Wednesday, May 21, 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • Media
Support Us
Macdonald-Laurier Institute
  • Home
  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Who Makes MLI Work
    • Tenth Anniversary
  • Experts
    • Experts Directory
    • In Memoriam
  • Issues
    • Domestic Policy
      • Economic Policy
      • Justice
      • Rights and Freedoms
      • Assisted Suicide (MAID)
      • Health Care
      • COVID-19
      • Gender Identity
      • Canada’s Political Tradition
      • AI, Technology and Innovation
      • Media and Telecoms
      • Housing
      • Immigration
      • Agriculture and Agri-Food
      • Competition Policy
    • Energy Policy
      • Energy
      • Environment
    • Foreign Policy
      • Israel-Hamas War
      • Ukraine
      • Taiwan
      • China
      • Europe and Russia
      • Indo-Pacific
      • Middle East and North Africa
      • North America
      • Foreign Interference
      • National Defence
      • National Security
      • Foreign Affairs
    • Indigenous Affairs
  • Projects
    • CNAPS (Center for North American Prosperity and Security)
    • The Promised Land
    • Voices that Inspire: The Macdonald-Laurier Vancouver Speaker Series
    • Dragon at the Door
    • Canada on top of the world
    • Justice Report Card
    • The Great Energy Crisis
    • DisInfoWatch.org
    • Double Trouble
    • Digital Policy & Connectivity
    • Managing Indigenous Prosperity
    • Defending The Marketplace of Ideas
    • Reforming the University
    • Past Projects
      • Canada and the Indo-Pacific Initiative
      • The Transatlantic Program
      • COVID Misery Index
        • Provincial COVID Misery Index
        • Beyond Lockdown
        • COVID and after: A mandate for recovery
      • Speak for Ourselves
      • The Eavesdropping Dragon: Huawei
      • Talkin’ in the Free World with Mariam Memarsadeghi
      • An Intellectual Property Strategy for Canada
      • Munk Senior Fellows
      • A Mandate for Canada
      • Confederation Series
      • Fiscal Reform
      • The Canadian Century project
      • Fixing Canadian health care
      • Internal trade
      • From a mandate for change
      • Size of government in Canada
      • Straight Talk
      • Labour Market Report
      • Leading Economic Indicator
      • Centre for Advancing Canada’s Interests Abroad
      • Indigenous Prosperity at a Crossroads
        • Aboriginal Canada and Natural Resources
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Past Events
      • MLI Dinners
      • Great Canadian Debates
  • Latest News
  • Inside Policy
  • Libraries
    • Columns
    • Commentary
    • Papers
    • Books
    • Video
  • Home
  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Who Makes MLI Work
    • Tenth Anniversary
  • Experts
    • Experts Directory
    • In Memoriam
  • Issues
    • Domestic Policy
      • Economic Policy
      • Justice
      • Rights and Freedoms
      • Assisted Suicide (MAID)
      • Health Care
      • COVID-19
      • Gender Identity
      • Canada’s Political Tradition
      • AI, Technology and Innovation
      • Media and Telecoms
      • Housing
      • Immigration
      • Agriculture and Agri-Food
      • Competition Policy
    • Energy Policy
      • Energy
      • Environment
    • Foreign Policy
      • Israel-Hamas War
      • Ukraine
      • Taiwan
      • China
      • Europe and Russia
      • Indo-Pacific
      • Middle East and North Africa
      • North America
      • Foreign Interference
      • National Defence
      • National Security
      • Foreign Affairs
    • Indigenous Affairs
  • Projects
    • CNAPS (Center for North American Prosperity and Security)
    • The Promised Land
    • Voices that Inspire: The Macdonald-Laurier Vancouver Speaker Series
    • Dragon at the Door
    • Canada on top of the world
    • Justice Report Card
    • The Great Energy Crisis
    • DisInfoWatch.org
    • Double Trouble
    • Digital Policy & Connectivity
    • Managing Indigenous Prosperity
    • Defending The Marketplace of Ideas
    • Reforming the University
    • Past Projects
      • Canada and the Indo-Pacific Initiative
      • The Transatlantic Program
      • COVID Misery Index
        • Provincial COVID Misery Index
        • Beyond Lockdown
        • COVID and after: A mandate for recovery
      • Speak for Ourselves
      • The Eavesdropping Dragon: Huawei
      • Talkin’ in the Free World with Mariam Memarsadeghi
      • An Intellectual Property Strategy for Canada
      • Munk Senior Fellows
      • A Mandate for Canada
      • Confederation Series
      • Fiscal Reform
      • The Canadian Century project
      • Fixing Canadian health care
      • Internal trade
      • From a mandate for change
      • Size of government in Canada
      • Straight Talk
      • Labour Market Report
      • Leading Economic Indicator
      • Centre for Advancing Canada’s Interests Abroad
      • Indigenous Prosperity at a Crossroads
        • Aboriginal Canada and Natural Resources
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Past Events
      • MLI Dinners
      • Great Canadian Debates
  • Latest News
  • Inside Policy
  • Libraries
    • Columns
    • Commentary
    • Papers
    • Books
    • Video
No Result
View All Result
Macdonald-Laurier Institute

Let it burn: Peter Menzies in the Line

The Zombie Papers aren't coming back.

