Refine by MP, party, committee, province, or result type.

Results 76-90 of 107
Sort by relevance | Sorted by date: newest first / oldest first

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  It was in 2007.

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  No, the government does not contribute to its funding. The fund is for this year. Actually, there is an agreement now with private broadcasters who will be paying money into it for the development of Canadian content. We are talking about a fund of about $1 million for this year.

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  Not yet, but the government did allow for the fund to be set up initially.

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  We are trying to secure a meeting with government representatives to talk about a future contribution.

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  Yes, but I am not able to tell you what the status of that process is. Part of the plan of the fund managers is to meet with government officials.

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  No, I'm just a member.

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  First of all, I would like to thank you for your proactive support of francophone radio in Ottawa.

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  In any case, I wanted to thank you. To better reflect the communities we serve, we created a platform for artists. I will let Simon tell you more about it, because he is the one who developed it. The service we provide to the Alliance des radios communautaires du Canada consist

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  Yes, you can also hear it in Iqaluit. That gives us an opportunity to disseminate the culture of all of our communities across all communities. Obviously, we still have some ways to go. Indeed, we would like our radio stations to better reflect our communities, but given our lac

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  There is no doubt that they represent the future of our radio stations. It is extremely important to involve young people in our stations. Often, student radio stations in the schools record programs that we broadcast on our radio stations. Also, we invite young people to come i

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  Needs are not specifically associated with either small or large markets: they are the same, whether we are talking about Shediac, in New Brunswick, where things are going well, or in Yellowknife, where the station has only one half-employee and is very dire straights. In fact,

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  I can tell you that last year was an extremely trying year with respect to advertising, because a choice had already been made: it was the year of television and the Internet. Radio stations and newspapers paid the price, and it was a very stiff price. There was a drop of more th

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  As regards community radio, we would really like to see something in the next Roadmap that deals with community media and would relate specifically to those media. There is currently nothing in the Roadmap—or at least, only passing reference to them. Obviously, base funding is f

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté

Official Languages committee  A review of the community radio policy was very good for the sector, both for campus and community radio stations. The new policy provides for greater accessibility and is also much simpler for radio stations to administer. In terms of flexibility in programming, I am not certai

November 1st, 2011Committee meeting

François Côté