Thank you, and thank you all for serving as part of this review of the Copyright Act.
Canada's authors have been waiting a long time for the Copyright Act to be repaired and it's been a painful and expensive wait for us.
I am an author. I am here representing myself and the 2,100 members of the Writers' Union of Canada. I am also chair of the International Authors Forum in the U.K., which represents close to 700,000 writers and visual artists around the globe. The world's authors are also watching this process with great interest and considerable anxiety.
We now know that the 2012 imposition of education as a category of fair dealing has delivered none of its intended benefits and has caused exactly the kind of economic damage many of us predicted. Students now pay more for their education. Teachers are less able to legally access works, and are much more likely to end up in court. Meanwhile those who provide the work education copies, Canada's writers, have suffered a disastrous income decline. Fully 80% of our licensing income has simply disappeared because schools now copy for free what they used to pay for. These are facts that may be ignored by some, but they're indisputable.
Before the 2012 amendment, Parliament was promised that there would be “no loss of revenue for people who are in the creative economy”, and that “The education system, the sector, pays for licences and copyright, and will continue to do so.” These are direct quotations from educational testimony in 2011.
Authors are regular guests in classrooms across the country, and many have personally witnessed beleaguered teachers photocopying an improvised, free “class set” of materials, sometimes entire books. This is happening. Despite all the education technology promises and vagaries about disruption, open access, and the changing landscape, Canadian students continue to be fed a steady diet of photocopied and scanned excerpts from copyright-protected works.
You've recently heard from educational representatives that they continue to pay copyright licences. To be clear, they continue to pay some licences, mostly for expensive foreign journal content, but they are not paying the reasonable and affordable collective licences of Canada's commercial authors and publishers. Each year in Canada over 600 million pages of published work are copied for use in educational course packs, both print and digital, and the education sector is essentially claiming all of that work for free. That is the real world result of education's copying policies.
Those same policies have been thoroughly discredited by York University's copyright infringement loss in Federal Court, yet are still widely in use by school boards and post-secondary institutions across the country. Canadian schools and education ministries are now actually suing Canadian authors through our collective in a desperate attempt to re-establish the ground they lost in the York case. As a result of all of this, many Canadian authors have simply called it a day and stopped creating works. I ask you: Are these the outcomes Parliament desired in 2012?
Canada's authors embrace the future. We don't fear innovation, disruption, or the natural evolution of the marketplace. We lead those things. We create mobile literatures and cross-platform multimedia work that is stretching and expanding the definition of the word “book” in exciting ways. I, myself, do most of my creative writing on my mobile phone.
But we've all learned a lot about digital disruption in the last six years. The scandalous misuse of private data by online platforms is not unrelated to the crisis of unfair copying of creative content. Both arise from a free culture ethos that counsels taking first, and asking for permission later, if at all. This devalues the work of creative professionals.
Most other nations have wisely resisted the siren call of free culture. Canada, sadly, is the outlier. Right now Canada's writers and publishers have authorized and directed our collective to design a blockchain-enabled rights management system. That is real Canadian innovation, but it won't succeed without a clear, strong law at its back.
Authors are investors in education. Most of us have advanced degrees, we all pay taxes, and many of us are or soon will be paying our children's tuition. My own annual access copyright cheque used to go directly into my kids' RESPs. That's pointless now. Our labour creates the content so often copied by our schools. We do not deserve this unfair dealing.
The solution is simple, and it's truly fair. Remove education as a category of fair dealing and require collective licensing for educational copying.
The word “education” has been in the fair dealing section less than a decade, and all it's done is cause damage and clog the courts. The existence of a reasonable, regulated, collective licensing structure is the access solution favoured by most of our global partners. It should be ours as well.
Thank you very much.