Thank you, Chair.
I want to thank Mr. Ripley for that.
It's an interesting clause that Mr. Champoux puts forward. Many of us in the broadcasting field have often thought that the CRTC needs a deadline for renewals. We have seen, countless times, where you get the licence and then you walk away and don't do what was talked about in the licence. Then they'll come back in year six and look at the licence and make sure that they get the stamp for the next seven years.
I think we need some regulation of this. I don't think we need to give underlings and conventional broadcasters.... They have to be accountable to people, and I think the CRTC has to be accountable to people. To give a “we'll get back to you when you're doing something bad” isn't what I would do. I think there has to be a provision to look at everything in the CRTC's purview.
That's why, in a way, I don't know that I would support this, Mr. Champoux. I think the CRTC needs to be accountable not only to Canadians but to broadcasters and those online. Making sure that they have a deadline, whether it's five, four or seven years, gives the CRTC time to know that they're going to visit everybody. I think that's important. It's important for executives of Netflix and Amazon and all those companies to know that Big Brother is in fact looking over their shoulder—not every day, but there will be provisions here where they will sit down and look at what they've done over the past seven years.
That's just my thought. I think it's not only good for the public, but for the corporate world too.