Minority report by Labor Senators
Executive Summary
Datacasting
- The definition of datacasting, as it stands, is overly
restrictive, complicated and goes beyond restricting datacasting to services
that do not constitute broadcasting. Labor Senators believe that while
datacasting cannot be de facto broadcasting, the definition should be amended
to remove the artificial and unnecessary limitations on datacasting.
- Labor Senators believe it is crucial that this emergent industry
is not stifled in its development and innovative capacity by overly restrictive
regulation and that the benefits for Australia’s technological advancement,
improved consumer services and employment and economic opportunities should not
be constrained.
- Labor Senators oppose the genre-based content definition of
datacasting and call upon the Government to withdraw from that approach.
- Labor Senators support an approach that favours flexibility,
minimises barriers to entry, and allows new services to develop over time.
ABA regulatory
power
- Labor Senators note the ABA’s regulatory role in the area of
determining datacasting content. Labor Senators note the Bill denies interested
parties the ability to access stay powers or seek injunctive relief in relation
to decisions of the ABA. Labor Senators urge deletion of relevant exclusions in
the Bill.
- Labor Senators acknowledge the legitimate concerns of the
national broadcasters that the genre-based content definition of datacasting
might impinge on programming decisions properly the province of their Boards.
The definition of datacasting in the Bill gives occasion to this concern. Specific
provisions that might apply to datacasting by the ABC and SBS might more
appropriately be contained within the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Act 1983 and the Special Broadcasting Service Act 1991.
National
broadcasters and datacasting
- The nonsensical decision to impose datacasting fees on the
national broadcasters should be reversed, and they should be exempted from
payment of the fees.
- National broadcasters should be allowed to broadcast radio
programs for datacasting purposes.
Datacasting transmission
licences after the broadcasting moratorium
- Labor Senators believe it is important that the post-moratorium
arrangements for datacasting licences, which have a term of 10 years with a
5-year option, be considered by early review.
Multi-channelling
by the national broadcasters
- There is broad support for allowing the national broadcasters the
ability to multi-channel. Labor Senators see no valid justification for denying
the national broadcasters the ability to multi-channel, particularly when those
arguments are balanced against the resultant benefits.
Spectrum loan to
commercial television stations and HDTV
- There is some industry criticism of the Government’s policy
decision to loan spectrum to the commercial free-to-air television broadcasters
for the purpose of conversion to digital and HDTV.
- Labor Senators believe that the arrangements mandating HDTV
require early review to assess the continued mandating of HDTV broadcasting.
Enhanced
programming
- On the evidence, it is not an unreasonable conclusion that the
provisions of the Bill allow simultaneous, multiple broadcasts of distinct
substance which could constitute de facto multi-channelling. This allows the
free-to-air broadcasters to compete with the multi-channelling services offered
by the pay TV sector.
- It is clear to Labor Senators that these proposed provisions may
cross the boundary between what was conceived to comprise ‘enhancements’
pursuant to the Act and the Minister’s media release of 21st
December 1999, into the domain of de facto multi-channelling. The provisions
are substantively different from those previously proposed.
- Labor Senators believe that the Bill should be consistent with
the Minister’s previous policy indications of what would comprise enhanced
programming and the circumstances in which multi-channelling in the case of an
‘overlap’ would be permitted, so that commercial free-to-air stations do not
engage in de facto multi-channelling.
Reviews
- In recognition of the transitional nature of the legislation, it
is highly desirable that its consequences and efficacy are measured over the
coming years to ensure that Parliament’s policy objectives are being properly
and effectively implemented.
- Labor Senators believe that it is critical for the proposed
reviews to be instigated, completed and their findings considered in a timely
manner consistent with the industry’s requirement for certainty.
- Labor Senators believe it is pertinent for the reviews to be
transparent and accountable to Parliament. As such they should be statutory and
required by this legislation.
Community
broadcasting
- Labor Senators consider some degree of legislative certainty
consistent with the Minister’s undertakings for community broadcasters to be
warranted and appropriate.
Captioning
arrangements
- Labor Senators welcome the captioning requirements, which have
considerable benefit for a significant sector of the community.
- Whilst it is acknowledged that regional television broadcasters
will inevitably bear a disproportionate burden of costs of the captioning
requirements relative to metropolitan stations, the importance of captioning to
those with hearing impairments or deafness should not be under-estimated.
Introduction
Inquiry process
Interested parties have eagerly awaited the
tabling of the Broadcasting Services Amendment (Digital TV and Datacasting)
Bill 2000 for several months. The breadth of issues covered by the Bill has
proven somewhat overwhelming for those who have had to analyse the detail and
impact of the legislation over the last three weeks. The Committee received 38
submissions and held around 20 hours of public hearings over two days.
