CBC Cuts: Broadcaster Reveals Details In Wake Of Federal Budget Reductions

Posted: 04/10/2012 2:42 pm Updated: 04/19/2012 11:11 pm

TORONTO - Big budget cuts at the CBC are putting "everything" on the chopping block — including hit shows "Republic of Doyle" and "Heartland," programming boss Kirstine Stewart said Tuesday as the public broadcaster axed CBC News Network's "Connect with Mark Kelley" and CBC Radio's "Dispatches."

Tough decisions about how to manage a $225-million shortfall will include shaving six existing or planned shows from the public broadcaster's TV lineup, said Stewart, executive vice-president of CBC's English Services.

"We are making those decisions next week and we've got some pretty strong criteria to make those decisions," Stewart said after CBC staff were briefed on job and program cuts in an internal meeting.

"But in the end what we're trying to do is protect the programming that Canadians seem to be most interested in and it will really narrow down the variety of programming that we've been able to give Canadians over the last few years."

Staff learned Tuesday that CBC-TV's programming and news departments will bear the brunt of punishing cuts planned over the next three years.

They include shuttered news bureaus in Africa and South America as well the elimination of 88 news jobs.

CBC says $10 million will be cut from news on all platforms while $21.3 million in cuts will come from non-news TV including 18 positions in the documentary unit.

"It's not a good day for CBC," said Marc-Philippe Laurin, president of the Canadian Media Guild's CBC branch.

"Canadians are really going to see a difference on the TV screen and hear a difference on CBC Radio."

In all, English services will eliminate 215 positions this year and a total of 256 positions by 2015.

The belt-tightening follows last week's federal budget, which cut $115 million — or about 10 per cent of the CBC's overall government subsidy — over the next three years.

CBC president Hubert Lacroix has said additional financial pressures actually push the CBC's shortfall to $200 million, plus there's another $25 million in severance costs for expected layoffs.

Last week, the broadcaster said it expected to lay off more than 650 people over three years, with the majority to be let go this year.

It said CBC fans could expect fewer TV shows, more ads on radio and the delay of regional initiatives that were meant to boost local programming.

Government funding makes up about 64 per cent of CBC's budget and the corporation receives about $1.15 billion a year from taxpayers.

The media guild says the news cuts include 34 jobs at local stations, 44 at the network level and another 10 will come from news administration.

Stewart said the news department would minimize the impact of the cuts as much as possible, noting that funds previously directed toward maintaining bureaus in Africa and South America could be used to support roving reporters.

"You can't have a cut this sizable without it affecting all areas and the news is going to be affected," she said.

"But we're living in a world where some technologies and other opportunities are making us be able to produce things, particularly in a live kind of way, more inexpensively. So we're going to push that integration into news gathering and try to make most efficiencies out of that."

CBC Kids will also reduce programming by four hours a week, while the "Sports Weekend" program will narrow its focus to "snow and ice sports" in the winter and signature programs in the summer. Laurin said that means sports fans can expect less coverage of amateur events.

Meanwhile, the guild said Radio 2 is cutting live concert recordings and scrapping regional recording facilities in St. John's, Ottawa, Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary and Edmonton.

Laurin says he has "some empathy" for the hard decisions facing managers.

"They're in a tough position, they're trying to save as much programming as possible, they're trying to save jobs, they're trying to save people that create the content that create the programs that CBC airs," he said.

"They're trying to avoid as much as possible starting to run repeat after repeat after repeat. It's not what the CBC wants to be, it's not what the CBC wants to put on the air, it's not what our members want to see but at the same time we all knew that some hard decisions were going to have to be made because this is a devastating cut to the CBC allocation."

Stewart said decisions to cut programs and staff were made all the harder because of recent ratings successes such as rookie breakout "Arctic Air."

"It's not easy to be told with all this enthusiasm and all this talent that now we're going to be working with less," she said.

