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First Session, Forty-fourth Parliament, |
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70-71 Elizabeth II – 1 Charles III, 2021-2022-2023 |
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STATUTES OF CANADA 2023 |
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CHAPTER 23 |
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An Act respecting online communications |
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platforms that make news content available |
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to persons in Canada |
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ASSENTED TO |
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JUNE 22, 2023 |
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BILL C-18 |
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RECOMMENDATION |
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Her Excellency the Governor General recommends to the House |
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of Commons the appropriation of public revenue under the cir- |
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cumstances, in the manner and for the purposes set out in a |
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measure entitled “An Act respecting online communications |
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platforms that make news content available to persons in |
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Canada”. |
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SUMMARY |
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This enactment regulates digital news intermediaries to enhance |
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fairness in the Canadian digital news marketplace and contribute |
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to its sustainability. It establishes a framework through which |
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digital news intermediary operators and news businesses may |
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enter into agreements respecting news content that is made |
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available by digital news intermediaries. The framework takes in- |
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to account principles of freedom of expression and journalistic |
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independence. |
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The enactment, among other things, |
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(a) applies in respect of a digital news intermediary if, having |
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regard to specific factors, there is a significant bargaining |
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power imbalance between its operator and news businesses; |
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(b) authorizes the Governor in Council to make regulations |
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respecting those factors; |
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(c) specifies that the enactment does not apply in respect of |
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“broadcasting” by digital news intermediaries that are |
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“broadcasting undertakings” as those terms are defined in |
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the Broadcasting Act or in respect of telecommunications ser- |
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vice providers as defined in the Telecommunications Act; |
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(d) requires the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommu- |
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nications Commission (the “Commission”) to maintain a list |
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of digital news intermediaries in respect of which the enact- |
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ment applies; |
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(e) requires the Commission to exempt a digital news inter- |
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mediary from the application of the enactment if its operator |
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has entered into agreements with news businesses and the |
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Commission is of the opinion that the agreements satisfy cer- |
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tain criteria; |
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(f) authorizes the Governor in Council to make regulations |
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respecting how the Commission is to interpret those criteria |
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and setting out additional conditions with respect to the eligi- |
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bility of a digital news intermediary for an exemption; |
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(g) establishes a bargaining process in respect of matters re- |
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lated to the making available of certain news content by digi- |
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tal news intermediaries; |
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(h) establishes eligibility criteria and a designation process |
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for news businesses that wish to participate in the bargaining |
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process; |
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Available on the House of Commons website at the following address: |
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www.ourcommons.ca |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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(i) requires the Commission to establish a code of conduct |
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respecting bargaining in relation to news content; |
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(j) prohibits digital news intermediary operators from acting, |
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in the course of making available certain news content, in |
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ways that discriminate unjustly, that give undue or unreason- |
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able preference or that subject certain news businesses to an |
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undue or unreasonable disadvantage; |
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(k) allows certain news businesses to make complaints to the |
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Commission in relation to that prohibition; |
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(l) authorizes the Commission to require the provision of in- |
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formation for the purpose of exercising its powers and per- |
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forming its duties and functions under the enactment; |
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(m) requires the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to pro- |
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vide the Commission with an annual report if the Corporation |
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is a party to an agreement with an operator; |
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(n) establishes a framework respecting the provision of infor- |
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mation to the responsible Minister, the Chief Statistician of |
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Canada and the Commissioner of Competition, while permit- |
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ting an individual or entity to designate certain information |
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that they submit to the Commission as confidential; |
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(o) authorizes the Commission to impose, for contraventions |
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of the enactment, administrative monetary penalties on cer- |
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tain individuals and entities and conditions on the participa- |
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tion of news businesses in the bargaining process; |
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(p) establishes a mechanism for the recovery, from digital |
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news intermediary operators, of certain costs related to the |
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administration of the enactment; and |
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(q) requires the Commission to have an independent auditor |
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prepare a report annually in respect of the impact of the en- |
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actment on the Canadian digital news marketplace. |
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Finally, the enactment makes related amendments to other Acts. |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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SUMMARY |
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TABLE OF PROVISIONS |
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An Act respecting online communications platforms |
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that make news content available to persons in |
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Canada |
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Short Title |
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Online News Act |
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1 |
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Interpretation |
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Definitions |
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2 |
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Freedom of expression |
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3 |
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Purpose |
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Purpose |
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4 |
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Designation of Minister |
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Designation |
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5 |
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Application |
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Application |
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6 |
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Duty to notify |
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7 |
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List of digital news intermediaries |
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8 |
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Broadcasting |
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9 |
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Telecommunications service providers |
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10 |
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Exemptions |
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Exemption order |
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11 |
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Interim order |
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12 |
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For greater certainty |
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13 |
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Review |
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14 |
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Reasons |
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15 |
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Statutory Instruments Act |
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16 |
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Publication of orders |
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17 |
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Bargaining Process |
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Overview |
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Definition of party |
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18 |
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Steps in bargaining process |
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19 |
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Initiation of bargaining process |
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20 |
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Duty to bargain |
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21 |
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Good faith |
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22 |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Copyright |
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Initiation of bargaining process |
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23 |
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Limitations and exceptions |
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24 |
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Mediation and final offer arbitration |
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25 |
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Liability of operators |
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26 |
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Eligibility |
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Eligible news businesses — designation |
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27 |
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Provincial public broadcasters |
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28 |
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Public list |
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29 |
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Identification of news outlets |
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30 |
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Application to Commission |
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31 |
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Agreements |
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Agreement with group |
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32 |
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Final Offer Arbitration |
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Roster of qualified arbitrators |