Detailed investigation of the Broadcasting
Services Amendment (Digital TV and Datacasting) Bill 2000, which is the
subject of this Inquiry, has been constrained by the timeframes imposed by the
Government. The Government has sought to have Parliament enact the Bill at the
end of a particularly eventful session.
The unreasonably short timeframe for conduct
of the Inquiry, combined with the Government’s undue haste, has compromised the
ability of relevant industries to adequately formulate detailed responses to
the many issues which the Bill addresses or raises.
It is in this context that Labor Senators have
identified the issues we consider critical to the efficacy of the Bill in
realising the policy objectives it explicitly seeks to achieve.
Development of commercial free-to-air television
broadcasting regulation
Regulation of the commercial free-to-air
television stations (and other broadcasting services) is achieved predominantly
by the Broadcasting Services Act 1992 (hereafter the “BSA”). The BSA and
Australian broadcasting policy more generally, are predicated on various
structural divisions within the broadcasting industry that are increasingly becoming
less discrete as a result of technological developments.
An example of the inherent complexities of the
framework for Australian broadcasting policy can be seen from the way the
important policy objective of promoting Australian content on commercial
television has been used to justify competitive restrictions for the entry of
new broadcasters. Commercial television stations have argued that the
imposition of the higher costs of Australian content on them necessitates
protection of their revenues. At the same time, the consequence of limitations
on competition has led to the risk of overly concentrated media ownership. In
response to the fear that concentration of media ownership is not in the public
interest, ownership and control of licences has been regulated. This chain of
regulatory responses is illustrative of the inbuilt convolutedness of the BSA.
Regulation of the commercial television
broadcasting industry has often involved a degree of technological specificity
that is inflexible for an industry where technologies are so rapidly
converging.
1998 legislative policy framework
The Government’s policy framework for the
introduction of digital television was established by the Television
Broadcasting Services (Digital Conversion) Act 1998 (hereafter “the Act”).
There has been, in the intervening period, an announcement of Government policy
by the Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts on the
21st December 1999 to effect and implement that framework. It has
been contended in evidence to the Committee’s Inquiry into the Broadcasting
Services Amendment (Digital TV and Datacasting) Bill 2000 (hereafter “the
Bill”), that the Bill contains significant variations from the policy framework
as originally legislated.[1]
Since the passage of the Act the importance of
some its provisions to the success or failure of the digital conversion has
become apparent. Notably, the Act provided for:[2]
- the requirement for digital transmission to commence on 1st
January 2001 for metropolitan broadcasters and by 1st January 2004
in regional areas;
- the loan of 7 megahertz of spectrum to commercial free-to-air
television broadcasters for the requisite period of analog and digital
simulcasting;
- a moratorium on the allocation of new commercial television licences
until 1st January 2007;
- mandatory quotas for digital transmission in high definition
format;
- prohibition of multi-channelling by the commercial broadcasters;
- ‘datacasting’ (provisionally defined as a service other than
broadcasting that delivers information) by existing broadcasters and new
players;
- the capacity for broadcasters to provide ‘incidental and directly
linked’ (undefined in the Act) enhanced programming.
Criticisms of framework
Since the introduction of the Television
Broadcasting Services (Digital Conversion) Act 1998 the bases for the
legislative provisions, which implement the Government’s policy objectives have
been criticised by sections of the industry, including suggestions that
achievement of the policy objectives is in jeopardy of failure.
In 1998, it was suggested that high definition
digital television would provide significant improvements in picture quality
and consumer services, it was anticipated that consumer demand would
consequently drive take-up of the technology and there was a presumption that
HDTV would be the predominant technology in Western Europe, the United States
and Japan.
It is yet to be seen whether these forecasts
prove accurate, and consumer demand drives the consumer take-up that is
critical to the affordability of the technology and success of the legislative
framework.
The criticisms of the high definition format
include international experiences involving disappointing results for HDTV. The
US is the only other market to have legislated for high definition television
and is therefore, with Japan, the only market with high definition content.[3]
The United States experience of high
definition television is suggested as evidence of the inefficiencies of HDTV,
particularly in the consumer marketplace. ASTRA has called HDTV “a dud” and
noted “it is not working in America and there seems to be no enthusiasm for
it.”[4] Mr. A. Encel of International
Dynamics agreed with this statement, and advised “HDTV is acknowledged as a
consumer product failure in the USA, and there are even fewer reasons for it to
succeed in Australia”.[5]
The Screen Producers Association of Australia has indicated that take-up of
HDTV in Australia “is likely to be extremely low, especially in the early years
of digital television” if the American experience can be extrapolated into the
Australian setting.[6]
In the UK HDTV was rejected and a
multiplexing, standard definition model was adopted. UK policy specifically
facilitates the entry of new players into the commercial market, and this is
suggested to be part of the explanation for the general consideration of the UK
digital scheme as a success, and for the resultant substantial take-up rates.