February 13, 2023
in Domestic Policy, Latest News, Columns, In the Media, Media and Telecoms, Peter Menzies
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
Let it burn: Peter Menzies in the Line

This article originally appeared in the Line.

By Peter Menzies, February 13, 2023

I have been faithfully watching HBO’s The Last of Us, proudly pointing out that Bill and Frank’s place is in High River, that bridge was really over Calgary’s Fish Creek, and — OMG — that was actually the Alberta Legislature the zombies broke into before Tess set them, it and her ablaze.

Ah, memories.

I am so old, you see, that I can recall when the #ableg was buzzing with a couple dozen reporters and columnists. The late, great Rod Love and — as best as I can recall — a communications staff of just two, ruled the roost, offering reporters scoldings and scoops. Martini’s was the off-the-record bar of choice and who will ever forget La Nuit des Milles Bieres? Those were halcyon days.

Today, near as I can tell, the Premier’s office has close to as many comms staff — if not more — than the Press Gallery has members. Martini’s closed years ago. There are no more nights of a thousand beers. The once-vibrant news organizations that dominated the place are nominally alive, but to all intents and purposes are dead. With few exceptions, they are zombies.

In Saskatchewan, there are maybe two reporters and a columnist covering the provincial legislature when it’s in session (which isn’t a lot).

At the time of my shift in the Alberta gallery in 1995, the Calgary Herald newsroom boasted around 150 men and women. The Calgary Sun had another 60 or so. By the end of this month, after Postmedia’s most recent round of tearfully announced layoffs, the combined Herald/Calgary Sun headcount will be closer to 20. The building which once housed the Herald has been sold for half of its original asking price. The Regina Leader Post offices are now an industrial mall and the landmark Saskatoon Star Phoenix building is for sale. What is left of its staff will work from home. All take their orders from editors in Calgary who take theirs from someone a four-hour flight away in the east. The few copies they bother to print for the Paris of the Prairies these days come off a press 450 km away in Weyburn.

Life in the once outrageously profitable — and fun — Canadian newspaper industry is not just dire; it’s pathetic and sad. Things are so bad there weren’t enough jobs left to absorb the full $119 million set aside in annual federal tax credits. Only 57 per cent of the money allocated since 2019 was actually accessed, according to Blacklock’s Reporter.

This is scheduled to be the final year (2023-24) for the $10 million annual Local Journalism Initiative (LJI). Sure, Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez has doubled the amount to fund journos in “news deserts” in the LJI’s final year to $20 million. He’s thrown another $40 million over three years into his “Special measures for Journalism” pot, but there’s no indication the LJI will be extended.

This month, the business’s very last hope for government salvation — the Online News Act — lurched into the Senate, where there is no shortage of former journos to help it on its way. Those include Edmonton Journal columnist Paula Simons, former broadcast anchor Pamela Wallin, Julie Miville-Dechene (ex of Radio Canada) and Marty Klyne, a past publisher (remember those?) of the Leader Post. In short order, there will be more journalists in the senate than in some local newsrooms.

There will be many calls for amendments. There will be pleading, urging and even begging from various parts of the industry. Experts will testify. But no amount of second-thought tinkering — no matter how sober — is going to make Bill C-18 into the saviour publishers once fancied it would be.

The legislation was first proposed by legacy print newspapers to force Facebook and Google to give them money. Starry-eyed predictions of $200 million or more annually were promised, and newsrooms filled with real people with kids, mortgages and dreams bought into it because, well, they needed to. Who among us, in their shoes, wouldn’t have done the same?

Problem is, people began to notice that the whole thing was built on a fantasy. And then the broadcasters, pleading poverty and miffed that they’d been excluded from previous taxpayer-funded schemes, shamelessly bellied up to the bar and damn near drank it dry. The Parliamentary Budget Officer has predicted the entire Bill C-18 shakedown will, as constructed, generate $329 million. Most of that will be consumed by broadcasters — primarily CBC and Bell Media — leaving a measly $80 million for the entire non-broadcast news industry.

That’s about $15 million more than guys like Steph Curry and Lebron James get paid each year to play basketball. It’s half of what Chelsea of the English Premier League just paid Benfica of Portugal for an Argentinian soccer player. It’s not, in other words, anywhere near enough to stabilize a horribly broken legacy news industry.

Then there’s the fact that U.S. politicians are becoming increasingly vocal concerning this and other Canadian legislation targeting American online companies. Billions in retaliatory tariffs seem a high price to pay for something that isn’t going to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.

And if Facebook decides to simply get out of carrying news — which is highly likely — rather than pay the news racket’s fee, not only will the publishers’ once dreamy pot of gold shrink further, the entire industry will lose a vital — and free — delivery platform. That will include startups that have virtuously sworn off taking favours from government.

Bill C-18, in other words, isn’t going to make the old zombie papers whole again and could very easily mortally wound the news industry innovators we so badly need to keep journalism’s heart beating.

