Howard Knopf Speaking Notes for Senate
BANC Committee November 21, 2018
Here is the webcast of this hearing. My opening remarks occur at 14:49. There were some very good questions, and presentations from Jeremy de Beer and Casey Chisick.
The following are my speaking notes. The
final transcript is not yet available.
PROBLEMS WITH BILL C-86 APPROACH TO BOARD REFORM
1.
Thank
you for the invitation and the opportunity to compress nearly 40 years of
experience into 5 minutes. Frankly, an omnibus
bill approach to all these complex and controversial IP issues is absolutely
NOT the way to proceed here and is unnecessary and unacceptable. There are many
serious issues and problems with the nearly 100 pages of IP material in Bill
C-86 but I was only invited here to talk about the Copyright Board. This is in
some respects the most drastic change to the Board since 1936 and it is getting
only an hour or so of Committee consideration here and much less in the other
place.
2.
The
clarification of criteria – including the inclusion of the terminology of “public
interest” and “willing buyer and willing seller in a competitive market with
all relevant information, at arm’s length and free of external constraints” may
actually backfire. This will formalize in an untested and unprecedented manner what
has been an informal exercise that has often resulted, for better or worse, effectively
in the averaging of two extreme sets of numbers – and will almost certainly
result in even more expensive and time-consuming so-called “expert evidence”
about something that is circular at best and paradoxically impossible at worst
– which is that determining a competitive market rate. There is no such thing as
a competitive market in a world where mandatory tariffs can be set by law for
the benefit of powerful monopolies that would otherwise be criminal
conspiracies were they to exist without the blessing of Parliament and the
Copyright Board and the Courts. Moreover, the concept of “public interest” may potentially
conflict with that of a “competitive market”. We can expect longer and more expensive
hearings and more judicial review in figuring out what, if anything, this will
all mean.
3.
As
for the commendable idea encouraging public participation without incurring the
costs of full participation as indicated in the Government’s Fact Sheet, that
appears to be more talk than action. If the Government means reimbursement for costs
of public interest participation, that would require enabling legislation as we
have with the CRTC. But that enabling legislation is simply not there in this
bill.
4.
As
to streamlined timelines, the Bill simply doesn’t deliver. Moving up the filing
date by 5.5 months and making tariffs last three years rather than one won’t
make any difference to the fact that it usually has taken about four years for
a hearing to even take place and there are few if any examples of “annual” hearings
on the same tariff. It then typically takes the Board 3 years to render a decision,
which is then very retroactive, and which often results in judicial review and
even rehearings. Contrary to what you heard earlier today and my friend Prof. de
Beer, the Board normally certifies fewer than 5 tariffs a year.
5.
The
enabling legislation for regulations to specify time lines has already been
there for at least three decades – and still hasn’t been used. The setting of deadlines
and timelines have still been postponed and punted again. This bill does
nothing to impose necessary deadlines, as we have for other tribunals and in
the Federal Courts as set by the Governor in Council – for example in the case
of the Federal Courts and the Competition Tribunal, which incidentally will
have a much smaller budget than the Copyright Board.
6.
The
bill will eliminate the requirement for music industry collectives to file
tariffs that require Board oversight – even if there is no opposition. This has
been a requirement since 1936 following the monumental Parker Commission
Report. That means that the music industry will have even more effectively unchecked
monopoly power over organizations ranging from hockey stadiums and movie
theatres OTOH to barber and beauty salons OTOH. No wonder SOCAN and Re:Sound
have been so quick to welcome this Bill.
7. The elephant in the room here, of course,
is the overwhelming question of whether Copyright Board tariffs are mandatory
for users. I successfully argued in the SCC that this is not the case. It’s one
thing for the Government to provide a train or plane tariff to get from Ottawa
to Toronto – as once was the case. But, the Government never forced anyone to
take either the train or plane if they wanted to take the bus or drive their
own car. However, in the Access Copyright v. York University case, York did not address the
issue of whether final approved tariffs are mandatory. Let’s hope that the FCA
gets this right. It will likely end up in the SCC. The issue is certain to
arise in the s. 92 hearings as well. So, in this regard, I’m a little
concerned about the purpose or need for the new s. 73.1 which imports language
from the “mandatory” levy scheme in Part VIII of the act re enforcement of
“terms and conditions”?
8.
I’ll
be happy to answer your questions.
HPK
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