satellite radio

NCRA/ANREC Presentation to the CRTC re. Subscription Radio, November 2004

Submitted by tranquileye on Tue, 2006-02-21 21:58.

November 4th 2004. National Campus and Community Radio Association presentation to the Canadian Radio-television Telecommunications Commission in response to Broadcasting Notice of Public Hearing CRTC 2004-6.

Cote, Cook and Stevenson Intervention on Subscription Radio - CRTC Public Notice 2004-6

Submitted by tranquileye on Tue, 2006-02-21 21:52.

September 2004 submission to CRTC concerning subscription radio applications.

Introduction: We believe that satellite radio may represent the single greatest threat to the relevance and vitality of campus and community radio since the creation of the sector some thirty years ago. Not only will the proposed services, if accepted, have a negative economic impact on campus and community radio in Canada, they fail to incorporate any aspect of community media, and their approach to Canadian Content runs contrary to thirty years of Canadian radio policy.

Petition to the Governor in Council requesting to set aside Broadcasting Decisions CRTC

Submitted by tranquileye on Tue, 2006-02-21 21:43.

August 2, 2005. Appeal to the federal cabinet in regards to the CRTC's decisions to grant broadcasting licences for both CSR (Decision 2005-246) and Sirius Canada (Decision 2005-247) to provide satellite radio services in Canada from Alliance of Canadian Cinema, Television and Radio Artists (ACTRA), American Federation of Musicians (Canada) (AFM), Canadian Auto Workers (CAW), Canadian Conference of the Arts (CCA), Canadian Film and Television Production Association (CFTPA), Canadian Independent Record Production Association (CIRPA), Canadian Labour Congress (CLC), Communications, Energy & Paperworkers Union (CEP), Directors Guild of Canada (DGC), Friends of Canadian Broadcasting (FCB), National Campus & Community Radio Association (NCRA/ANREC), Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers (SOCAN), Songwriters Association of Canada (SAC), United Steel Workers (USW), and Writers Guild of Canada (WGC).

Transcript of November 4, 2004 Hearing on Subscription Radio

Submitted by tranquileye on Tue, 2006-02-21 14:34.

Transcript of November 4, 2004 CRTC Hearing on Subscription Radio.

NCRA/ANREC, ARC du Canada, ARCQ re. CRTC Broadcasting Public Notice 2005-94

Submitted by tranquileye on Tue, 2006-02-21 14:14.

November 4, 2005. This is the response to the call for comments on CRTC Broadcasting Public Notice 2005-94, from the National Campus and Community Radio Association/l’Association nationale étudiantes et communautaires (NCRA/ANREC), l’Alliance des radios communautaires du Canada (ARC du Canada), and l’Association des radiodiffuseurs communautaires du Québec (ARCQ).

NCRA/ANREC Presentation to the CRTC on Subscription Radio, 2004

Submitted by tranquileye on Wed, 2005-11-09 21:43.

New media collapse space and time, and what is in danger of being lost is the local... Satellite radio and Internet audio are wonderful at serving specialized, yet geographically distributed audiences, but they fail when it comes to supporting local communities. As we move to more national and international services, the local is in danger of being further marginalized... We believe that community radio is the most effective means by which the local can be nurtured in Canadian broadcasting. We are inexpensive – the average revenue of our member stations is less than $120 000 – and unlike commercial and public broadcasters our focus is always clearly on the local community...
We urge the Commission to link the creation and expansion of new national audio services with support for local, community broadcasters through a Canadian Community Radio Fund.

Côté, Cook and Stevenson submission on Subscription Radio, 2004

Submitted by tranquileye on Wed, 2005-11-09 21:37.

Submission from Caroline Côté, Iain Cook, and John Harris Stevenson on Broadcasting Public Notice CRTC 2004-6.

"We believe that satellite radio may represent the single greatest threat to the relevance and vitality of campus and community radio since the creation of the sector some thirty years ago. Not only will the proposed services, if accepted, have a negative economic impact on campus and community radio in Canada, they fail to incorporate any aspect of community media, and their approach to Canadian Content runs contrary to thirty years of Canadian radio policy."