Thank you very much.
Ladies and gentlemen, members of the committee, good morning. My name is Pierre Karl Péladeau. I am the President and Chief Executive Officer of Quebecor, Quebecor Media and Sun Media Corporation. We want to thank the committee members for the opportunity to share our opinion on access to information regarding CBC/Radio-Canada, given our experience with the state broadcaster in this matter.
I am here today as the CEO of Sun Media Corporation, Canada's largest newspaper publisher and private media company in Canada. We manage 42 daily newspapers all around the country, including major urban newspapers like the Toronto Sun, the Calgary Sun, and Le Journal de Montréal, the largest- circulation French newspaper in Canada, the 24 Hours chain of free dailies, as well as many other newspapers, like The Sudbury Star, The Peterborough Examiner, the Grande Prairie Daily Herald Tribune, and even Canada's oldest continuously published daily newspaper, The Kingston Whig Standard. In addition to this, we also own close to 200 weekly newspapers in all regions of the country, as well as two all-news stations, Sun News and LCN, and Canada's biggest French-language broadcaster, TVA, which dominates the news segment in front of Radio-Canada.
Sun Media newspapers have a long tradition, both proud and fearless, of shining a light on wasteful and ineffective spending of all levels of government, forcing them to reveal critical information of interest to Canadians. For example, we recently revealed the fact that the federal government had a list of suspected war criminals wanted for deportation, and that Ottawa would not disclose their identities. Our front page stories, along with coverage on Sun News, led to the government changing its policy and creating a most-wanted list, which resulted in the apprehension of a number of dangerous fugitives.
In other words, we abide by the credo expressed in the landmark 1989 Supreme Court ruling that “a democracy cannot exist without that freedom to express new ideas and to put forward opinions about the functioning of public institutions”. As the crown corporation receiving the largest subsidy from the Canadian Parliament, CBC/Radio-Canada cannot be immune from public scrutiny. Unfortunately, for about 25 years, from when the Access to Information Act was adopted in 1982, until 2007, citizens and journalists were not able to use one of the most important accountability tools available in our democracy, the access to information regime.
When this changed, following the adoption of the Federal Accountability Act, it is understandable that an organization with over a thousand journalists would file a great number of access to information requests to the state broadcaster. It is our duty and our right as conferred by Parliament to do so. What followed is by now well documented, having been the object of several damning reports by the Canada Information Commissioner: proactive delays, exorbitant demands for search fees, numerous complaints, and, in the end, very little information to Canadians about how the state broadcaster manages public funds.
The main reason that CBC/Radio-Canada lacks access to information performance is its insistence on hiding behind a series of exemptions and exclusions. The most significant of these exclusions, and the one that brings us here today, is the exclusion stemming from section 68.1, which states that the Access to Information Act "does not apply to any information that is under the control of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that relates to its journalistic, creative or programming activities, other than information that relates to its general administration". CBC/Radio-Canada took the Information Commissioner to court over the right to be the sole decider over what information can be withheld by virtue of section 68.1.
A first ruling rejected the state broadcaster's conceit. Judge Boivin declared that the "position taken by the CBC confers the Crown corporation judge in its own case in respect of access requests it receives". To CBC/Radio-Canada and executives, this case is first and foremost about protecting journalistic sources. Of course, protecting journalistic sources is also a priority for Sun Media. This is in fact shown by the fact that not a single one of the numerous access to information requests we sent to CBC/Radio-Canada was aimed at journalistic sources. In fact, not only have we never made such demands, but we never would. Furthermore, of the 16 access to information requests that are before the court, not a single one is in any way related to journalistic sources. I have the requests with me.
The requests ask for travel expenses for Sylvain Lafrance, who received la Légion d'honneur in France, outdoor advertising expenses, a commercial agreement to create a new magazine, and so on. In other words, it has nothing to do with journalistic sources, but all to do with CBC/Radio-Canada using every possible scheme to refuse accountability.
This, unfortunately, is nothing new for us at Sun Media. To illustrate this, I have brought with me a couple of requests submitted by Sun Media to CBC/Radio-Canada and what we got in return.
The first one concerns the state broadcaster's fleet of vehicles. What we got back is a single line of text mentioning a lone 2007 Ford 500. All other 17 pages of the document have been redacted, with CBC claiming an exclusion under section 68.1. I must still have a lot to learn about creation, programming, and journalism, because I fail to see what asking for information about a fleet of cars has to do with any of these activities.
Another request concerns CBC/Radio-Canada's 75th anniversary celebration planning budget. What we got in return is 250 pages with all and any dollar amounts redacted by virtue of one exemption or another. Withholding information from Canadians about the cost of anniversary celebrations is apparently par for the course when it comes to CBC/Radio-Canada's interpretation of the Access to Information Act.
Ladies and gentlemen, I used these few examples to try to illustrate the types of difficulties Sun Media has come across in its attempts to do its job as a media outlet.
Despite the opinion of people who accuse us of waging war on CBC/Radio-Canada, we believe that those requests are not only legitimate and of public interest, but also fully compliant with the spirit of the act.
Unfortunately, the reality is that Sun Media is currently the only press group with the distance and independence needed to ask those questions of the state broadcaster. That testifies to the extent to which many of our competitors are allied with CBC/Radio-Canada.
Is it a coincidence that the presence of reporters from the daily newspaper La Presse, published by Gesca-Power Corporation, on CBC's television and radio programs is inversely proportional to the number of requests the newspaper has submitted regarding CBC/Radio-Canada, which actually specializes in that?
But to be sure, the lack of scrutiny of CBC/Radio-Canada is not just a Quebec media phenomenon. When the National Post was launched back in 1998, one of the changes it brought to the media landscape was the willingness to turn a critical eye to the management of the state broadcaster in a regular segment called “CBC Watch”. That has changed. Today the National Post is in a commercial partnership with the CBC whereby the CBC provides it with essential sports and video content. It is no surprise that “CBC Watch” is gone. It has been replaced with stories promoting new CBC programming and giveaways of episodes of The Nature of Things to people who sign up for their mobile app.
I don't want to pick on the National Post; it is the rest of the media as well. Bell, the owner of CTV and CTV Newsnet, has just launched a joint bid with CBC/Radio-Canada for the Olympic coverage, and Canadian Press's biggest customer is CBC/Radio-Canada.
The Globe and Mail and the Toronto Sun, two of the three owners of CP, benefit from large advertising buys from the CBC. Meanwhile, taking a critical editorial position on the CBC will result in the state broadcaster pulling all advertising from our papers, as Sun Media knows only too well.
Between their strategic partnerships, their advertising budget, and their direct payments to journalists in other media organizations, CBC/Radio-Canada has somehow managed to quiet dissenting voices in most outlets--everywhere, that is, with the exception of Sun Media.
Ladies and gentlemen, members of the committee, CBC/Radio-Canada annually receives over 1.1 billion dollars in parliamentary appropriations to fulfill its public broadcasting mandate. In exchange, Canadians have the right to expect a level of transparency that would enable them to ensure that the money they give to the crown corporation is well spent. In other words, the money should be spent efficiently and in alignment with its mandate.
Thank you very much for your attention.