CPAC (TV channel)

The Cable Public Affairs Channel (French: La Chaîne d'affaires publiques par câble), better known by its acronym CPAC (/ˈspæk/ SEE-pak), is a Canadian specialty channel that is owned by a consortium that includes among other part-owners Rogers Communications, Shaw Communications, Vidéotron, Cogeco, and Eastlink. The channel is devoted to coverage of public and government affairs, including carrying a full, uninterrupted feed of proceedings of the House of Commons of Canada, with three audio channels, one untreated feed and, with the assistance of interpreters, one in each of the official languages.

CPAC
CountryCanada
Broadcast areaNationwide
SloganFor the record
HeadquartersOttawa, Ontario
Programming
Language(s)English, French
Picture format1080i HDTV
(downscaled to letterboxed 480i for the SDTV feed)
Ownership
OwnerRogers Communications (41.58%)
Shaw Communications (23.68%)
Vidéotron (Quebecor) (21.81%)
Cogeco (6.73%)
Eastlink (3.77%)
Others (2.43%)[1]
History
LaunchedOctober 1992 (1992-10)
ReplacedCBC Parliamentary Television Network
Former namesCanadian Parliamentary Channel (CPaC)
Links
Websitewww.cpac.ca
Availability
Cable
Channel slots vary on each providerConsult your local cable provider for channel availability
Satellite
Bell Satellite TV
  • Channel 512 (English) Channel 1583 (English) HD
  • Channel 149 (French) Channel 1838 (French) HD
Shaw DirectChannel 291 / 396 (HD)
IPTV
Bell Aliant Fibe TV
  • Channel 63 (English)
  • Channel 808 (French)
Bell Fibe TV
  • Channel 512 (English)
  • Channel 144 (French)
Bell MTS
  • Channel 28 (English)
  • Channel 407 (French)
Optik TV
  • Channel 841 (English)
  • Channel 2051 (French)
SaskTel
  • Channel 18 (English)
  • Channel 274 (French)
Telus Quebec
  • Channel 18 (English)
  • Channel 19 (French)
Vmedia
  • Channel 104 (English)
  • Channel 604 (French, Ontario)
  • Ch. 501 (French, Quebec City)
Zazeen
  • Channel 129 (English)
  • Channel 217 (French)

Synopsis

CPAC's main purpose is the broadcast of proceedings of the House of Commons. Other programming includes meetings of The House of Commons and Senate of Canada parliamentary committees, occasional Supreme Court proceedings, political conventions, conferences, committees and coverage of general elections. CPAC also airs the proceedings of certain Royal Commissions and judicial enquiries.

CPAC is similar to services in other countries including C-SPAN (United States), EuroparlTV (European Union), La Chaîne parlementaire (France), Phoenix (Germany), BBC Parliament (United Kingdom) and TV Câmara and TV Senado (Brazil), some of which (particularly C-SPAN) occasionally supply programming to CPAC.

History

Television broadcasting of the proceedings of the House of Commons began in 1977 after a motion approving it was adopted by the House, with broadcasts commencing in October of that year. The Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) allowed cable companies to carry the broadcasts on their specialty channels as an interim measure. In 1979, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation was given a temporary network licence to begin live coverage of the proceedings (which had been airing on a tape delayed basis until then), leading to the creation of the CBC Parliamentary Television Network. A permanent licence was granted to the CBC the next year.

Original logo used from 1992 to 1996

In 1989, the CBC and a consortium of cable television providers made a joint proposal for the creation of a new entity, the Canadian Parliamentary Channel (CPaC) that would carry the proceedings of the House of Commons and committees, along with proceedings of royal commissions, enquiries, court hearings and provincial legislatures, and public affairs programming. A review of parliamentary broadcasting resulted but the CPaC proposal was not acted upon.

In December 1990, the CBC announced that as a result of budget cuts the CBC "is no longer able to bear the cost of operating the English- and French-language parliamentary channels. The government will seek the views of the Speaker of the House and consider means of maintaining the service."[2] The CBC announced that it was discontinuing its role as the parliamentary broadcaster effective April 1, 1991. As an interim measure, the House of Commons' Board of Internal Economy negotiated a temporary contract with the CBC to provide parliamentary coverage for an additional year while the Board considered proposals to take over the service. In 1992, the Board came to an agreement with Canadian Parliamentary Channel, Inc., a consortium of 25 cable companies, to take over the CBC's role – the new service received its licence from the CRTC in 1993.

