Foreign streamers must pay into fund to boost Canadian content, CRTC says - Action News
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Foreign streamers must pay into fund to boost Canadian content, CRTC says

Online streaming services operating in Canada will be required to contribute five per cent of their Canadian revenues to support the domestic broadcasting system, the country's telecoms regulator said on Tuesday.

Money will be put toward funding for local, Indigenous broadcasting, per briefing

Hand holding a TV remote while watching shows on a streaming service on TV.
Online streaming services operating in Canada will be required to contribute five per cent of their Canadian revenues to support the domestic broadcasting system, the country's telecoms regulator said on Tuesday. (Said Marroun/Shutterstock)

Online streaming services operating in Canada will be required to contribute fiveper cent of their Canadian revenues to support the domestic broadcasting system, the country's telecomsregulator said on Tuesday.

The money willbe used to boost funding for local and Indigenous broadcasting,officials from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) said in a briefing.

"Today's decision will help ensure that online streaming services make meaningful contributions to Canadian and Indigenous content," wrote CRTC chief executive and chair Vicky Eatridesin a statement.

The measure was introduced under the auspices of a law passed last year designed to make sure that companieslike Netflix make a more significantcontribution to Canadian culture.

The government says the legislation will ensure that online streaming services promote Canadian music and stories, and support Canadian jobs.

WATCH | Heritage minister says asking foreign streamers to pay is only fair:

Forcing certain streamers to pay 'about fairness in the system,' says heritage minister

3 months ago
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Minister of Canadian Heritage Pascale St-Onge told reporters on Tuesday that a decision by the CRTC, which calls for online streaming services to hand over five per cent of domestic revenues, will help stimulate investment in Canadian content.

Funding will also be directed to French-language content and content created by official language minority communities, as well as content created by equity-deserving groups and Canadians of diverse backgrounds.

The release also said that online streaming services will "have some flexibility" to send their revenues to support Canadian television directly.

If, and how, the measure will impactCanadians

Dave Forget, thenational executive director of the Directors Guild of Canada, says he believes the decision will ultimately benefit Canadian audiences.

"Itincreases the offer of great international productions that they have now available to them, as well as shows that get made here, and that reflect their own experience a little bit more closely," he told CBC News.

While Forget noted that the directors guild has worked extensively with U.S. and international streamers, helping build up a talent pool and creating employment opportunities,"we have stories to tell as Canadians."

The CRTC's measures will ensure "we have a world where we are expressing ourselves as Canadians and we areparticipating in this global industry," he said, with content created by Canadian writers, directors and performers.

Other Canadian organizations,like the Canadian Media Producers Association (CMPA), applauded the CRTC's decision. But critics of the measure are concerned that Canadians will ultimately foot the bill.

"I think one of the prime concerns associated with the decision, as it stands right now, is that there are a lot of other decisions that the CRTC has to make to make the entire framework work," said Michael Geist, alaw professor at the University of Ottawa.

The government has said that the definition of Canadian content needs to be re-examined and modernized. Doing sowould ensure thatbeneficiaries of payments from a foreign streamer are in fact creating works that meet those standards, he said.

"The problem is that the CRTC hasn't done that," Geist said.

Geist added that he thinks it's likely that consumers will ultimately pay for the new legislation, either potentially with fewer choices or with higher bills.

"If you take away five per centof revenues and say that has to now go into this fund and [streamers] don't even benefit from any of this, it seems likely that you have to increase prices if you're going to stay in the market to ensure that you remain competitive," he said.

Levy would raise $200M per year

The measure, which will start in the 2024-2025 broadcasting year,would raise roughly $200 million annually, CRTC officialssaid.It will only apply to services that are not already affiliated with Canadian broadcasters.

The Motion Picture Association Canada issued a statement on behalf of its members, which include Netflix and Disney+, saying it was disappointed with the decision.

It said the new measure "will make it harder for global streamers to collaborate directly with Canadian creatives and invest in world-class storytelling made in Canada for audiences here and around the world."

A spokesperson for Amazon Prime Video said the company was still assessing the decision, but that it was "concerned by the negative impact it will have on Canadian consumers."

Apple TV+and Spotifydid not immediately respond to a request forcomment.

LISTEN | Discussing the potential impactof the CRTC'spodcast regulations (October):

The CMPAwas among 20 screen organizations from around the world thatsigned a statement in January asking governments to impose stronger regulations on streaming companies operating in local markets.

One of the demands was a measure that would force companiesprofiting from their presence in those markets to contribute financiallyto the creation of new local content.

Canada isn't the first country to ask foreign streamers to direct domestic revenues toward local content. France set similar rules in 2021, requiring streamers to allocate 20 to 25 per cent of revenues to European and French content creation.

With files from Reuters, Anis Heydari and James Dunne