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33 |
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Arbitration panel |
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34 |
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Conflicts of interest |
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35 |
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Commission assistance |
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36 |
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Decision of arbitration panel |
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37 |
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Factors |
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38 |
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Dismissal of offers |
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39 |
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Other submissions |
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40 |
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Decision final |
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41 |
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Decision deemed to be agreement |
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42 |
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Reasons |
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43 |
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Costs |
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44 |
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Civil Remedies |
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Right of recovery |
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45 |
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Compliance order |
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46 |
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Competition Act |
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Covered agreements |
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47 |
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Other agreements |
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48 |
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Code of Conduct |
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Establishment of code |
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49 |
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Compliance order |
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50 |
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Discrimination, Preference and |
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Disadvantage |
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Prohibition |
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51 |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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TABLE OF PROVISIONS |
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Complaint |
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52 |
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Provision of Information |
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Duty to provide information |
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53 |
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Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |
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53.1 |
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Minister and Chief Statistician |
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54 |
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Confidential information |
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55 |
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Offence — disclosure |
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56 |
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Administration and Enforcement |
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Production Orders |
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Designated persons |
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57 |
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Power to order production |
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58 |
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News Businesses |
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Contravention — eligible news business |
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59 |
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Administrative Monetary Penalties |
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Violation — operators, directors, etc. |
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60 |
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Maximum amount of penalty |
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61 |
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Procedures |
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62 |
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Designation |
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63 |
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Notice of violation |
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64 |
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Undertaking |
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65 |
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Payment of penalty |
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66 |
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Evidence |
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67 |
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Burden of proof |
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68 |
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Defence |
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69 |
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Directors, officers, etc. |
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70 |
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Vicarious liability |
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71 |
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Limitation or prescription period |
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72 |
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Information may be made public |
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73 |
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Receiver General |
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74 |
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Debt due to Her Majesty |
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75 |
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Regulations |
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76 |
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Other Provisions |
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Judicial powers |
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77 |
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Sections 126 and 127 of Criminal Code |
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78 |
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Financial Provisions |
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Fees for services |
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79 |
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Costs apportioned by Commission |
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80 |
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Cost recovery |
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81 |
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Debt due to Her Majesty |
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82 |
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Spending |
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83 |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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TABLE OF PROVISIONS |
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Regulations |
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Regulations — Governor in Council |
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84 |
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Regulations — Commission |
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85 |
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Independent Review |
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Annual report — independent auditor |
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86 |
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Review of Act |
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Review |
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87 |
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Related Amendments |
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Access to Information Act |
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88 |
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Canadian |
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Radio-television |
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and |
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Telecommunications |
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Commission Act |
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89 |
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Broadcasting Act |
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91 |
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Telecommunications Act |
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92 |
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Coming into Force |
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Order in council |
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93 |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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TABLE OF PROVISIONS |
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70-71 ELIZABETH II – 1 CHARLES III |
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CHAPTER 23 |
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An Act respecting online communications platforms |
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that make news content available to persons in |
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Canada |
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[Assented to 22nd June, 2023] |
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His Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of |
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the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, |
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enacts as follows: |
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Short Title |
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Short title |
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1 This Act may be cited as the Online News Act. |
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Interpretation |
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Definitions |
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2 (1) The following definitions apply in this Act. |
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Commission means the Canadian Radio-television and |
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Telecommunications Commission. (Conseil) |
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covered agreement means, as applicable, |
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(a) an agreement that is entered into as a result of |
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bargaining sessions referred to in paragraph 19(1)(a) |
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or mediation sessions referred to in paragraph |
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19(1)(b); or |
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(b) an arbitration panel’s decision that is deemed to |
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be an agreement under section 42. (accord assujetti) |
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digital news intermediary means an online communi- |
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cations platform, including a search engine or social me- |
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dia service, that is subject to the legislative authority of |
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Parliament and that makes news content produced by |
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news outlets available to persons in Canada. It does not |
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include an online communications platform that is a |
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messaging service the primary purpose of which is to al- |
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low persons to communicate with each other privately. |
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(intermédiaire de nouvelles numériques) |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Page 10 |
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eligible in relation to a news business, means that the |
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business is designated under subsection 27(1). (admis- |
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sible) |
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entity includes a corporation or a trust, partnership, |
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fund, joint venture or any other unincorporated associa- |
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tion or organization. (entité) |
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Indigenous news outlet means an undertaking or any |
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distinct part of an undertaking whose primary purpose is |
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to produce news content and that |
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(a) is operated by an individual who belongs to an In- |
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digenous group, community or people; and |
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(b) produces news content primarily for Indigenous |
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peoples. (média d’information autochtone) |
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Indigenous peoples has the meaning assigned by the |
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definition aboriginal peoples of Canada in subsection |
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35(2) of the Constitution Act, 1982. (peuples autoch- |
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tones) |
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Minister means the Minister of Canadian Heritage or, if |
