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Canada's TV fund disputed.


Significant changes could be in store for the Canadian Television Fund The Canadian Television Fund was created in 1996 to support the broadcast and production of quality Canadian television programming. It is financed by the Canadian government, cable television and DTH satellite providers.  (CTF CTF Capture The Flag
CTF Child Trust Fund (UK)
CTF Canadian Tax Foundation
CTF Canadian Taxpayers Federation (lobby group)
CTF Canadian Television Fund
CTF Canadian Teachers' Federation
). Following protests from cable operators Shaw Communications Shaw Communications Inc. (TSX: SJR.NV.B NYSE: SJR) is a Canadian telecomunications company headquartered in Calgary, Alberta.

The company was founded by J.R. Shaw in 1966 as Capital Cable Television Co Ltd..
 and Quebecor, the Canadian Radio-television Telecommunications Commission (CRTC CRTC Canadian Radio-Television & Telecommunications Commission
CRTC Combat Readiness Training Center
CRTC Cathode Ray Tube Controller
CRTC China Railway Telecommunications Center
CRTC Cold Region Test Center
CRTC Continuously Regenerated Trap Column
) has created a task force to review how the C$250-million TV production-financing arm is managed. The CRTC mandates that, as a condition of operating in Canada, all cable companies must contribute annually to the CTF.

But earlier this year, Jim Shaw, Shaw's vocal CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. , said he would suspend his necessary monthly payments to the fund until his concerns were addressed. Fellow cabler Quebecor also withheld payments. Among the companies' biggest concerns are the find's governance, the private sector's lack of influence in operations and the fund's investment performance. In fact, according to Shaw, the fund has spent C$2.3 billion over the last decade on programming, with very few success stories to show for it. Shaw would like to see the fund operated more like an investment fund. Quebecor accused CTF funding of flailing to take into account new media, the flastest-growing element of the broadcasting sector. Both companies could have caused CTF a C$75 million annual loss of revenue.

But by the end of February, after several MPs accused the firms of breaking the law by withholding their payments, both Shaw and Quebecor announced that they would resume payments in an attempt to end their almost two-month battle. Shaw said he felt confident that the government and CRTC were committed to mending the problems.

Following that announcement, new CRTC chairman Konrad von Finckenstein Konrad W. von Finckenstein, QC (b. April 4, 1945 in Germany) is the current Chairman of the Canadian Radio-television Telecommunications Commission, since January 25, 2007. His term is scheduled to end on January 24, 2012.  (who had met with Shaw the night before announcing he would resume payment), said he'd resolve his inherited crisis through co-operation rather than confrontation. While giving testimony in front of the House of Commons House of Commons: see Parliament.  heritage committee, von Finckenstein put the CTF on notice that it must come to the table and work toward addressing the concerns.

The CRTC-created task force (which is headed by CRTC vice-chairman Michael Arpin) will gather evidence, meet with fund stakeholders and work toward a consensus on how to address the firms' concerns. If a consensus can't be reached, the group's report (to be published at the end of this month) will make recommendations to resolve shareholders' concerns. The CRTC could then decide to hold public hearings.
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Title Annotation:World
Publication:Video Age International
Date:Feb 1, 2007
Words:375
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