The Netflix logo is shown in this illustration photograph in Encinitas,
California, Oct. 14, 2014. Canada's government wants media companies to
provide more local content.
Photo: Reuters
Canada's Liberal government is prepared to overhaul the
country's laws governing broadcasting, media and cultural industries to
support local content, Heritage Minister Melanie Joly told the Globe and
Mail in a report Saturday, announcing a new policy direction in what
she called a broken system.
Canada's broadcast regulator
has long had requirements for networks to carry certain amounts of
local content. But it cut that quota drastically last year under the
Conservative government after the industry was shaken up by the arrivals
of online media services such as the streaming site Netflix.
Joly told the Globe she was willing to change laws such as
the Broadcasting Act and the Telecommunications Act and modify the
mandates of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications
Commission (CRTC) broadcast regulator and the Canadian Broadcasting Corp
public media organization. She added the government would also create
new laws or agencies as needed.
Joly's Canadian Heritage federal department Saturday announced a
public consultation on how to support and promote Canadian content in
the current digital climate. The department said in a statement it has
made available a pre-consultation questionnaire on media consumption
habits and expectations that will be open until May 20. The department
said Joly will lead the next phase, which will begin in the summer,
though it did not give further details.
Canadian Heritage did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Joly told the Globe she will start acting on the
consultation's feedback in 2017, when she will also prepare a new
cultural export strategy with International Trade Minister Chrystia
Freeland.
Last year the government eliminated its 55 percent
requirement for local shows on over-the-air TV, with the CTRC saying the
protections were no longer relevant in a world of abundance and choice.
The regulator's decision is not expected to take effect until 2017.
Netflix arrived in Canada in late 2010 and does not have to
ensure a quota of Canadian content, which is usually less popular than
that from the United States. It and similar services have shaken up the
industry by offering more choices than traditional subscription TV
services.
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