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another federal minister is designated under section 5, |
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that minister. (ministre) |
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news business means an individual or entity that oper- |
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ates a news outlet in Canada. (entreprise de nouvelles) |
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news content means content — in any format, includ- |
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ing an audio or audiovisual format — that reports on, in- |
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vestigates or explains current issues or events of public |
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interest and includes such content that an Indigenous |
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news outlet makes available by means of Indigenous sto- |
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rytelling. (contenu de nouvelles) |
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news outlet means an undertaking or any distinct part |
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of an undertaking whose primary purpose is to produce |
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news content and includes an Indigenous news outlet or |
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an official language minority community news outlet. |
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(média d’information) |
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official language minority community means English- |
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speaking communities in Quebec and French-speaking |
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communities outside Quebec. (communauté de langue |
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officielle en situation minoritaire) |
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official language minority community news outlet |
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means an undertaking or any distinct part of an under- |
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taking whose primary purpose is to produce news con- |
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tent and that produces news content primarily for an of- |
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ficial language minority community. (média d’informa- |
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tion de communauté de langue officielle en situation |
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minoritaire) |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Interpretation |
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Section |
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2 |
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Page 11 |
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operator means an individual or entity that, through |
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any means, operates a digital news intermediary. (ex- |
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ploitant) |
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Making available of news content |
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(2) For the purposes of this Act, news content is made |
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available if |
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(a) the news content, or any portion of it, is repro- |
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duced; or |
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(b) access to the news content, or any portion of it, is |
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facilitated by any means, including an index, aggrega- |
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tion or ranking of news content. |
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Freedom of expression |
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3 (1) For greater certainty, this Act is to be interpreted |
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and applied in a manner that is consistent with freedom |
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of expression. |
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Journalistic independence |
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(2) This Act is to be interpreted and applied in a manner |
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that supports the journalistic independence enjoyed by |
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news outlets in relation to news content produced pri- |
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marily for the Canadian news marketplace, including lo- |
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cal, regional and national news content. |
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Treatment of news content |
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(3) This Act is to be interpreted and applied in a manner |
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that is aimed at ensuring news content is made available |
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by digital news intermediaries without undue manipula- |
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tion or interference. |
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Purpose |
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Purpose |
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4 The purpose of this Act is to regulate digital news in- |
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termediaries with a view to enhancing fairness in the |
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Canadian digital news marketplace and contributing to |
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its sustainability, including the sustainability of news |
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businesses in Canada, in both the non-profit and for- |
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profits sectors, including independent local ones. |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Interpretation |
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Sections 2-4 |
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Page 12 |
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Designation of Minister |
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Designation |
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5 The Governor in Council may, by order, designate any |
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federal minister to be the Minister referred to in this Act. |
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Application |
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Application |
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6 This Act applies in respect of a digital news intermedi- |
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ary if, having regard to the following factors, there is a |
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significant bargaining power imbalance between its oper- |
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ator and news businesses: |
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(a) the size of the intermediary or the operator; |
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(b) whether the market for the intermediary gives the |
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operator a strategic advantage over news businesses; |
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and |
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(c) whether the intermediary occupies a prominent |
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market position. |
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Duty to notify |
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7 (1) If this Act applies in respect of a digital news inter- |
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mediary, its operator must so notify the Commission. |
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Information required |
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(2) An individual or entity that operates an online com- |
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munications platform must, at the request of the Com- |
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mission and within the time and in the manner that it |
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specifies, provide the Commission with any information |
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that it requires for the purpose of verifying compliance |
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with subsection (1) or preventing non-compliance with it. |
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List of digital news intermediaries |
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8 (1) The Commission must maintain a list of digital |
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news intermediaries in respect of which this Act applies. |
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The list must set out each intermediary’s operator and |
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contact information for that operator and specify |
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whether an order made under subsection 11(1) or 12(1) |
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applies in relation to the intermediary. |
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Statutory Instruments Act |
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(2) The Statutory Instruments Act does not apply in re- |
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spect of the list maintained under subsection (1). |
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Publication |
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(3) The Commission must publish the list on its website. |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Designation of Minister |
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Sections 5-8 |
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Page 13 |
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Broadcasting |
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9 This Act does not apply in respect of a digital news in- |
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termediary that is a broadcasting undertaking in re- |
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spect of its broadcasting, as those terms are defined in |
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subsection 2(1) of the Broadcasting Act. |
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Telecommunications service providers |
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10 For greater certainty, this Act does not apply to a |
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telecommunications service provider, as defined in |
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subsection 2(1) of the Telecommunications Act, when it |
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is acting solely in that capacity. |
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Exemptions |
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Exemption order |
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11 (1) The Commission must make an exemption order |
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in relation to a digital news intermediary if its operator |
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requests the exemption and the following conditions are |
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met: |
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(a) the operator has entered into agreements with |
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news businesses that operate news outlets that pro- |
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duce news content primarily for the Canadian news |
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marketplace and the Commission is of the opinion |
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that, taken as a whole, the agreements satisfy the fol- |
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lowing criteria: |
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(i) they provide for fair compensation to the news |
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businesses for the news content that is made avail- |
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able by the intermediary, |
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(ii) they ensure that an appropriate portion of the |
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compensation will be used by the news businesses |
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to support the production of local, regional and na- |
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tional news content, |
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(iii) they do not allow corporate influence to under- |
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mine the freedom of expression and journalistic in- |
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dependence enjoyed by news outlets, |
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(iv) they contribute to the sustainability of the |
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Canadian news marketplace, |
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(v) they ensure a significant portion of independent |
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local news businesses benefit from them, they con- |
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tribute to the sustainability of those businesses and |
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they encourage innovative business models in the |
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Canadian news marketplace, |
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(vi) they involve a range of news outlets in both the |
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non-profit and for-profit sectors and they were en- |
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tered into with news businesses that reflect a diver- |
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sity of business models that provide services to all |
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markets and diverse populations, including local |
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and regional markets in every province and |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Application |
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Sections 9-11 |
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Page 14 |
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territory, anglophone and francophone communi- |
