Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you for inviting me.
The Syndicat des travailleuses et travailleurs de Radio-Canada, or STTRC, has approximately 3,000 members in Quebec and Moncton. The members we represent work in more than 200 jobs, ranging from administration and the technical sector to production. We are the second-largest communications union in the country. The STTRC belongs to the Fédération nationale des communications et de la culture, or FNCC, one of the nine federations that make up the Confédération des syndicats nationaux, or CSN.
Even though our primary responsibility is to negotiate and uphold employment contracts, the STTRC has always fought for adequate, stable multi-year funding for CBC/Radio-Canada. We support its mission to inform, enlighten and entertain, and we embrace its values.
Beyond their employment relationship, the vast majority of our members share a special bond with the organization. They are committed to ensuring that Canadians have access to accurate verified information, in English, in French and in several first nations and Inuit languages.
The STTRC, in co‑operation with the FNCC and CSN, has participated in at least two campaigns in support of the public broadcaster. The most recent was in 2016, with the Tous amis de Radio-Canada campaign. It met with tremendous popular success in Quebec and Moncton, with as many as 12,000 people answering the call of organizers and marching in the streets of Montreal. A series of performances were put on throughout the province and in Moncton, demonstrating people's commitment to CBC/Radio-Canada.
The work of CBC/Radio-Canada is vital in the North American landscape. For francophones, who are—and will always be—a minority facing extinction, Radio-Canada is the tool of choice to showcase who they are and how they live. It is thanks mainly to Radio-Canada that francophones right across the country are able to see themselves, hear their voices, tell their stories, debate the issues they care about and nurture their connection to a strong community, fragmented though it may be. For anglophones, CBC is an essential tool to support and promote what it means to be Canadian.
While not alone, CBC/Radio-Canada is a beacon for understanding regional, national and international realities from a Canadian perspective. CBC/Radio-Canada is worth protecting, and the government must ensure its growth and development.
The current media crisis is, at the outset, a financial crisis. CBC/Radio-Canada's business model is helping it to weather some of the storm, but not all.
We are calling for a media summit, which would give the government an opportunity to reaffirm its commitment to the public broadcaster. It is essential that the government not only ensure CBC/Radio-Canada's independence in producing content, but also provide the public broadcaster with financial support. The two go hand in hand. There is no such thing as a relevant and independent public broadcaster without adequate, stable and consistent funding.
The public broadcaster is not immune to the turmoil in the media sector. CBC/Radio-Canada announced that it was cutting 800 jobs, which will undermine its ability to fulfill its mandate, especially in francophone communities. In order to bring reliable, verified information to Canadians, the public broadcaster must maintain a network of stations across every province and territory with adequate staffing and resources. Credibility is the CBC/Radio-Canada's trademark, but the flood of fake news weakens and diminishes that credibility.
The work of CBC/Radio-Canada is not something to be measured strictly in financial terms. It is about more than ratings. It is a collective effort to help us know and understand one another better, while helping us better understand the world we live in. It is fundamental to the vitality of our democracy.
The last thing I will say is this: now, more than ever, CBC/Radio-Canada is you and me. It is us.