Evidence of meeting #121 for Canadian Heritage in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was artists.

A video is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Caroline Rioux  President, Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency Ltd.
Allan Reid  President and Chief Executive Officer, CARAS, The JUNO Awards, MusiCounts, Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences
Jackie Dean  Chief Operating Officer, CARAS, The JUNO Awards, MusiCounts, Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences
Brian Fauteux  Primary Investigator, Cultural Capital Project, As an Individual
Randy Boissonnault  Edmonton Centre, Lib.
David Yurdiga  Fort McMurray—Cold Lake, CPC
Wayne Long  Saint John—Rothesay, Lib.

11:55 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Julie Dabrusin

Thank you.

We will now go to Mr. Long for three minutes.

September 27th, 2018 / 11:55 a.m.

Wayne Long Saint John—Rothesay, Lib.

Thank you, Madam Chair, and thank you, everyone, for your presentations.

I won't ramble on too long here.

Ms. Rioux, the U.S. Senate recently unanimously approved changes to copyright reforms. Are there any measures contained in those reforms that we could emulate here?

11:55 a.m.

President, Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency Ltd.

Caroline Rioux

I'll try to be brief.

The portion of the MMA, Music Modernization Act, that I'm most familiar with, and even so I'm not an expert in that domain, has to do with ensuring that there is much less fragmentation of the marketplace in the U.S. Up until now under the MMA, there has been no one central collective for the administration of the reproduction rights in the U.S.

What was happening was that you had lots of different rights holders. There was a difficult infrastructure for the online music services to try to get a central point for licences and/or to get the data flow to be administered, and the payments as well.

The MMA is an attempt—these are my own words—to consolidate this so that it's much more efficient and reaches a larger scope of rights holders out there who may have been missing in the past.

11:55 a.m.

Saint John—Rothesay, Lib.

Wayne Long

Ms. Dean, do you have anything to add to that?

Noon

Chief Operating Officer, CARAS, The JUNO Awards, MusiCounts, Canadian Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences

Jackie Dean

In Canada, I've been involved with organizations that do the distribution and the payments to the artist, and it's the efficiencies that need to come from those processes, just as Caroline has been stating.

I think the adoption of that, in following those models from international counterparts, will really help us get the dollars to the artists quicker. I have seen millions of dollars sit on balance sheets because a decision hasn't been made at the Copyright Board or they can't get the data processed to figure out who is actually owed the dollars.

I think that we can do a better job at that.

Noon

Saint John—Rothesay, Lib.

Wayne Long

Thank you.

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal Julie Dabrusin

Thank you to all of our witnesses, and for all of the members who asked questions today.

We are going to suspend briefly and move in camera, so we will have to clear the room.

Thank you.

[Proceedings continue in camera]