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ties, and Black and other racialized communities, |
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(vii) they ensure a significant portion of Indigenous |
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news outlets benefit from them and they contribute |
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to the sustainability of those outlets in a way that |
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supports the provision of news content by and for |
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Indigenous peoples, and |
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(viii) they ensure a significant portion of official |
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language minority community news outlets benefit |
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from them and they contribute to the sustainability |
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of those outlets in a way that supports the provision |
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of news content by and for official language minori- |
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ty communities; |
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(a.1) the Commission has held public consultations in |
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accordance with any conditions that its Chairperson |
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may specify; and |
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(b) any condition set out in regulations made by the |
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Governor in Council. |
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Effect of order |
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(2) The order exempts the operator, in relation to the in- |
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termediary, from the application of |
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(a) section 21 and any provision of any regulations |
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made under section 85 that is in relation to section 21; |
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and |
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(b) any other provision of this Act and any provision |
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of any regulations made under subsection 81(1) or sec- |
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tion 85 that is specified by the Commission, in its dis- |
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cretion, in the order. |
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Conditions |
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(3) The order may contain any conditions the Commis- |
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sion considers appropriate. |
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Approval of Treasury Board |
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(4) The order is subject to the approval of the Treasury |
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Board if the order exempts the operator from the applica- |
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tion of section 82 or any provision of any regulations |
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made under subsection 81(1). |
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Duration of order |
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(5) The order remains in effect for a period of not more |
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than five years and, subject to this section, may be re- |
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newed. |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Exemptions |
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Section |
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11 |
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Page 15 |
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Interim order |
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12 (1) The Commission may, in relation to a digital |
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news intermediary, make an interim order that has the |
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same effect as an exemption order if the following condi- |
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tions are met: |
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(a) its operator has requested an exemption order in |
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relation to the intermediary; |
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(b) the operator has entered into agreements with |
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news businesses that operate news outlets that pro- |
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duce news content primarily for the Canadian news |
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marketplace; |
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(c) the Commission is unable to make the exemption |
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order because it is of the opinion that, taken as a |
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whole, the agreements do not satisfy the criteria set |
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out in subparagraphs 11(1)(a)(i) to (viii); and |
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(d) the Commission is of the opinion that it will be |
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able to change its opinion because the operator is, in |
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good faith, taking measures that will permit the crite- |
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ria to be satisfied within a reasonable period, which |
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period must not be longer than one year. |
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Conditions |
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(2) The interim order must contain conditions respecting |
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the measures being taken by the operator and may con- |
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tain any other condition the Commission considers ap- |
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propriate, including a condition requiring that public |
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consultations be held at a time and place in Canada to be |
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fixed by the Commission. |
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Approval of Treasury Board |
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(3) The interim order is subject to the approval of the |
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Treasury Board if the order exempts the operator from |
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the application of a provision referred to in sub- |
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section 11(4). |
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Cessation of effect |
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(4) The interim order must specify the period referred to |
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in paragraph (1)(d) and ceases to have effect at the end of |
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that period. |
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For greater certainty |
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13 For greater certainty, agreements referred to in para- |
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graph 11(1)(a) or 12(1)(b) include agreements that were |
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entered into before the day on which this section comes |
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into force. |
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Review |
|
14 (1) For greater certainty, the Commission may re- |
|
view an exemption order or an interim order. |
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2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Exemptions |
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Sections 12-14 |
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Page 16 |
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Repeal of exemption order |
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(2) The Commission may repeal an exemption order if |
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(a) the Commission is of the opinion that the operator |
|
of the digital news intermediary in question is acting |
|
in a manner that is inconsistent with this Act; |
|
(b) a condition referred to in subsection 11(1) is no |
|
longer met; or |
|
(c) a condition contained in the exemption order is |
|
not met. |
|
Repeal of interim order |
|
(3) The Commission may repeal an interim order if |
|
(a) the Commission is of the opinion that the operator |
|
of the digital news intermediary in question is acting |
|
in a manner that is inconsistent with this Act; |
|
(b) a condition referred to in paragraph 12(1)(c) or (d) |
|
is no longer met; or |
|
(c) a condition contained in the interim order is not |
|
met. |
|
Reasons |
|
15 The Commission must publish on its website reasons |
|
for |
|
(a) making or not making a requested exemption or- |
|
der; |
|
(b) deciding to make or not to make an interim order; |
|
and |
|
(c) deciding to repeal an exemption order or interim |
|
order. |
|
Statutory Instruments Act |
|
16 The Statutory Instruments Act does not apply in re- |
|
spect of an exemption order or an interim order. |
|
Publication of orders |
|
17 The Commission must publish on its website each ex- |
|
emption order and interim order that it makes. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Exemptions |
|
Sections 14-17 |
|
|
|
Page 17 |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Overview |
|
Definition of party |
|
18 In sections 19 to 44, party means, as applicable, an |
|
operator, an eligible news business or a group of eligible |
|
news businesses. |
|
Steps in bargaining process |
|
19 (1) The bargaining process consists of |
|
(a) negotiation or bargaining sessions over a period of |
|
90 days; |
|
(b) if the parties are unable, within the negotiation or |
|
bargaining period, to reach an agreement, mediation |
|
sessions over a period of 120 days, beginning on the |
|
day after the end of the negotiation or bargaining peri- |
|
od; and |
|
(c) if the parties are unable, within the mediation pe- |
|
riod, to reach an agreement and at least one of the |
|
parties wishes to initiate arbitration, final offer arbi- |
|
tration for a period of 45 days, beginning on the day |
|
after the end of the mediation period. |
|
Extension |
|
(1.1) On request of both parties, the Commission may |
|
extend a period provided for in any of paragraphs (1)(a) |
|
to (c). |
|
Scope of bargaining process |
|
(2) The bargaining process is limited to matters related |
|
to the making available, by the digital news intermediary |
|
in question, of news content produced by a news outlet |
|
that is identified under section 30 as a subject of the bar- |
|
gaining process and, if an application is made under sub- |
|
section 31(1), determined by the Commission to be a sub- |
|
ject of the bargaining process. |
|
Scope of final offer arbitration |
|
(3) Any final offer arbitration under the bargaining pro- |
|
cess is limited to monetary disputes. |
|
Initiation of bargaining process |
|
20 Only an eligible news business that is listed under |
|
subsection 29(1) or a group of eligible news businesses |
|
that are listed under that section may initiate the bar- |
|
gaining process with an operator. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Sections 18-20 |
|
|
|
Page 18 |
|
Duty to bargain |
|
21 An operator must participate in the bargaining pro- |
|
cess with the eligible news business or group of eligible |
|
news businesses that initiated it. |
|
Good faith |
|
22 Parties that are participating in the bargaining pro- |
|
cess must do so in good faith. |
|
Copyright |
|
Initiation of bargaining process |
|
23 For greater certainty, an eligible news business or a |
|
group of eligible news businesses may initiate the bar- |
|
gaining process in relation to news content in which |
|
copyright subsists only if |
|
(a) the business or a member of the group owns the |
|
copyright or is otherwise authorized to bargain in rela- |
|
tion to the content; or |
|
(b) the group is authorized to bargain in relation to |
|
the content. |
|
Limitations and exceptions |
|
24 For greater certainty, limitations and exceptions to |
|
copyright under the Copyright Act do not limit the scope |
|
of the bargaining process. |
|
Mediation and final offer arbitration |
|
25 For greater certainty, the use of news content is not |
|
to be the subject of mediation sessions or final offer arbi- |
|
tration during the bargaining process if the operator in |
|
question |
|
(a) has made payments to the eligible news business |
|
in question for the use of that content in accordance |
|
with a licence or agreement between the operator and |
|
the business; or |
|
(b) has made payments or has offered to make pay- |
|
ments to the business in question for the use of that |
|
content in accordance with the relevant tariff ap- |
|
proved by the Copyright Board for the use of that con- |
|
tent. |
|
Liability of operators |
|
26 (1) If news content is made available by a digital |
|
news intermediary and its operator is a party to a covered |
|
agreement in relation to the making available of the news |
|
content by the intermediary, the operator is not liable |
|
under the Copyright Act for an infringement of copyright |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Overview |
|
Sections 21-26 |
|
|
|
Page 19 |
|
in relation to activities that are subjects of that agree- |
|
ment. |
|
For greater certainty |
|
(2) For greater certainty, nothing in this Act limits the li- |
|
ability of an eligible news business under the Copyright |
|
Act for an infringement of copyright. |
|
Eligibility |
|
Eligible news businesses — designation |
|
27 (1) At the request of a news business, the Commis- |
|
sion must, by order, designate the business as eligible if it |
|
(a) is a qualified Canadian journalism organization |
|
as defined in subsection 248(1) of the Income Tax Act, |
|
or is licensed by the Commission under paragraph |
|
9(1)(b) of the Broadcasting Act as a campus station, |
|
community station or native station as those terms |
|
are defined in regulations made under that Act or oth- |
|
er categories of licensees established by the Commis- |
|
sion with a similar community mandate; |
|
(b) produces news content of public interest that is |
|