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TORONTO - Big budget cuts at the CBC are putting "everything" on the chopping block — including hit shows "Republic of Doyle" and "Heartland," programming boss Kirstine Stewart said Tuesday as the p...
TORONTO - Big budget cuts at the CBC are putting "everything" on the chopping block — including hit shows "Republic of Doyle" and "Heartland," programming boss Kirstine Stewart said Tuesday as the p...
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07:34 PM on 04/15/2012
I presume the Tories are itching to funnel the money these CBC cuts free up to Sun News, so they will be able to stage more phony citizenship ceremonies, and hire more Ezra Levants to fill the airwaves with Tory boot-licking and sanctimonious bloviation. Which, of course, is of far greater value to Canadians than the informative and entertaining programming offered by the CBC.
evecaren
Every cloud has a silver lining
09:58 AM on 04/14/2012
Big budget cuts at the CBC are putting "everything" on the chopping block - including hit
shows "Republic of Doyle" and "Heartland" . I didn't realize the Republic of Doyle was
a hit show not based on the little bits of the show I've seen anyway. I can't speak for
Heartland. I've only seen the promos for Heartland and based on that it looks like a good
show.
01:14 PM on 04/12/2012
The Auditor General of Canada, and perhaps a few other federal agencies and departments, should investigate the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. The national broadcaster receives a billion taxdollars a year, for programming and salaries; yet the CBC is cutting 650 jobs, cancelling "Connect with Mark Kelley" and "Republic of Doyle"; selling two CBC properties in Halifax, and basically dismantling an important Canadian institution.
Why?
Greed. The CBC is a commerical Crown corporation that operates at arms-length from government, from the people. "The Broadcasting Act" of 1991 gives the Crown corporation the power to maintain multiple bank accounts in foreign countries. . As a commercial entity, the CBC keeps the money from the sale of Crown property, including buildings (Jarvis Street Complex in Toronto; 1500 Bronson Avenue in Ottawa) and land.
Over half a billion dollars from the CBC's pension fund surplus "vanished" (see article by Rick Westhead, Toronto Star). Not surprisingly, the CBC is the worst offender, for ignoring Access to Information requests.
It is time for the CBC to return to it's original, core mandate- - -to air programs that are predominanly and distinctively Canadian; programs that reflect Canada and its regions to national and regional audiences, and "contribute to a shared national consciousness and identity."
Follow the money, Auditor General of Canada. MP's, you have the power to stop the Americanization, commercialization and privatization of a beloved national institution, the CBC. Give the CBC back to it's rightful owners - - - the People of Canada.
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grizzly bear55
King of the forest
04:10 AM on 04/12/2012
The problem is with the provincial governments, you can cut as much as you want on the Federal scene, but then you have provinces like Ontario and Quebec who spend like there is no tomorrow making all Federal savings irrelevant.

The Federal should cut some of the transfers to provinces who have their own tax collecting system and power of taxation and do not follow the Federal in the tax cuts as cuts in spending.

Let us not forget municipalities who are the biggest offenders with huge numbers of unneeded municipalities taxing and spending , while the conditions of their roads are pitiful with 10 workers to fix a pothole .

Each time I see them fixing a pothole my blood boil and I feel like someone is stealing my money in front of my own eyes.
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gravescanada
10:02 AM on 04/15/2012
Hmmm, Ontario still sends more money to Ottawa than it gets back. How about we eliminate the transfer program entirely and let each province exist on its own? For how long was Ontario the engine that drove the entire Canadian Economy? Its only now that we keep our dollar high, that Ontario is having a hard time, losing manufacturing jobs. Get the Canadian Dollar back to 70 cents American and see Ontario come back to life with a vengeance.
10:13 PM on 04/11/2012
I enjoy. The CBC, but think they have to learn to survive without freeloading on the taxpayers. What do they pay mansridge, and don cherry.
evecaren
Every cloud has a silver lining
10:00 AM on 04/14/2012
What do they pay Mansbridge and Don Cherry ? Big bucks no doubt.
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stanschurman
10:13 PM on 04/11/2012
Let's face it. This government would like nothing more than the demise of the CBC. Then they'd only have to contend with nerf ball questions from their CTV fan club.
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Peter Manierka
89 and going strong
09:50 PM on 04/11/2012
Ilike the CBCas is.I can easely do without Harper
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Ascoli
09:45 PM on 04/11/2012
Gotta save that money........how else to buy fighter jets,
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06:13 PM on 04/11/2012
CBC and especially CBC radio are by far the best broadcasting i have encountered in the 3 years now i've lived in Canada. my significant other and i often find ourselves sitting in the car long after we've arrived at our destination, listening to CBC radio. it reminds me of listening to NPR back in the States... quality programming on a wide range of subjects. these cuts are such a shame.
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Rock Jocelyn
05:53 PM on 04/11/2012
I was planning to move back to Canada and try to get a job with CBC radio after I graduate from school, but perhaps that's not such a good idea...
03:40 PM on 04/11/2012
If they cut some of the good evening programs, I would like to see them replaced by some of the old CBC stuff, i.e. DaVinci's Inquest, Wojek, Beachcomber, King of Kensington, and others I missed and don't know the names of but which were probably pretty good for their time. I get a kick out of older programs and movies - they're good windows into the zeitgeist of the times, and some of them are gems. There's probably a lot of crap too, but there's even more crap on commercial TV now, and at least CBC wouldn't have to spend much to re-air the old shows.
evecaren
Every cloud has a silver lining
10:04 AM on 04/14/2012
You've obviously never seen Beachcomber or you wouldn't ask for the CBC to
rerun this show. It's quite outdated and quite frankly the plots and I use the term
lightly are boring. If you're looking for good entertainment, how about reruns of
Wayne and Shuster.
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03:18 PM on 04/11/2012
Ah, CBC censorship, two times I posted, not here yet.?
05:52 PM on 04/11/2012
you're on huffpo not cbc, and they monitor all the comments, it takes time to get them posted ... you're not that special.
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03:06 PM on 04/11/2012
I hope Rick the "political jester" will be axed.
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Quando Omni Flunkus Moritati
12:25 PM on 04/11/2012
Threatening to cut popular programs is just a ploy to get public sympathy and support.
Cutting the fat out of CBC's bloated bureaucracy of overpaid executives is the best tactic to improve the CBC and keep viewer interest.
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Denis OBrien
12:21 PM on 04/11/2012
Equally brilliant idea...cuts news.....just like good old Canwest newspapers where once was fresh news every day, there is now the same drivel running for days on end. I guess nothing really happens in the world these days....such a boring place.