Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you, Mr. Minister, for being here today.
The CRTC, as you know, is an independent organization. It regulates and supervises Canadian broadcasting and telecommunications systems. It's independent. It's there. It's supposed to do its job. Its mandate is to ensure that the broadcasting and telecommunications systems serve the Canadian public.
The CRTC gets its objectives from the Broadcasting Act and the Telecommunications Act, which guide its policy decisions. From what I can gather, it's using for its guidelines, its beacon, what was said by the industry minister at the time--your office--in 2006, which was that they were moving to market forces.
Now, market forces sounds good. It would seem to me that when you talk about market forces, you just open up the doors and let the market prevail. I hear it from the other side. It seems to be a Conservative mantra to just let the market take care of it, and everything will take care of itself. I have some reservations about that.
Earlier, when you were asked what you really meant and what the government policy is, it was choice in competition. It sounds good. It's fluffy. It sounds good, but it really doesn't give me anything to go to. Five years go by, and all we have to offer the CRTC as objectives is to go with market forces and choice in competition. If it doesn't suit your office, then it gets overturned.
What I see here is a return to what happened years ago. When I look at the UBB and what happened in the last month or so, it's almost as if there was a crisis that showed up again. It was created. Guess what. The minister comes across as a hero. Isn't that lovely? That's like saying that here's the guy who set the fire, and he's a hero, because he called the fire department. I'm sorry, but I'm having a hard time with this.
There was a series of decisions made regarding the UBB that are consistent with what I believe was given in 2006. Are you saying that these guidelines have been changed or that the CRTC didn't follow them? If they didn't follow them, what is it that didn't quite match up with the original policies?