primarily focused on matters of general interest and |
|
reports of current events, including coverage of demo- |
|
cratic institutions and processes, and |
|
(i) regularly employs two or more journalists in |
|
Canada, which journalists may include journalists |
|
who own or are a partner in the news business and |
|
journalists who do not deal at arm’s length with the |
|
business, |
|
(ii) operates in Canada, including having content |
|
edited and designed in Canada, |
|
(iii) produces news content that is not primarily fo- |
|
cused on a particular topic such as industry-specific |
|
news, sports, recreation, arts, lifestyle or entertain- |
|
ment, and |
|
(iv) is either a member of a recognized journalistic |
|
association and follows the code of ethics of a rec- |
|
ognized journalistic association or has its own code |
|
of ethics whose standards of professional conduct |
|
require adherence to the recognized processes and |
|
principles of the journalism profession, including |
|
fairness, independence and rigour in reporting |
|
news and handling sources; or |
|
(c) operates an Indigenous news outlet in Canada and |
|
produces news content that includes matters of gener- |
|
al interest, including coverage of matters relating to |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Copyright |
|
Sections 26-27 |
|
|
|
Page 20 |
|
the rights of Indigenous peoples, including the right of |
|
self-government and treaty rights. |
|
Revoked designation |
|
(3) Despite subsection (1), a news business must not be |
|
designated as eligible if it was previously designated and |
|
had its designation revoked under paragraph 59(1)(c). |
|
Ineligible news businesses |
|
(3.1) Despite subsection (1), a news business must not |
|
be designated as eligible if |
|
(a) the news business is the subject of sanctions under |
|
the United Nations Act, the Special Economic Mea- |
|
sures Act or the Justice for Victims of Corrupt For- |
|
eign Officials Act (Sergei Magnitsky Law), or is |
|
owned or controlled by an individual or entity that is |
|
the subject of such sanctions; or |
|
(b) the news business has its headquarters in a for- |
|
eign state, as defined in section 2 of the Special Eco- |
|
nomic Measures Act, that is the subject of measures |
|
under an Act referred to in paragraph (a). |
|
Revoked designation |
|
(3.2) If a news business described in paragraph (3.1)(a) |
|
or (b) was previously designated as eligible, the Commis- |
|
sion must, by order, revoke the order designating the |
|
business as eligible. |
|
Statutory Instruments Act |
|
(4) The Statutory Instruments Act does not apply in re- |
|
spect of an order made under subsection (1). |
|
Provincial public broadcasters |
|
28 The designation of a provincial public broadcaster as |
|
an eligible news business is subject to any other condi- |
|
tions specified in regulations made by the Governor in |
|
Council. |
|
Public list |
|
29 (1) The Commission must maintain a list of eligible |
|
news businesses and publish that list on its website. An |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Eligibility |
|
Sections 27-29 |
|
|
|
Page 21 |
|
eligible news business is only included on the list if it |
|
gives its consent. |
|
Statutory Instruments Act |
|
(2) The Statutory Instruments Act does not apply in re- |
|
spect of the list maintained under subsection (1). |
|
Identification of news outlets |
|
30 When initiating the bargaining process, an eligible |
|
news business or group of eligible news businesses must |
|
notify the operator of the digital news intermediary in |
|
question of the news outlets that are to be the subjects of |
|
the bargaining process. |
|
Application to Commission |
|
31 (1) If the operator is of the opinion that a news outlet |
|
identified under section 30 by an eligible news business |
|
or group of eligible news businesses should not be a sub- |
|
ject of the bargaining process, it may apply to the Com- |
|
mission for a determination of the issue. |
|
Determination |
|
(2) A news outlet is to be a subject of the bargaining pro- |
|
cess if the Commission is of the opinion that the outlet is |
|
operated exclusively for the purpose of producing news |
|
content — including local, regional and national news |
|
content — consisting primarily of original news content |
|
that is |
|
(a) produced primarily for the Canadian news market- |
|
place; |
|
(b) focused on matters of general interest and reports |
|
of current events, including coverage of democratic in- |
|
stitutions and processes; |
|
(c) not focused on a particular topic such as industry- |
|
specific news, sports, recreation, arts, lifestyle or en- |
|
tertainment; and |
|
(d) not intended to promote the interests, or report on |
|
the activities, of an organization, an association or its |
|
members. |
|
Special case — Indigenous news outlet |
|
(2.1) Despite subsection (2), an Indigenous news outlet |
|
is to be a subject of the bargaining process if it |
|
(a) operates in Canada; and |
|
(b) produces news content that includes matters of |
|
general interest, including coverage of matters relating |
|
to the rights of Indigenous peoples, including the right |
|
of self-government. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Eligibility |
|
Sections 29-31 |
|
|
|
Page 22 |
|
Summary dismissal |
|
(3) If the Commission is of the opinion that an applica- |
|
tion under subsection (1) is frivolous, vexatious or not |
|
made in good faith, it may dismiss the application sum- |
|
marily and the news outlet that is otherwise the subject |
|
of the application is a subject of the bargaining process. |
|
Agreements |
|
Agreement with group |
|
32 (1) If a group of eligible news businesses enters into |
|
an agreement with an operator as a result of bargaining |
|
or mediation sessions under the bargaining process, the |
|
group must file a copy of the agreement with the Com- |
|
mission within 15 days after the day on which it is en- |
|
tered into. |
|
For greater certainty |
|
(2) For greater certainty, nothing in this Act prevents the |
|
agreement from applying to eligible news businesses that |
|
join the group after the agreement is entered into if the |
|
agreement provides for it. |
|
Final Offer Arbitration |
|
Roster of qualified arbitrators |
|
33 (1) The Commission must publish qualifications for |
|
arbitrators on its website and must maintain a roster of |
|
arbitrators who meet those qualifications. |
|
Indigenous persons on roster |
|
(1.1) The Commission must ensure that the roster in- |
|
cludes Indigenous persons. |
|
Proposals |
|
(2) Parties that are engaging in bargaining or mediation |
|
sessions may propose candidates for the roster. |
|
Arbitration panel |
|
34 (1) A final offer arbitration must be conducted by a |
|
panel that is composed of three arbitrators who |
|
(a) are selected by the parties from the roster; or |
|
(b) are appointed by the Commission from the roster, |
|
if the parties do not select the arbitrators within a pe- |
|
riod that the Commission considers reasonable. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Eligibility |
|
Sections 31-34 |
|
|
|
Page 23 |
|
Appointment by Commission |
|
(2) The Commission must take the preferences of the |
|
parties into account if it appoints the arbitrators to the |
|
panel. |
|
Status |
|
(3) An arbitration panel is not a federal board, commis- |
|
sion or other tribunal for the purposes of the Federal |
|
Courts Act. |
|
Conflicts of interest |
|
35 (1) If the Commission is of the opinion that an arbi- |
|
trator selected by the parties has a conflict of interest, |
|
that arbitrator is ineligible to be a panel member and a |
|
replacement must be |
|
(a) selected by the parties from the roster; or |
|
(b) appointed by the Commission from the roster, if |
|
the parties do not select the replacement within a peri- |
|
od that the Commission considers reasonable. |
|
Appointment by Commission |
|
(2) The Commission must not appoint an arbitrator who |
|
has a conflict of interest. |
|
Commission assistance |
|
36 (1) The Commission may, at the request of an arbi- |
|
tration panel, provide administrative and technical assis- |
|
tance to the panel and may, on any terms that the Com- |
|
mission considers necessary, disclose to the panel any in- |
|
formation, including confidential information, in the |
|
Commission’s possession that, in the Commission’s opin- |
|
ion, is necessary for a balanced and informed decision- |
|
making process, on the condition that the Commission |
|
ensures that the arbitration panel or each individual arbi- |
|
trator that presides over the final offer arbitration does |
|
not further disclose any confidential information other |
|
than during the arbitration, including by imposing any |
|
further terms that the Commission considers necessary. |
|
Confidentiality |
|
(2) Each individual arbitrator must take all reasonably |
|
necessary measures to ensure that confidential informa- |
|
tion disclosed to them under subsection (1) is not dis- |
|
closed other than during the arbitration. |
|
Offence — confidentiality |
|
(3) Every individual who contravenes subsection (2) is |
|
guilty of an offence and is liable on summary conviction, |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Final Offer Arbitration |
|
Sections 34-36 |
|
|
|
Page 24 |
|
(a) for a first offence, to a fine of not more |
|
than $5,000; and |
|
(b) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not |
|
more than $10,000. |
|
Decision of arbitration panel |
|
37 The arbitration panel makes its decision by selecting |
|
the final offer made by one of the parties. |
|
Factors |
|
38 An arbitration panel must take the following factors |
|
into account in making its decision: |
|
(a) the value added, monetary and otherwise, to the |
|
news content in question by each party, as assessed in |
|
terms of their investments, expenditures and other ac- |
|
tions in relation to that content; |
|
(b) the benefits, monetary and otherwise, that each |
|
party receives from the content being made available |
|
by the digital news intermediary in question; and |
|
(c) the bargaining power imbalance between the news |
|
business and the operator of the digital news interme- |
|
diary in question. |
|
Dismissal of offers |
|
39 (1) An arbitration panel must dismiss any offer that, |
|
in its opinion, |
|
(a) allows a party to exercise undue influence over the |
|
amount of compensation to be paid or received; |
|
(b) is not in the public interest because the offer |
|
would be highly likely to result in serious detriment to |
|
the provision of news content to persons in Canada; or |
|
(c) is inconsistent with the purposes of enhancing |
|
fairness in the Canadian digital news marketplace and |
|
contributing to its sustainability. |
|
Effect of dismissal |
|
(2) If the arbitration panel dismisses, in accordance with |
|
subsection (1), the final offer made by one of the parties, |
|
it must accept the final offer made by the other party. |
|
Reasons and new offers |
|
(3) If the arbitration panel dismisses, in accordance with |
|
subsection (1), the final offer made by each of the parties, |
|
it must provide written reasons to the parties and give |
|
them an opportunity to make a new offer. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Final Offer Arbitration |
|
Sections 36-39 |
|
|
|
Page 25 |
|
Other submissions |
|
40 An arbitration panel may, in making its decision, |
|
seek oral or written submissions from the Commission |
|
and from the Commissioner of Competition appointed |
|
under subsection 7(1) of the Competition Act. |
|
Decision final |
|
41 An arbitration panel’s decision is final. |
|
Decision deemed to be agreement |
|
42 An arbitration panel’s decision is deemed, for the |
|
purposes of its enforceability, to be an agreement entered |
|
into by the parties. |
|
Reasons |
|
43 An arbitration panel must provide written reasons for |
|
its decision to the parties and the Commission. |
|
Costs |
|
44 The arbitration panel may apportion the costs related |
|
to final offer arbitration between the parties, if the par- |
|
ties cannot agree, within a period that the panel consid- |
|
ers reasonable, on how to share the costs. In doing so, the |
|
panel must take into account each party’s ability to pay, |
|
their conduct during the arbitration and any other factor |
|
that it considers appropriate. |
|
Civil Remedies |
|
Right of recovery |
|
45 For greater certainty, an eligible news business or |
|
group of eligible news businesses may, during the period |
|
specified in a covered agreement, collect payments due |
|
under it and, if they are not made, recover the payments |
|
in a court of competent jurisdiction. |
|
Compliance order |
|
46 For greater certainty, if a provision of a covered |
|
agreement is not complied with, a party to the agreement |
|
may, in addition to any other remedy available, apply to a |
|
court of competent jurisdiction for an order directing |
|
compliance with the provision. |
|
Competition Act |
|
Covered agreements |
|
47 Sections 45 and 90.1 of the Competition Act do not |
|
apply in respect of |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Bargaining Process |
|
Final Offer Arbitration |
|
Sections 40-47 |
|
|
|
Page 26 |
|
(a) any activity, including the making of payments or |
|
the exchange of information, that is carried out in ac- |
|
cordance with a covered agreement between an opera- |
|
tor and a group of eligible news businesses; |
|
(b) any provision of the covered agreement that is re- |
|
lated to that activity; or |
|
(c) any bargaining or mediation session or any final |
|
offer arbitration under the bargaining process set out |
|
in sections 18 to 44 to which an operator and a group |
|
of eligible news businesses are parties. |
|
Other agreements |
|
48 (1) Sections 45 and 90.1 of the Competition Act also |
|
do not apply in respect of |
|
(a) any bargaining activity between an operator and a |
|
group of eligible news businesses that is conducted |
|
with a view to entering into an agreement; |
|
(b) any activity, including the making of payments or |
|
the exchange of information, that is carried out in ac- |
|
cordance with an agreement; or |
|
(c) any provision of an agreement that is related to an |
|
activity referred to in paragraph (b). |
|
Definition of agreement |
|
(2) In this section, agreement means an agreement that |
|
(a) is not a covered agreement; |
|
(b) is entered into by an operator and a group of eligi- |
|
ble news businesses the members of which operate |
|
news outlets that produce news content primarily for |
|
the Canadian news marketplace; and |
|
(c) is in relation to the making available of that con- |
|
tent by a digital news intermediary operated by the |
|
operator. |
|
Code of Conduct |
|
Establishment of code |
|
49 (1) The Commission must, by regulation, establish a |
|
code of conduct respecting bargaining in relation to news |
|
content — including any bargaining and mediation ses- |
