Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you to the witnesses for coming today.
Over the past I think I have demonstrated that I don't always agree with the CRTC. In fact, especially if we go back to the issue of fee for carriage or value for signal, I made it pretty clear that I was very disappointed with the position they were taking. I thought it would lead to gouging of Canadians.
We saw a court decision earlier in the week, which I think potentially opens the door to that and which I'd be very disappointed to see. I think Canadians are, frankly, tired of being nickeled and dimed, and a decision in that regard to go in that direction would provoke the type of furor that Canadians have responded with on a number of fronts, so I hope we don't go there.
However, on this decision, I actually think the CRTC is doing a pretty good job. They do have breakdowns by regions, by ridings, of the number of homes they believe could potentially be affected and of which broadcasters and which towers are currently broadcasting in any given area. They do have pretty good data on that. I thought they had broken some new ground with Shaw on the purchase of Global, and I would expect we will see a similar deal made with the Bell purchase of CTV.
Of course I understand you said it's time-limited, and nothing says they will renew this deal, but I would expect that the CRTC, which held them to this standard in the first place, is likely to continue to hold them to this standard when they come for licensing renewal. I don't think too many BDUs will tell you that the CRTC is their buddy. They might not dislike the CRTC, but they are very concerned when they go before the CRTC that the regulator certainly does tend to come down on them.
I'm just curious. If we look at what Shaw did when it purchased Global, which was to extend free satellite dishes and signal and installation to anyone who could have their signal disrupted, and we anticipate that a similar deal is most likely to occur with Bell—which came before the committee and extended the offer of a program they call “freesat” a couple years ago—and if that is extended and continually re-extended, where is the problem?