Mr. Chair, esteemed colleagues, it is a pleasure to be with you today.
We are here today because on July 8, something unacceptable happened in our country. I am convinced each and every one of you heard countless stories from frustrated constituents who were impacted by the Rogers outage on July 8—I know I did.
The Rogers outage concerns all Canadians, and not only the company's more than 12 million clients who were directly impacted. As I have said many times, what happened on July 8 is absolutely unacceptable, period.
Canadians rightfully deserve answers for what happened.
Mr. Chair, this is why it was so important for me to come before this committee today. Let's remember that during the outage, millions of Canadians were without cellphone and Internet access for more than 15 hours. Literally hundreds of thousands of small and medium-sized businesses had to turn customers away because they were unable to use Interac to complete transactions. Government departments lost the ability to provide services to Canadians. Most worrisome, countless Canadians lost the ability to call 911.
Again, this is simply unacceptable, full stop. That is the message I conveyed to Tony Staffieri, the CEO of Rogers, on multiple occasions since July 8. I used my voice to amplify the voice of millions of Canadians and expressed in no uncertain terms their frustration with this unprecedented outage in our country. Mr. Staffieri has acknowledged that Rogers has broken the public's trust and has agreed to taking a series of actions to address this matter promptly and decisively.
While the responsibility for the outage rests solely with Rogers, we now have to be in solution mode. That's the attitude I have adopted since the very first hours of this outage.
I was informed of the outage by my team in the late afternoon of July 8 Tokyo time—which was very early morning on July 8 here in Ottawa—as I was wrapping up a week-long mission to Japan. A few hours later, I received an update indicating that the outage now seemed more serious than originally anticipated. I immediately picked up the phone, not only to contact the CEO of Rogers, but also the CEOs of Telus and Bell to see how they could possibly help.
As soon as I landed back in Canada the next day, I convened a meeting with the CEOs of Rogers, Telus, Bell, Videotron, Shaw, SaskTel and Eastlink. I directed them to take immediate action to improve network resiliency and reliability across Canada. As a first step, I demanded that within 60 days the companies enter into a formal binding agreement ensuring and guaranteeing three things: emergency roaming, mutual assistance, and a communication protocol for advising the public and government on major outages and other emergencies.
Folks, the clock is ticking and there are 45 days left to deliver on that commitment.
In a similar fashion, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission recently adopted measures to improve network resiliency, on July 6.
As you know, the CRTC is also conducting a detailed investigation of the outage, including the measures that Rogers is putting in place to prevent similar outages. I've also directed the Canadian Security Telecommunications Advisory Committee to develop additional proposals to improve network resiliency on the basis of their findings.
As I said from the outset, we will consider more measures to have the network resiliency that Canadians deserve.
To conclude, I would note that all Canadians deserve strong, reliable, affordable and resilient communications networks. That is why we are going to insist that Canada's telecom providers are better prepared to prevent future outages. We also need to continue to hold Canada's telecom providers accountable, and we will do so on behalf of Canadians.
In closing, let me say this: there are some who will see an opportunity today to talk about a number of issues relating to telcos in Canada—from competition, to the proposed Rogers‑Shaw merger, to many other subjects, I'm sure. While I'll be more than happy to answer those questions—to the extent I can—I think that today, Canadians expect us to talk about two things.
First, what happened on July 8 and why. Second, what solutions do we have going forward to ensure that a situation like this does not happen again.
With that, I will be happy to take questions from my House of Commons colleagues.