|
sions during the bargaining process set out in sections 18 |
|
to 44 — between |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Competition Act |
|
Sections 47-49 |
|
|
|
Page 27 |
|
(a) operators of digital news intermediaries that make |
|
available news content that is produced primarily for |
|
the Canadian news marketplace by news outlets; and |
|
(b) eligible news businesses or groups of eligible news |
|
businesses. |
|
Purpose of code |
|
(2) The purpose of the code is to support fairness and |
|
transparency in bargaining in relation to news content. |
|
Mandatory contents |
|
(3) The code of conduct must contain provisions |
|
(a) respecting the requirement to bargain in good |
|
faith that is set out in section 22; |
|
(b) requiring parties to bargain in good faith even if |
|
they are bargaining outside of the bargaining process |
|
set out in sections 18 to 44; |
|
(c) respecting the requirement to bargain in good |
|
faith that is referred to in paragraph (b); and |
|
(d) respecting the information that the parties require |
|
to make informed business decisions. |
|
Discretionary contents |
|
(4) The code of conduct may, among other things, |
|
(a) prohibit the use of specified provisions in agree- |
|
ments, including agreements that are entered into as a |
|
result of bargaining or mediation sessions under the |
|
bargaining process set out in sections 18 to 44; and |
|
(b) set out examples of unfair behaviour that could |
|
arise during bargaining. |
|
Compliance order |
|
50 (1) If an operator, eligible news business or group of |
|
eligible news businesses fails to comply with the code of |
|
conduct, the Commission may, by order, require the op- |
|
erator, business or group to take any measure the Com- |
|
mission considers necessary to remedy the non- |
|
compliance. |
|
Statutory Instruments Act |
|
(2) The Statutory Instruments Act does not apply in re- |
|
spect of an order made under subsection (1). |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Code of Conduct |
|
Sections 49-50 |
|
|
|
Page 28 |
|
Discrimination, Preference and |
|
Disadvantage |
|
Prohibition |
|
51 In the course of making available news content that is |
|
produced primarily for the Canadian news marketplace |
|
by news outlets operated by eligible news businesses, the |
|
operator of a digital news intermediary must not act in |
|
any way that |
|
(a) unjustly discriminates against an eligible news |
|
business; |
|
(b) gives undue or unreasonable preference to any in- |
|
dividual or entity, including itself; or |
|
(c) subjects an eligible news business to an undue or |
|
unreasonable disadvantage. |
|
Complaint |
|
52 (1) An eligible news business or group of eligible |
|
news businesses may make a complaint to the Commis- |
|
sion if the business or group has reasonable grounds to |
|
believe that an operator has, in relation to the business or |
|
a member of the group, contravened section 51. |
|
Factors to take into account |
|
(2) In determining whether an operator has contravened |
|
section 51, the Commission may take into account any |
|
factor it considers appropriate, but it must take into ac- |
|
count whether the conduct in question is |
|
(a) in the normal course of business for the operator; |
|
(b) retaliatory in nature; or |
|
(c) consistent with the purposes of this Act. |
|
Dismissal of complaint |
|
(3) If the Commission is of the opinion that a complaint |
|
under subsection (1) is frivolous, vexatious or not made |
|
in good faith, it may dismiss the complaint summarily. |
|
Provision of Information |
|
Duty to provide information |
|
53 An operator or news business must, at the request of |
|
the Commission and within the time and in the manner |
|
that it specifies, provide the Commission with any infor- |
|
mation that it requires for the purpose of exercising its |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Discrimination, Preference and Disadvantage |
|
Sections 51-53 |
|
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|
Page 29 |
|
powers or performing its duties and functions under this |
|
Act. |
|
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |
|
53.1 If the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is party |
|
to an agreement with an operator in relation to the mak- |
|
ing available of news content by a digital news intermedi- |
|
ary, the Corporation must provide the Commission, with- |
|
in the time and in the manner that it specifies, with an |
|
annual report that includes the following information: |
|
(a) the amount of compensation received by the Cor- |
|
poration under agreements it has entered into with |
|
operators in relation to the making available of news |
|
content by digital news intermediaries; |
|
(b) information relating to the Corporation’s use of |
|
that compensation; and |
|
(c) information relating to the contribution of those |
|
agreements to the sustainability of the Canadian digi- |
|
tal news marketplace, including any such information |
|
that the Commission specifies must be included in the |
|
report. |
|
Minister and Chief Statistician |
|
54 (1) The Commission must, on request, provide the |
|
Minister or the Chief Statistician of Canada with any in- |
|
formation submitted to the Commission under this Act. |
|
Restriction |
|
(2) Information that is provided to the Minister in accor- |
|
dance with subsection (1) is only to be used by the Minis- |
|
ter for the purpose of permitting the Minister and the |
|
Governor in Council to exercise their powers and per- |
|
form their duties and functions under this Act. |
|
Confidential information |
|
55 (1) For the purposes of this section, an individual or |
|
entity that submits any of the following information to |
|
the Commission may designate it as confidential: |
|
(a) information that is a trade secret; |
|
(b) financial, commercial, scientific or technical infor- |
|
mation that is confidential and that is treated consis- |
|
tently in a confidential manner by the individual or |
|
entity that submitted it; or |
|
(c) information the disclosure of which could reason- |
|
ably be expected to |
|
(i) result in material financial loss or gain to any in- |
|
dividual or entity, |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Provision of Information |
|
Sections 53-55 |
|
|
|
Page 30 |
|
(ii) prejudice the competitive position of any indi- |
|
vidual or entity, or |
|
(iii) affect contractual or other negotiations of any |
|
individual or entity. |
|
Prohibition — disclosure |
|
(2) Subject to subsections (4), (5), (7) and (8), if an indi- |
|
vidual or entity designates information as confidential |
|
and the designation is not withdrawn by them, it is pro- |
|
hibited for an individual described in subsection (3) to |
|
knowingly disclose the information, or knowingly allow it |
|
to be disclosed, to any individual or entity in any manner |
|
that is calculated or likely to make it available for the use |
|
of any individual or entity that may benefit from the in- |
|
formation or use it to the detriment of any other individ- |
|
ual or entity to whose business or affairs the information |
|
relates. |
|
Application to individuals |
|
(3) Subsection (2) applies to any individual referred to in |
|
any of the following paragraphs who comes into posses- |
|
sion of designated information while holding the office or |
|
employment described in that paragraph, whether or not |
|
the individual has ceased to hold that office or be so em- |
|
ployed: |
|
(a) a member of, or individual employed by, the Com- |
|
mission; |
|
(b) in respect of information disclosed under para- |
|
graph (4)(b) or (5)(b), the Commissioner of Competi- |
|
tion appointed under subsection 7(1) of the Competi- |
|
tion Act or an individual whose duties involve the car- |
|
rying out of that Act and who is referred to in section |
|
25 of that Act; and |
|
(c) in respect of information provided under subsec- |
|
tion 54(1), the Minister, the Chief Statistician of |
|
Canada or an agent of or an individual employed in |
|
the federal public administration. |
|
Disclosure of information submitted in proceedings |
|
(4) If designated information is submitted in the course |
|
of proceedings before the Commission, the Commission |
|
may |
|
(a) disclose it or require its disclosure if it determines, |
|
after considering any representations from interested |
|
individuals and entities, that the disclosure is in the |
|
public interest; and |
|
(b) disclose it or require its disclosure to the Commis- |
|
sioner of Competition on the Commissioner’s request |
|
if the Commission determines that the information is |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Provision of Information |
|
Section |
|
55 |
|
|
|
Page 31 |
|
relevant to competition issues being considered in the |
|
proceedings. |
|
Disclosure of other information |
|
(5) If designated information is submitted to the Com- |
|
mission otherwise than in the course of proceedings be- |
|
fore it, the Commission may |
|
(a) disclose it or require its disclosure if, after consid- |
|
ering any representations from interested individuals |
|
and entities, it determines that the information is rele- |
|
vant to the determination of a matter before it and de- |
|
termines that the disclosure is in the public interest; |
|
and |
|
(b) disclose it or require its disclosure to the Commis- |
|
sioner of Competition on the Commissioner’s request |
|
if it determines that the information is relevant to |
|
competition issues being raised in the matter before it. |
|
Use of information disclosed to Commissioner of |
|
Competition |
|
(6) It is prohibited for the Commissioner of Competition |
|
and any individual whose duties involve the administra- |
|
tion and enforcement of the Competition Act and who is |
|
referred to in section 25 of that Act to use information |
|
that is disclosed |
|
(a) under paragraph (4)(b) other than to facilitate the |
|
Commissioner’s participation in proceedings referred |
|
to in subsection (4); or |
|
(b) under paragraph (5)(b) other than to facilitate the |
|
Commissioner’s participation in a matter referred to |
|
in subsection (5). |
|
Disclosure |
|
(7) The Commission may disclose designated informa- |
|
tion obtained by it if requested to do so under sub- |
|
section 54(1). |
|
Information inadmissible |
|
(8) Designated information that is not disclosed or re- |
|
quired to be disclosed under this section is not admissi- |
|
ble in evidence in any judicial proceedings except pro- |
|
ceedings for failure to submit information required to be |
|
submitted under this Act or for forgery, perjury or false |
|
declaration in relation to the submission of the informa- |
|
tion. |
|
Offence — disclosure |
|
56 (1) Every individual who contravenes subsection |
|
55(2) is guilty of an offence and is liable on summary con- |
|
viction, |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
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Chapter 23: Online News Act |
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Provision of Information |
|
Sections 55-56 |
|
|
|
Page 32 |
|
(a) for a first offence, to a fine of not more |
|
than $5,000; and |
|
(b) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not |
|
more than $10,000. |
|
Offence — use |
|
(2) Every individual who contravenes subsection 55(6) is |
|
guilty of an offence and is liable on summary conviction, |
|
(a) for a first offence, to a fine of not more |
|
than $5,000; and |
|
(b) for a second or subsequent offence, to a fine of not |
|
more than $10,000. |
|
Defence |
|
(3) An individual is not to be found guilty of an offence |
|
under subsection (2) if they establish that they exercised |
|
due diligence to prevent the commission of the offence. |
|
Administration and |
|
Enforcement |
|
Production Orders |
|
Designated persons |
|
57 The Commission may designate persons or classes of |
|
persons for the purposes of section 58. |
|
Power to order production |
|
58 (1) A person designated under section 57 may, for a |
|
purpose related to verifying compliance or preventing |
|
non-compliance with this Act, by order require an opera- |
|
tor or an eligible news business to produce, within the |
|
time and in the manner specified in the order, for exami- |
|
nation or copying, any record, report, electronic data or |
|
other document that the designated person has reason- |
|
able grounds to believe contains information that is rele- |
|
vant to that purpose. |
|
Copies and data |
|
(2) The designated person may |
|
(a) make copies of or take extracts from the record, |
|
report, electronic data or other document produced |
|
under subsection (1); |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Provision of Information |
|
Sections 56-58 |
|
|
|
Page 33 |
|
(b) reproduce any document from the data, or cause it |
|
to be reproduced, in the form of a printout or other |
|
output; and |
|
(c) prepare a document, or cause one to be prepared, |
|
based on the data. |
|
Assistance |
|
(3) The operator or eligible news business and every di- |
|
rector, officer, employee and agent or mandatary of the |
|
operator or business must |
|
(a) give all assistance that is reasonably required to |
|
enable the designated person to exercise their powers |
|
and perform their duties and functions under this sec- |
|
tion, including by providing explanations respecting |
|
its organization, information technology systems, data |
|
handling and business activities; and |
|
(b) provide any documents or information, and access |
|
to any data, that are reasonably required for that pur- |
|
pose. |
|
Confidential information |
|
(4) The rules in section 55 respecting the designation and |
|
disclosure of information apply in respect of any infor- |
|
mation contained in a record, report, electronic data or |
|
other document that is provided to the designated person |
|
as if that person were a member of the Commission exer- |
|
cising the powers of the Commission. |
|
Statutory Instruments Act |
|
(5) The Statutory Instruments Act does not apply in re- |
|
spect of an order made under subsection (1). |
|
News Businesses |
|
Contravention — eligible news business |
|
59 (1) If an eligible news business contravenes a provi- |
|
sion of this Act, a provision of the regulations or an order |
|
made under this Act, the Commission may, by order, |
|
(a) impose any conditions on the business that are de- |
|
signed to further its compliance with this Act, includ- |
|
ing conditions respecting its participation in the bar- |
|
gaining process set out in sections 18 to 44; |
|
(b) suspend, for the period the Commission specifies, |
|
the order designating the business as eligible; or |
|
(c) revoke the order designating the business as eligi- |
|
ble. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
Production Orders |
|
Sections 58-59 |
|
|
|
Page 34 |
|
Contravention — group of eligible news businesses |
|
