Madam Chair, I am pleased that we are talking about regional news coverage.
Mr. Bibic, I understand that the entire media ecosystem is in crisis. People have been saying it for years, and successive governments have been too slow to react. The fact remains that Bell is a major player in the industry in Canada, and that comes with responsibilities. One of those responsibilities, a moral and social responsibility, is to ensure that its role is fulfilled in the best possible way.
I looked at the figures and, as far as I can see, Bell still isn't in the red. It might very well be that profits have declined over the years, but Bell is still a going concern. So the company still has some leeway whether its shareholders like it or not.
However, media coverage in eastern Quebec has been in a critical situation for years, and Bell is withdrawing its operations there, as a result of which media coverage is declining in that part of Quebec.
I spoke to you earlier about media coverage in Saguenay—Lac-Saint-Jean. This winter, there was an extremely worrisome situation. People were stuck on the river and needed help. The event may have been trivial for the people of Montreal and Toronto, but for residents in the region, this news was of vital importance. However, no one from Bell was there to cover the event, because the regional newscast was produced in Quebec City. So, Mr. Bibic, how can you tell the committee here that Bell has invested in news and that it has correspondents in all the provinces of Canada, when it is abandoning regional news coverage, thinking that Radio-Canada and the CBC will stay behind to do the job?
I am aware that there is a problem in terms of market fairness. I realize that the web giants have to do their part, but they won't be involved in journalism. The responsibility for journalism rests, once again, with broadcasting companies, and Bell is probably the largest in Canada.
Mr. Bibic, I am making a heartfelt plea. Are you able to tell Quebeckers today that once we have succeeded in restoring equity in this market between the web giants, who are abusing the system, and the broadcasting companies, which are under an extremely heavy regulatory burden—we are all aware of that—Bell is committed to reinvesting in the jobs that have been cut and in Quebec's regional media coverage, which is lacking?
Are you able to tell Quebeckers today that once equity with the web giants is restored and Bell has the leeway it needs to operate in the broadcasting sector in Canada, it will start reinvesting in regional news?