Bell Media confirms CTV local news job cuts while 'phasing out' sportscasts

spaminator

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 26, 2009
38,813
3,557
113
Bell Media confirms CTV local news job cuts while 'phasing out' sportscasts
Canadian Press
More from Canadian Press
Published:
November 20, 2017
Updated:
November 20, 2017 4:59 PM EST
CALGARY — Bell Media is laying off employees, including prominent on-air personalities, at radio and TV stations across Canada.
However, the company won’t say how many, who or where.
Unifor, the union representing on-air and broadcasting technicians at 17 CTV stations, estimates 50 jobs are being eliminated at Bell Media’s TV network alone in the latest round.
It says CFTO sportscasters Joe Tilley and Lance Brown, along with on-air personalities such as BNN host Michael Kane and Ottawa CTV 2 hosts Melissa Lamb and Lianne Laing, are among those affected.
With respect to sports, I can confirm that we are phasing out specific sportscasts and anchors wholly dedicated to sports ... in response to evolving viewer behaviour.
Matthew Garrow, Bell Media spokesman
The union said the cuts mean the end of local sports broadcasts as of Dec. 27 at CTV’s flagship station CFTO in Toronto, a move it claims has already been made at CTV stations in Edmonton, Calgary, and Montreal.
In an email sent Monday, Bell Media spokesman Matthew Garrow confirmed a union report that a number of employees were told last week their jobs would end due to a reorganization designed in part to address declines in advertising revenue.
“Like other Canadian broadcasters, we are confronting rapid change in the media marketplace including new broadcast technologies and viewing options and fast-growing international competition,” he said.
CTV Vancouver news anchors Tamara Taggart and Mike Killeen appear on the set in Vancouver, B.C. on December 8, 2010. (Carmine Marinelli/QMI AGENCY)
“As the media marketplace evolves, local radio and TV stations are facing significant declines in advertising, their only source of revenue. We need to reorganize and reduce costs to manage the impact.”
Garrow said Bell is cutting its local sports presence but will continue to have sports in its local newscasts.
“With respect to sports, I can confirm that we are phasing out specific sportscasts and anchors wholly dedicated to sports as an editorial decision to transition sports coverage in response to evolving viewer behaviour,” he said.
Last January, Bell cited similar factors as it confirmed it was cutting an unspecified number of jobs at 24 of its locations across Canada.
This latest round of layoffs isnu2019t just Bell Media's penny-pinching, this one has been directly caused by the CRTC.
Jake Moore, Unifor Media Council Chair
Howard Law, director of Unifor’s media sector, said the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission, the federal broadcasting regulator, must take partial blame for the cuts because it has been issuing five-year broadcast licence renewals without imposing strong conditions to ensure quality local news continues.
“What the CRTC did not do, despite our urging, was to set regulations that enforced ’quality’ over quantity, meaning that networks can continue to cut corners on staffing, actual news gathering, and allowing ’talking heads’ current affairs shows to be called ’news,”’ he said in an email.
A construction worker works on a Bell building in Ottawa on January 31, 2017. (Sean Kilpatrick/THE CANADIAN PRESS)
Bell Media is a division of BCE Inc. (TSX:BCE), Canada’s largest telecommunications company. It owns 30 local television stations and 105 licensed radio stations.
Many media companies across Canada have been cutting staff to deal with increasing competition in advertising markets.
Early this year, Rogers Media moved to trim its workforce by four per cent or 200 jobs, in a bid to improve efficiency.
Newspaper chain Postmedia laid off 90 employees in January as part of a plan to cut $80 million in costs by mid-2017.
Bell Media confirms CTV local news job cuts while ‘phasing out’ sportscasts | Toronto Sun
 

WLDB

Senate Member
Jun 24, 2011
6,182
0
36
Ottawa
No surprise. They eliminated the local news staff in my hometown nearly ten years ago.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
The CRTC is allowing this TV/Radio conglomeration and it should be illegal.

It's no different than what's happening in the USA.

Soon we will all get our news funneled via Bell or Rogers head office.....


"This latest round of layoffs isn't just Bell Media's penny-pinching, this one has been directly caused by the CRTC," said Unifor Media Council Chair Jake Moore.

"We warned the CRTC that tough licencing conditions would be required if big media companies were granted five-year licences for local news. They didn't listen," said Moore.

The layoffs will seal the fate of the CTV network's remaining local sports broadcasts, adding their flagship station CFTO in Toronto to the list of casualties that already includes sports programming at CTV stations in Edmonton, Calgary, and Montreal. Local sports go off air in Toronto on December 27.

The federal broadcasting regulator the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission granted the major TV networks five-year licence renewals on May 15, 2017. Then Chair Jean Pierre Blais rejected any licence conditions of "local presence" that might have guarded against cutting on-air staff.

"These huge media companies were allowed by the CRTC to grow big and eat up smaller companies with the expectation that they would maintain a high level of local news coverage," said Unifor Media Director Howard Law. "This was supposed to end happily for local news, and it has not."

CRTC and Bell must shoulder blame for TV job cuts, says Unifor
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,888
126
63
Good thing the internet was invented by Al Gore so we now don't need the large netwerks to get our news.
 

tay

Hall of Fame Member
May 20, 2012
11,548
1
36
Good thing the internet was invented by Al Gore so we now don't need the large netwerks to get our news.
 

IdRatherBeSkiing

Satelitte Radio Addict
May 28, 2007
15,253
2,883
113
Toronto, ON
I can't remember the last time I got my sports from a local TV station (at least that I went there to get it -- it has been on when I have been watching).
 

Danbones

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 23, 2015
24,505
2,198
113
Competition is a sin!
Go fascist state sponsored television!