(2) If a group of eligible news businesses contravenes a |
|
provision of this Act, a provision of the regulations or an |
|
order made under this Act, the Commission may, by or- |
|
der, impose any conditions designed to further the com- |
|
pliance of the group and its members with this Act, in- |
|
cluding restrictions on its participation in the bargaining |
|
process set out in sections 18 to 44. |
|
Contravention — directors, officers, etc. |
|
(3) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the con- |
|
travention of a provision of this Act, a provision of the |
|
regulations or an order made under this Act by an eligi- |
|
ble news business or group of eligible news businesses |
|
includes such a contravention by its director, officer, em- |
|
ployee or agent or mandatary. |
|
Statutory Instruments Act |
|
(4) The Statutory Instruments Act does not apply to an |
|
order made under subsection (1) or (2). |
|
Administrative Monetary Penalties |
|
Violation — operators, directors, etc. |
|
60 (1) Subject to any regulations made under paragraph |
|
76(a), an operator or a director, officer, employee or |
|
agent or mandatary of an operator commits a violation if |
|
they |
|
(a) contravene a provision of this Act, a provision of |
|
the regulations, an order made under this Act or an |
|
undertaking that they entered into under section 65; |
|
or |
|
(b) make a misrepresentation of a material fact or an |
|
intentional omission to state a material fact to a per- |
|
son designated under section 57 or paragraph 63(a). |
|
Violation — other individuals and entities |
|
(2) An individual or entity commits a violation if they |
|
contravene subsection 7(2). |
|
Continued violation |
|
(3) A violation that is continued on more than one day |
|
constitutes a separate violation in respect of each day on |
|
which it is continued. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
News Businesses |
|
Sections 59-60 |
|
|
|
Page 35 |
|
Maximum amount of penalty |
|
61 (1) Subject to any regulations made under paragraph |
|
76(b), an individual or entity that commits a violation is |
|
liable to an administrative monetary penalty |
|
(a) in the case of an individual, of not more |
|
than $25,000 for a first violation and of not more |
|
than $50,000 for each subsequent violation; or |
|
(b) in the case of an entity, of not more than $10 mil- |
|
lion for a first violation and of not more than $15 mil- |
|
lion for each subsequent violation. |
|
Criteria for penalty |
|
(2) The amount of the penalty is to be determined by |
|
taking into account |
|
(a) the nature and scope of the violation; |
|
(b) the history of compliance with this Act, the regula- |
|
tions and orders made under this Act by the individual |
|
or entity that committed the violation; |
|
(c) the history of the individual or entity with respect |
|
to any previous undertaking entered into under sec- |
|
tion 65; |
|
(d) any benefit that the individual or entity obtained |
|
from the commission of the violation; |
|
(e) the ability of the individual or entity to pay the |
|
penalty; |
|
(f) any factors established by regulations made under |
|
paragraph 76(c); |
|
(g) the purpose of the penalty; and |
|
(h) any other relevant factor. |
|
Purpose of penalty |
|
(3) The purpose of the penalty is to promote compliance |
|
with this Act and not to punish. |
|
Procedures |
|
62 (1) Despite subsection 64(1), the Commission may |
|
impose a penalty in a decision made in the course of a |
|
proceeding before it under this Act, including a proceed- |
|
ing in respect of a complaint made under section 52, in |
|
which it finds that a violation referred to in section 60 has |
|
been committed by an individual or entity other than the |
|
individual or entity that entered into an undertaking un- |
|
der section 65 in connection with the same act or omis- |
|
sion giving rise to the violation. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
Administrative Monetary Penalties |
|
Sections 61-62 |
|
|
|
Page 36 |
|
For greater certainty |
|
(2) For greater certainty, the Commission is not to im- |
|
pose a penalty under subsection (1) on an individual or |
|
entity that has not been given the opportunity to be |
|
heard. |
|
Designation |
|
63 The Commission may |
|
(a) designate persons or classes of persons who are |
|
authorized to issue notices of violation or to accept an |
|
undertaking under section 65; and |
|
(b) establish, in respect of each violation, a short-form |
|
description to be used in notices of violation. |
|
Notice of violation |
|
64 (1) A person who is authorized to issue notices of vi- |
|
olation may, if they believe on reasonable grounds that |
|
an individual or entity has committed a violation, other |
|
than a violation in respect of a contravention of section |
|
51, issue a notice of violation and cause it to be served on |
|
that individual or entity. |
|
Contents |
|
(2) The notice of violation must set out |
|
(a) the name of the individual or entity that is believed |
|
to have committed the violation; |
|
(b) the act or omission giving rise to the violation, as |
|
well as a reference to the provision that is at issue; |
|
(c) the penalty that the individual or entity is liable to |
|
pay, as well as the time and manner in which the indi- |
|
vidual or entity may pay the penalty; |
|
(d) a statement informing the individual or entity that |
|
they may pay the penalty or make representations to |
|
the Commission with respect to the violation and the |
|
penalty and informing them of the time and manner |
|
for making representations; and |
|
(e) a statement informing the individual or entity that, |
|
if they do not pay the penalty or make representations |
|
in accordance with the notice, they will be deemed to |
|
have committed the violation and the penalty may be |
|
imposed. |
|
Undertaking |
|
65 (1) An individual or entity may enter into an under- |
|
taking at any time. The undertaking is valid on its |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
Administrative Monetary Penalties |
|
Sections 62-65 |
|
|
|
Page 37 |
|
acceptance by the Commission or the person designated |
|
to accept an undertaking. |
|
Requirements |
|
(2) An undertaking |
|
(a) must set out every act or omission that is covered |
|
by the undertaking; |
|
(b) must set out every provision that is at issue; |
|
(c) may contain any conditions that the Commission |
|
or the person designated to accept the undertaking |
|
considers appropriate; and |
|
(d) may include a requirement to pay a specified |
|
amount. |
|
No service of notice of violation |
|
(3) If an individual or entity enters into an undertaking, |
|
a notice of violation must not be served on them in con- |
|
nection with any act or omission referred to in the under- |
|
taking. |
|
Undertaking after service of notice of violation |
|
(4) If an individual or entity enters into an undertaking |
|
after a notice of violation is served on them, the proceed- |
|
ing that is commenced by the notice is ended in respect |
|
of that individual or entity in connection with any act or |
|
omission referred to in the undertaking. |
|
Payment of penalty |
|
66 (1) If an individual or entity that is served with a no- |
|
tice of violation pays the penalty set out in the notice, |
|
they are deemed to have committed the violation and the |
|
proceedings in respect of it are ended. |
|
Representations to Commission and decision |
|
(2) If an individual or entity that is served with a notice |
|
of violation makes representations in accordance with |
|
the notice, the Commission must decide, on a balance of |
|
probabilities, after considering any other representations |
|
that it considers appropriate, whether the individual or |
|
entity committed the violation. If the Commission de- |
|
cides that the individual or entity committed the viola- |
|
tion, it may |
|
(a) impose the penalty set out in the notice, a lesser |
|
penalty or no penalty; and |
|
(b) suspend payment of the penalty subject to any |
|
conditions that the Commission considers necessary |
|
to ensure compliance with this Act. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
Administrative Monetary Penalties |
|
Sections 65-66 |
|
|
|
Page 38 |
|
Penalty |
|
(3) If an individual or entity that is served with a notice |
|
of violation neither pays the penalty nor makes represen- |
|
tations in accordance with the notice, the individual or |
|
entity is deemed to have committed the violation and the |
|
Commission may impose the penalty. |
|
Copy of decision |
|
(4) The Commission must cause a copy of any decision |
|
made under subsection (2) or (3) to be issued and served |
|
on the individual or entity. |
|
Evidence |
|
67 In a proceeding in respect of a violation, a notice pur- |
|
porting to be served under subsection 64(1) or a copy of a |
|
decision purporting to be served under subsection 66(4) |
|
is admissible in evidence without proof of the signature |
|
or official character of the person appearing to have |
|
signed it. |
|
Burden of proof |
|
68 In a proceeding in respect of a violation in respect of |
|
a contravention of section 51, the burden of establishing |
|
that any discrimination is not unjust or that any prefer- |
|
ence or disadvantage is not undue or unreasonable is on |
|
the individual or entity that is believed to have contra- |
|
vened that section. |
|
Defence |
|
69 (1) An individual or entity is not to be found liable |
|
for a violation, other than a violation in respect of a con- |
|
travention of section 22, if they establish that they exer- |
|
cised due diligence to prevent its commission. |
|
Common law principles |
|
(2) Every rule and principle of the common law that |
|
makes any circumstance a justification or excuse in rela- |
|
tion to a charge for an offence applies in respect of a vio- |
|
lation to the extent that it is not inconsistent with this |
|
Act. |
|
Directors, officers, etc. |
|
70 A director, officer or agent or mandatary of an entity |
|
that commits a violation is liable for the violation if they |
|
directed, authorized, assented to, acquiesced in or partic- |
|
ipated in the commission of the violation, whether or not |
|
the entity is proceeded against. |
|
Vicarious liability |
|
71 An individual or entity is liable for a violation that is |
|
committed by their employee acting within the scope of |
|
their employment or their agent or mandatary acting |
|
within the scope of their authority, whether or not the |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
Administrative Monetary Penalties |
|
Sections 66-71 |
|
|
|
Page 39 |
|
employee or agent or mandatary is identified or proceed- |
|
ed against. |
|
Limitation or prescription period |
|
72 (1) Proceedings in respect of a violation may be insti- |
|
tuted within, but not after, three years after the day on |
|
which the subject matter of the proceedings became |
|
known to the Commission. |
|
Certificate |
|
(2) A document that appears to have been issued by the |
|
secretary to the Commission, certifying the day on which |
|
the subject matter of any proceedings became known to |
|
the Commission, is admissible in evidence without proof |
|
of the signature or official character of the person who |
|
appears to have signed the document and is, in the ab- |
|
sence of evidence to the contrary, proof of the matter as- |
|
serted in it. |
|
Information made public |
|
73 The Commission must make public |
|
(a) the name of an individual or entity that enters into |
|
an undertaking under section 65, the nature of the un- |
|
dertaking, including the acts or omissions and provi- |
|
sions at issue, the conditions included in the under- |
|
taking and the amount payable under it, if any; and |
|
(b) the name of an individual or entity that is deemed, |
|
or is found by the Commission, to have committed a |
|
violation, the acts or omissions and provisions at issue |
|
and the amount of the penalty imposed, if any. |
|
Receiver General |
|
74 A penalty paid or recovered in relation to a violation |
|
is payable to the Receiver General. |
|
Debt due to Her Majesty |
|
75 (1) The following amounts are debts due to Her |
|
Majesty in right of Canada that may be recovered in any |
|
court of competent jurisdiction: |
|
(a) the amount of the penalty imposed by the Com- |
|
mission in a decision made in the course of a proceed- |
|
ing before it under this Act in which it finds that a vio- |
|
lation referred to in section 60 has been committed; |
|
(b) the amount payable under an undertaking entered |
|
into under section 65, beginning on the day specified |
|
in the undertaking or, if no day is specified, beginning |
|
on the day on which the undertaking is accepted; |
|
(c) the amount of the penalty set out in a notice of vio- |
|
lation, beginning on the day on which it is required to |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
Administrative Monetary Penalties |
|
Sections 71-75 |
|
|
|
Page 40 |
|
be paid in accordance with the notice, unless repre- |
|
sentations are made in accordance with the notice; |
|
(d) if representations are made, either the amount of |
|
the penalty that is imposed by the Commission, begin- |
|
ning on the day specified by the Commission or, if no |
|
day is specified, beginning on the day on which the de- |
|
cision is made; and |
|
(e) the amount of any reasonable expenses incurred in |
|
attempting to recover an amount referred to in any of |
|
paragraphs (a) to (d). |
|
Limitation or prescription period |
|
(2) Proceedings to recover a debt may be instituted with- |
|
in, but not after, three years after the day on which the |
|
debt becomes payable. |
|
Certificate of default |
|
(3) The Commission may issue a certificate for the un- |
|
paid amount of any debt referred to in subsection (1). |
|
Effect of registration |
|
(4) Registration of a certificate in any court of competent |
|
jurisdiction has the same effect as a judgment of that |
|
court for a debt of the amount set out in the certificate |
|
and all related registration costs. |
|
Regulations |
|
76 The Governor in Council may make regulations |
|
(a) providing for exceptions to paragraph 60(1)(a) |
|
or (b); |
|
(b) increasing the penalty amounts set out in subsec- |
|
tion 61(1); |
|
(c) for the purpose of paragraph 61(2)(f), establishing |
|
other factors to be considered in determining the |
|
amount of the penalty; |
|
(d) respecting undertakings referred to in section 65; |
|
(e) respecting the service of documents required or |
|
authorized to be served under sections 60 to 75, in- |
|
cluding the manner and proof of service and the cir- |
|
cumstances under which documents are to be consid- |
|
ered to be served; and |
|
(f) generally, for carrying out the purposes and provi- |
|
sions of sections 60 to 75. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
Administrative Monetary Penalties |
|
Sections 75-76 |
|
|
|
Page 41 |
|
Other Provisions |
|
Judicial powers |
|