Unpleasant as it sounds, it might be best for everyone if the zombies — all that’s left of the last of us — just burn.

Peter Menzies is a senior fellow with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, a former publisher at The Calgary Herald and a previous vice chair of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).

Source: The Line
Tags: Peter MenziesZombiesThe Line
Previous Post

The cost of sending fighter jets to Ukraine is not worth the risk: Richard Shimooka in The Hub

Next Post

The inconvenient truth – Aspirations vs realities of coexistence between “the West” and China: Stephen Nagy in Pacific Forum

Related Posts

Canada at a Crossroads – Volume 6: Degrees of separation – Universities versus the public
Canada at a Crossroads

Canada at a Crossroads – Volume 6: Degrees of separation – Universities versus the public

May 21, 2025
Indigenous partnerships are key to kickstarting Canada’s economy: JP Gladu and Caroline Cox in The Hub
Indigenous Affairs

Indigenous partnerships are key to kickstarting Canada’s economy: JP Gladu and Caroline Cox in The Hub

May 20, 2025
It’s not just the economy — Canada must find its place in new world order: Christopher Coates in the Windsor Star
Foreign Affairs

It’s not just the economy — Canada must find its place in new world order: Christopher Coates in the Windsor Star

May 20, 2025
Next Post
Xi is not attending the Glasgow summit; why is Canada going to the Beijing Games? J. Michael Cole in the Toronto Star

The inconvenient truth - Aspirations vs realities of coexistence between "the West" and China: Stephen Nagy in Pacific Forum

Newsletter Signup

  Thank you for Signing Up
  Please correct the marked field(s) below.
Email Address  *
1,true,6,Contact Email,2
First Name *
1,true,1,First Name,2
Last Name *
1,true,1,Last Name,2
*
*Required Fields

Follow us on

Macdonald-Laurier Institute

323 Chapel Street, Suite #300
Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 7Z2 Canada

613.482.8327

info@macdonaldlaurier.ca
MLI directory

Support Us

Support the Macdonald-Laurier Institute to help ensure that Canada is one of the best governed countries in the world. Click below to learn more or become a sponsor.

Support Us

  • Inside Policy Magazine
  • Annual Reports
  • Jobs
  • Privacy Policy

© 2023 Macdonald-Laurier Institute. All Rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
    • Who We Are
    • Who Makes MLI Work
    • Tenth Anniversary
  • Experts
    • Experts Directory
    • In Memoriam
  • Issues
    • Domestic Policy
      • Economic Policy
      • Justice
      • Rights and Freedoms
      • Assisted Suicide (MAID)
      • Health Care
      • COVID-19
      • Gender Identity
      • Canada’s Political Tradition
      • AI, Technology and Innovation
      • Media and Telecoms
      • Housing
      • Immigration
      • Agriculture and Agri-Food
      • Competition Policy
    • Energy Policy
      • Energy
      • Environment
    • Foreign Policy
      • Israel-Hamas War
      • Ukraine
      • Taiwan
      • China
      • Europe and Russia
      • Indo-Pacific
      • Middle East and North Africa
      • North America
      • Foreign Interference
      • National Defence
      • National Security
      • Foreign Affairs
    • Indigenous Affairs
  • Projects
    • CNAPS (Center for North American Prosperity and Security)
    • The Promised Land
    • Voices that Inspire: The Macdonald-Laurier Vancouver Speaker Series
    • Dragon at the Door
    • Canada on top of the world
    • Justice Report Card
    • The Great Energy Crisis
    • DisInfoWatch.org
    • Double Trouble
    • Digital Policy & Connectivity
    • Managing Indigenous Prosperity
    • Defending The Marketplace of Ideas
    • Reforming the University
    • Past Projects
      • Canada and the Indo-Pacific Initiative
      • The Transatlantic Program
      • COVID Misery Index
      • Speak for Ourselves
      • The Eavesdropping Dragon: Huawei
      • Talkin’ in the Free World with Mariam Memarsadeghi
      • An Intellectual Property Strategy for Canada
      • Munk Senior Fellows
      • A Mandate for Canada
      • Confederation Series
      • Fiscal Reform
      • The Canadian Century project
      • Fixing Canadian health care
      • Internal trade
      • From a mandate for change
      • Size of government in Canada
      • Straight Talk
      • Labour Market Report
      • Leading Economic Indicator
      • Centre for Advancing Canada’s Interests Abroad
      • Indigenous Prosperity at a Crossroads
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Past Events
      • MLI Dinners
      • Great Canadian Debates
  • Latest News
  • Inside Policy
  • Libraries
    • Columns
    • Commentary
    • Papers
    • Books
    • Video

© 2023 Macdonald-Laurier Institute. All Rights reserved.

Lightbox image placeholder

Previous Slide

Next Slide

Share

Facebook ShareTwitter ShareLinkedin SharePinterest ShareEmail Share

TwitterTwitter
Hide Tweet (admin)

Add this ID to the plugin's Hide Specific Tweets setting: