.
Thank you for this invitation. It is a privilege for Alain and for me to appear before your committee.
For the past seven years, as editor-in-chief of CBC's English services division, my role has been to oversee the news and current affairs programming on CBC television, radio, Newsworld, and CBC news online.
For more than 50 years, CBC/Radio-Canada news services have been keeping Canadians informed about their community, their country and their world at large. During that time, the CBC has moved from being a radio-only broadcaster to a multi-platform service to Canadians and to others around the world.
In the past four years at the CBC we have integrated CBC news and current affairs operations across CBC radio, television, and our increasingly important online service. This has not only been more efficient, it has enriched all of our local and network programming by ensuring that information, ideas, and resources can be more easily shared.
In my opening remarks I'd like to focus briefly on three aspects.
The first point is the CBC as Canada's window on the world. CBC/Radio-Canada has more international bureaus than any other news organization in Canada.
In many of these bureaux, our correspondents report for both the CBC and Radio-Canada. We truly are Canada's Window on the World.
Let's recall the past year. I think of Afghanistan. The CBC stood out for its efforts to give Canadians the most comprehensive coverage. The National, with Peter Mansbridge, is the only national newscast that has ever broadcast live out of Afghanistan.
Think of Lebanon. In the eleven months since last summer's war, only the CBC has stayed in Lebanon. Only the CBC maintains a full-time bureau in Beirut, with correspondent Nahlah Ayed.
And think of Africa. Our commitment to covering the horrible incidents in Darfur has taken us back to that region in Sudan repeatedly, in spite of the dangers inherent in such reporting. At one point last autumn we were the only network in the world in Darfur.
A second important area is the CBC as a provider of original and unique programming. There may be a multitude of choices in today's ever-changing media world, but many of them in Canada are owned by very few companies. More than ever, we would argue, there is a need in this modern democracy for a strong, public broadcaster.
You'll recall the Ontario lottery story, first told by the fifth estate last autumn. This investigation represented the finest traditions of public service Canadian journalism. Stories such as this--and there have been many of them recently on local and network programs on CBC radio and television--are the product of excellent, diligent, original work.
We sometimes hear it said that there's no need for CBC news because the private broadcasters do exactly what we do, and they do it well. We can agree that private broadcasters do some things very well and we can perhaps debate it some other time whether they do them better than CBC. But there is no debate about the role of CBC news when it comes to bringing Canada together at important times in our history. No other broadcaster comes close in providing live coverage of major events that tell the story of our country.
For the past 12 years in a row, CBC television news has been honoured with the Gemini award for the best live news special of the year. Last summer CBC news provided the world with coverage of the AIDS summit in Toronto and the World Urban Forum in Vancouver.
Just a few months ago, we were the only broadcaster that produced TV coverage of the ceremony at Vimy Ridge for the 90th anniversary of the historic battle there. It was only through CBC Television that Canadians saw our new War Museum opened.
Surely when it comes time to measure the value of a news service, one of the litmus tests is how the service rises to the occasion when the country needs it, often when no other broadcaster will.
My third and final point is about the CBC as a journalistic organization uniquely accountable to Canadians. Our duty to provide accurate, fair, and high-quality information to Canadians is at the heart of CBC/Radio-Canada's mandate as a public broadcaster.
At the CBC we have several safeguards to ensure not only that this is achieved but that Canadians can hold CBC news accountable.
CBC/Radio-Canada has an extensive code of journalistic standards and practices, a policy book, which I think you have on your desk, that is widely respected internationally by other broadcasters and news organizations. As editor-in-chief, I write a regular media column for cbc.ca dealing with policy issues and inviting contributions, including criticisms, from our audience.
And of course there is the CBC ombudsman. Canadians have access to an independent ombudsman at both the CBC and Radio-Canada to resolve major complaints about programming. In addition, CBC/Radio-Canada reaches out to experts and its audience to continually monitor the quality of its news and current affairs programming over the course of a season.
It's important to stress that no other broadcaster or news organization in this country has accountability safeguards as stringent as at CBC/Radio-Canada.
Everyone in Canada has an opinion about CBC, particularly about its news programming, and we wouldn't want it any other way. As we are often reminded, we are not perfect, and we acknowledge that, humbly. That is why we are so focused on improving.
But let's keep things in perspective. Every public opinion poll on the subject indicates that CBC/Radio-Canada is Canada's most respected news organization. In audience numbers, CBC radio news is number one in local and network programming in many Canadian markets. CBC Newsworld is Canada's top-rated news channel, by nearly a two-to-one margin. CBC news online is Canada's most popular Internet news site. And many of our TV news and current affairs programs, including The National and the fifth estate, are at least equal and often ahead of their commercial competitors in audience numbers. So there are accomplishments that should never be overlooked.
Thank you for your attention. I look forward to our discussion.
I would now like to introduce you to my colleague from Radio-Canada, Alain Saulnier.