77 In a proceeding under this Act, the Commission has |
|
the powers of a superior court with respect to the atten- |
|
dance and examination of witnesses and the production |
|
and examination of documents or things. |
|
Sections 126 and 127 of Criminal Code |
|
78 Sections 126 and 127 of the Criminal Code do not ap- |
|
ply in respect of any contravention of a provision of this |
|
Act, a provision of the regulations or an order made un- |
|
der this Act. |
|
Financial Provisions |
|
Fees for services |
|
79 (1) The Commission may make regulations respect- |
|
ing fees to be paid for the provision of services — includ- |
|
ing dealing with a complaint or providing regulatory pro- |
|
cesses — under this Act, including regulations |
|
(a) fixing those fees or setting out the manner of cal- |
|
culating them; |
|
(b) establishing classes of operators and of news busi- |
|
nesses and groups of news businesses for the purposes |
|
of paragraph (a); |
|
(c) respecting the payment of those fees, including the |
|
time and manner of payment; and |
|
(d) respecting the interest payable in respect of over- |
|
due fees. |
|
Commission assistance |
|
(2) For greater certainty, subsection (1) permits the mak- |
|
ing of regulations respecting the recovery of the Commis- |
|
sion’s costs for providing assistance to an arbitration |
|
panel under section 36. |
|
Amount not to exceed cost |
|
(3) Fees that are payable under regulations made under |
|
subsection (1) must not in the aggregate exceed the costs |
|
that the Commission determines to be attributable to |
|
providing the service. |
|
Criteria |
|
(4) Regulations made under subsection (1) may provide |
|
for fees to be calculated by reference to any criteria that |
|
the Commission considers appropriate, including |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Administration and Enforcement |
|
Other Provisions |
|
Sections 77-79 |
|
|
|
Page 42 |
|
(a) the revenues of the operator, the news business or |
|
the group of news businesses; or |
|
(b) the market served by the operator’s digital news |
|
intermediary or by the news outlets operated by the |
|
news business or by the members of the group of news |
|
businesses. |
|
Costs apportioned by Commission |
|
80 (1) The Commission may, by order, apportion the |
|
costs related to the bargaining process, other than those |
|
related to final offer arbitration, including fees payable |
|
under regulations made under subsection 79(1), between |
|
the parties, if the parties cannot agree, within a period |
|
that the Commission considers reasonable, on how to |
|
share the costs. |
|
Factors |
|
(2) In making an order, the Commission must take into |
|
account each party’s ability to pay, their conduct during |
|
bargaining and mediation sessions and any other factor |
|
that it considers appropriate. |
|
Statutory Instruments Act |
|
(3) For greater certainty, the Statutory Instruments Act |
|
does not apply in respect of an order made under subsec- |
|
tion (1). |
|
Cost recovery |
|
81 (1) With the approval of the Treasury Board, the |
|
Commission may make regulations respecting the |
|
charges payable by operators in respect of the recovery, |
|
in whole or in part, of costs that are incurred in relation |
|
to the administration of this Act, including regulations |
|
(a) setting out the manner of calculating those |
|
charges; |
|
(b) providing for the establishment of classes of oper- |
|
ators for the purposes of paragraph (a); |
|
(c) providing for the payment of any charge payable, |
|
including the time and manner of payment; and |
|
(d) respecting the interest payable in respect of any |
|
overdue charge. |
|
Amount not to exceed cost |
|
(2) Charges payable under regulations made under sub- |
|
section (1) must not exceed the costs that the Commis- |
|
sion determines to be attributable to exercising its pow- |
|
ers and carrying out its duties and functions under this |
|
Act and that are not recovered under regulations made |
|
under subsection 79(1). |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Financial Provisions |
|
Sections 79-81 |
|
|
|
Page 43 |
|
Criteria |
|
(3) Regulations made under subsection (1) may provide |
|
for charges to be calculated by reference to any criteria |
|
that the Commission considers appropriate, including |
|
(a) the revenues of the operator; or |
|
(b) the market served by the operator’s digital news |
|
intermediary. |
|
Debt due to Her Majesty |
|
82 (1) Fees and charges payable under regulations made |
|
under subsections 79(1) and 81(1), and any interest on |
|
them, constitute a debt due to Her Majesty in right of |
|
Canada and may be recovered as such in any court of |
|
competent jurisdiction. |
|
Deduction, set-off and compensation |
|
(2) Debts due to Her Majesty in right of Canada under |
|
regulations made under subsections 79(1) and 81(1) may |
|
be recovered at any time by way of deduction from, set- |
|
off against or compensation against any sum of money |
|
that may be due or payable by Her Majesty in right of |
|
Canada to the individual or entity responsible for the |
|
debt. |
|
Spending |
|
83 Subject to any conditions imposed by the Treasury |
|
Board, the Commission may spend revenues that are re- |
|
ceived under regulations made under subsections 79(1) |
|
and 81(1) for the purposes of exercising its powers and |
|
carrying out its duties and functions under this Act. If the |
|
Commission spends the revenues, it must do so in the fis- |
|
cal year in which they are received or, unless an appro- |
|
priation Act provides otherwise, in the next fiscal year. |
|
Regulations |
|
Regulations — Governor in Council |
|
84 The Governor in Council may make regulations |
|
(a) respecting the factors set out in section 6; |
|
(b) respecting the time at which or the period within |
|
which an operator must notify the Commission under |
|
subsection 7(1); |
|
(c) respecting how the Commission is to interpret |
|
subparagraphs 11(1)(a)(i) to (viii); |
|
(d) setting out conditions for the purposes of para- |
|
graph 11(1)(b); and |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Financial Provisions |
|
Sections 81-84 |
|
|
|
Page 44 |
|
(e) setting out conditions in respect of a provincial |
|
public broadcaster for the purposes of section 28, if |
|
the provincial minister responsible for that broadcast- |
|
er has made a request to the Minister. |
|
Regulations — Commission |
|
85 The Commission may make regulations |
|
(a) respecting requests for orders referred to in sub- |
|
section 11(1); |
|
(b) respecting the bargaining process set out in sec- |
|
tions 18 to 44; |
|
(c) respecting requests for designations referred to in |
|
subsection 27(1); |
|
(d) establishing the code of conduct referred to in sec- |
|
tion 49; |
|
(e) respecting complaints referred to in section 52; |
|
(f) respecting the manner in which groups of eligible |
|
news businesses are to be structured and the manner |
|
in which they are to exercise their rights or privileges |
|
and carry out their obligations under this Act; |
|
(g) respecting the provision of information by groups |
|
of eligible news businesses to the Commission respect- |
|
ing their structure; |
|
(h) respecting the exercise by any person appointed |
|
under section 8 of the Canadian Radio-television and |
|
Telecommunications Commission Act of any of the |
|
powers — other than the power to make regulations — |
|
or the carrying out of any of the duties or functions, of |
|
the Commission under this Act; and |
|
(i) respecting the Commission’s practices and proce- |
|
dures in relation to this Act. |
|
Independent Review |
|
Annual report — independent auditor |
|
86 (1) The Commission must cause an independent au- |
|
ditor to prepare an annual auditor’s report in respect of |
|
the impact of this Act on the Canadian digital news mar- |
|
ketplace. |
|
Contents |
|
(2) The report must set out an analysis of the impact of |
|
the agreements entered into under this Act on the Cana- |
|
dian digital news marketplace and include the following: |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Regulations |
|
Sections 84-86 |
|
|
|
Page 45 |
|
(a) information relating to the total commercial value |
|
of the agreements entered into under this Act; |
|
(b) information relating to the distribution of the |
|
commercial value of those agreements among eligible |
|
news businesses, including relative to the expendi- |
|
tures of those businesses on their newsrooms; |
|
(c) information relating to the effect of the agree- |
|
ments on those expenditures; |
|
(c.01) information relating to the impact of this Act |
|
on news outlets that produce news content primarily |
|
for diverse populations, including local and regional |
|
markets in every province and territory, anglophone |
|
and francophone communities and Black and other |
|
racialized communities; |
|
(c.02) information relating to the total number of |
|
those agreements that involve Indigenous news out- |
|
lets and to the portion of the commercial value of |
|
those agreements that benefits these news outlets; |
|
(c.03) information relating to the total number of |
|
those agreements that involve official language minor- |
|
ity community news outlets and to the portion of the |
|
commercial value of those agreements that benefits |
|
these news outlets; |
|
(c.1) if the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation has |
|
provided an annual report under section 53.1 in the 12 |
|
months preceding the preparation of the auditor’s re- |
|
port, information related to that annual report; and |
|
(d) any other element that, in the opinion of the audi- |
|
tor, supports the transparency of the impact of this Act |
|
on the Canadian digital news marketplace. |
|
Confidential information |
|
(3) The report must not contain any information that is |
|
likely to reveal information designated as confidential |
|
under subsection 55(1). |
|
Publication of report |
|
(4) The Commission must publish the report on its web- |
|
site within 30 days after the day on which it receives it. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Independent Review |
|
Section |
|
86 |
|
|
|
Page 46 |
|
Review of Act |
|
Review |
|
87 Before the fifth anniversary of the day on which this |
|
section comes into force, the Minister must cause a re- |
|
view of this Act and its operation to be conducted and |
|
cause a report on the review to be laid before each House |
|
of Parliament. |
|
Related Amendments |
|
R.S., c. A-1 |
|
Access to Information Act |
|
88 Schedule II to the Access to Information Act |
|
is amended by adding, in alphabetical order, a |
|
reference to |
|
Online News Act |
|
Loi sur les nouvelles en ligne |
|
and a corresponding reference to “subsections |
|
55(2) and 58(4)”. |
|
R.S., c. C-22 |
|
Canadian Radio-television and |
|
Telecommunications Commission Act |
|
89 Section 12 of the Canadian Radio-television |
|
and Telecommunications Commission Act is |
|
amended by adding the following after subsec- |
|
tion (1): |
|
Digital news |
|
(1.1) The Commission exercises the powers and per- |
|
forms the duties and functions conferred on it under the |
|
Online News Act. |
|
90 Section 13 of the Act is amended by adding the |
|
following after subsection (1): |
|
Online News Act |
|
(1.1) The report must include the contents of the annual |
|
auditor’s report prepared under section 86 of the Online |
|
News Act. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Review of Act |
|
Sections 87-90 |
|
|
|
Page 47 |
|
1991, c. 11 |
|
Broadcasting Act |
|
91 Section 4 of the Broadcasting Act is amended |
|
by adding the following after subsection (4): |
|
Operators of digital news intermediaries |
|
(5) For greater certainty, this Act does not apply to the |
|
operator of a digital news intermediary in respect of |
|
which the Online News Act applies when the operator |
|
acts solely in that capacity. In this subsection, digital |
|
news intermediary and operator have the same mean- |
|
ings as in subsection 2(1) of that Act. |
|
1993, c. 38 |
|
Telecommunications Act |
|
92 The Telecommunications Act is amended by |
|
adding the following after section 4: |
|
Digital news intermediaries excluded |
|
4.1 (1) This Act does not apply in respect of the making |
|
available of news content on or by a digital news interme- |
|
diary in respect of which the Online News Act applies. |
|
Definitions |
|
(2) In this section, digital news intermediary and |
|
news content have the same meanings as in subsection |
|
2(1) of the Online News Act. |
|
Interpretation |
|
(3) For the purposes of this section, news content is |
|
made available if |
|
(a) the news content, or any portion of it, is repro- |
|
duced; or |
|
(b) access to the news content, or any portion of it, is |
|
facilitated by any means, including an index, aggrega- |
|
tion or ranking of news content. |
|
Coming into Force |
|
Order in council |
|
93 (1) Section 6 comes into force on a day to be |
|
fixed by order of the Governor in Council, but |
|
that day must not be before the day on which the |
|
first regulations made under paragraph 84(a) |
|
come into force. |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Related Amendments |
|
Broadcasting Act |
|
Sections 91-93 |
|
|
|
Page 48 |
|
Order in council |
|
(2) Sections 7, 8, 11 to 17, 20, 27 to 31, 53.1 and 59 and |
|
subsection 60(2) come into force on a day to be |
|
fixed by order of the Governor in Council, but |
|
that day must not be before the latest of |
|
(a) the day fixed in accordance with subsection |
|
(1), |
|
(b) the day on which the first regulations made |
|
under paragraph 84(b) come into force, and |
|
(c) the day on which the first regulations made |
|
under paragraph 84(c) come into force. |
|
Order in council |
|
(3) Sections 18, 19, 21, 22 and 32 to 44 come into |
|
force on a day to be fixed by order of the Gover- |
|
nor in Council, but that day must not be before |
|
the day fixed in accordance with subsection (2). |
|
Order in council |
|
(4) Sections 49 to 52 and 68 come into force on a |
|
day to be fixed by order of the Governor in Coun- |
|
cil, but that day must not be before the day fixed |
|
in accordance with subsection (3). |
|
Order in council |
|
(5) Sections 79 to 83, 86, 87 and 90 come into force |
|
on a day or days to be fixed by order of the Gov- |
|
ernor in Council. |
|
180 days after royal assent |
|
(6) Despite subsections (1) to (5), any provision |
|
of this Act that does not come into force by order |
|
before the 180th day following the day on which |
|
this Act receives royal assent comes into force 180 |
|
days after the day on which this Act receives roy- |
|
al assent. |
|
Published under authority of the Speaker of the House of Commons |
|
2021-2022-2023 |
|
Chapter 23: Online News Act |
|
Coming into Force |
|
Section |
|
93 |
|
|
|
Page 49 |
|
|
|
Page 50 |
|
Available on the House of Commons website |
|
Disponible sur le site Web de la Chambre des com |
|
|
|
|