Second CPAC logo used from 1996 to 2001

While the Canadian Parliamentary Channel's name was soon changed to Cable Public Affairs Channel to reflect the greater diversity of programming and the cable industry's ownership of the service, the ownership structure continues today; the shareholders of Cable Public Affairs Channel Inc. are major cable companies such as Rogers Communications (41.4%), Shaw Communications (25.05%), Vidéotron (21.71%), Cogeco (6.7%), Eastlink (3.76%) and several other cable companies (including Access Communications and Omineca Cablevision) owning a combined equity of 1.37%.

To date there have been few, if any, accusations of influence by these cable companies on CPAC's editorial policy. Indeed, some CPAC promotions (featuring Tom Green) have claimed that because it is owned by the cable industry, "not the government", it is more independent than other broadcasters, such as the national public broadcaster CBC, which also provide extensive political coverage through various outlets.

During federal election campaigns, the network frequently airs Campaign Politics, a documentary series in which each episode profiles one individual electoral district through interviews with candidates and voters.

Choice of feeds

Logo used from 2001 to 2016

In 2003, at the behest of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC), CPAC and its carriers started to allow television viewers to choose which language they can hear the service in, putting the feed of one language on the service's main audio channel and the feed of the other language on its second audio program channel. Some cable systems also offer the two feeds on separate channels for easier access. CPAC has also offered a "floor" feed, a feed that does not carry any simultaneous translation, although due to the changes noted above, it may not remain in use over cable or satellite television. A choice between all three feeds are offered on CPAC's free Internet video stream available on the channel's website.

Senate proceedings

Proceedings of the Senate were historically not carried as the upper house had not agreed to allow its sessions to be televised. Then, on 25 April 2006, Senator Hugh Segal moved that the proceedings of the Senate be televised.[3] The motion was referred to the Senate Standing Committee on Rules, Procedures and the Rights of Parliament for consideration; although the motion was approved, broadcast of senate proceedings was not launched at that time apart from selected committee meetings.[4] Full broadcast of Senate proceedings launched for the first time on 18 March 2019,[5] concurrently with the Senate's temporary relocation to the Government Conference Centre.[4]

Non-political programming

From February 12 to 28, 2010, CPAC simulcasted the V network's coverage of the 2010 Winter Olympics. V does not have wide availability outside Quebec, unlike previous rightsholder Radio-Canada or even rival private network TVA. This had caused some concern with francophone groups outside Quebec, thus, CPAC was chosen because of its mandatory carriage on the basic service of all cable and satellite providers, as well as the fact that the House of Commons was not sitting during the games.[6] Although CPAC's conditions of licence do not normally permit the channel to air sports,[7] it received special authorization from the CRTC to permit this simulcast.[8][9]

Since 2009, CPAC has also had the authority to carry entertainment programming on July 1 in order to cover Canada Day celebrations on Parliament Hill or elsewhere.[10]

On-air staff

Hosts

Notes

  1. "CRTC Ownership Chart for CPAC" (PDF). Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. Retrieved August 11, 2013. Remaining owners include Access Communications and Omineca Cablevision.
  2. "Television and the House of Commons (BP-242E)". Archived from the original on March 5, 2009. Retrieved December 8, 2005.
  3. "Segal calls for televised Senate: Kingston politician wants body to be accountable". Kingston Whig-Standard, April 8, 2006.
  4. "Senate expected to start regular TV broadcasts after move to Government Conference Centre". iPolitics, March 10, 2018.
  5. "Ready for their closeup: Senate begins broadcasting proceedings for first time today". CBC News, March 18, 2019.
  6. CPAC and CTV Team Up to Deliver French Olympic Coverage Archived August 14, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, CPAC / COBMC press release, 2010-02-11
  7. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2009-390, 2009-06-29 (most recent CRTC decision referring to CPAC's permitted categories of programming)
  8. CRTC letter to CPAC, 2010-02-11
  9. CPAC desservira les francophones hors-Québec Archived February 15, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Radio-Canada, 2010-02-11
  10. Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2009-390
  11. L'Essentiel with Esther Bégin CPAC, August 31, 2019.
  12. "CPAC Unveils New Look and Welcomes Alison Smith" Archived November 19, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Broadcaster, November 16, 2016.
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