Similarly Europe has no plans for a high definition standard.[7]
In Japan, HDTV transmission has been delayed
until 2003.[8]
This suggests that there are some doubts remaining about the conversion to high
definition format digital television.
There is some support for removal of the
mandated HDTV transmission. Labor Senators believe it is important that this issue
be reviewed at an early opportunity.
Datacasting
Definition – criticisms
Considerable concerns have been raised with the Committee,
by a wide range of organisations, relating to the scope of the definition of
“datacasting” in the Bill. The Government has sought to confine datacasting,
the wisdom of which is dubious in view of the denunciation by a range of
interested parties of the means that has been chosen for implementing this
restraint.[9]
The Productivity Commission, in its recent report on broadcasting,
noted that the Government’s policy relating to datacasting “stifles competition
and innovation and is at odds with major tenets of mainstream broadcasting
policy”.[10]
It considers the regulatory restrictions:
“will be costly to Australian
consumers and businesses alike, .. delay consumer adoption of digital
technology and deprive business of opportunities to develop new products and
services for the world as well as Australian markets.”[11]
Telstra and the ACA[12]
have concurred with the Productivity Commission’s position that prescriptive
regulation is detrimental to the emergent industry and consumers. The Bill is
considered likely to have a negative impact on Australian consumers due to the
inability to provide the full range of new digital services, and on the
emergent industry whose viability is significantly limited by the provisions of
the Bill.[13]
Labor Senators believe it is crucial that this emergent industry is not stifled
in its development and innovative capacity by overly restrictive regulation,
with consequences for Australia’s technological advancement, improved consumer
services and employment and economic opportunities.
Criticisms of the datacasting regime include:
- the constraint that 10 minute segments cannot be “self-contained”
involves difficulty with objective definition of what is “self-contained”;[14]
- restriction of the entertainment value of datacasting is likely
to render it a commercially unattractive or inviable service to potential
datacasters and undesirable to consumers;[15]
- restrictions are likely to stifle innovation and technological
opportunities for consumers;[16]
- restricted definition of education will effectively exclude
children’s educational programs and programs that have considerable value to
the community;[17]
- objections to restriction of datacasting according to content
genre have been extensive;[18]
- the complexity of the definition will result in uncertainty; [19]
- the degree of technological specificity in the Bill will prevent
datacasters from responding to technological advancements and offering new
services as they become available;[20]
- the definition of information and whether it precludes provision
of opinion;[21]
- distinction between news and current affairs – a distinction
which is difficult and inappropriate to make and has no apparent policy
justification;[22]
- the definition of foreign language programming requires no
English content at all.[23]
Recommendation
Labor Senators
believe the definition of datacasting, as it stands, is overly restrictive,
complicated and goes beyond restricting datacasting to services that do not
constitute broadcasting. Labor Senators believe that while datacasting cannot
be de facto broadcasting, the definition should be amended to remove the
artificial and unnecessary limitations on datacasting.
Alternative definitions
There are arguments that the proposed legislative
categorisation goes beyond just prohibiting datacasters from broadcasting.[24]
To this end, alternative distinctions have been recommended to the Committee
including:
- removing the unnecessarily complicated restrictions from those
programs which are permitted to be broadcast (without Category A/B distinction)
whilst maintaining the 10 minute limitation of length;[25]
- complete removal of the genre-based restrictions, and general
relaxation of the limitations of the definition as detailed above.
Given the opportunity to define datacasting ab initio,
suggested definitions included:
- a definition based on the distinction between datacasting and
broadcasting being the interactivity of the former, rather than genre-based
regulation;[26]
- specify broadcasting as being the linear, passive, scheduled
production of television programs on a repeatable or ongoing basis, and
datacasting by reference to its not being broadcasting; that is differentiating
datacasting from broadcasting by reference to the known quantity of broadcast,
rather than by reference to the unknown quantity, datacasting; [27]
- definition of datacasting as “services which ... are not
broadcasting services”.[28]
The Government’s approach appears to widely define
broadcasting and expressly limit datacasting to a tightly limited range of
services that were characterised by the ACA as “worthy but dull”. The
Government’s policy approach fails to comprehend the scope of change in these
industries, the undeniable and legitimate need for datacasters to package their
products in attractive forms to succeed in emerging markets with products they
create.
There is nothing wrong with datacasters packaging content in
an attractive fashion. Labor Senators reject the argument of FACTS that this is
or should be the sole domain of free-to-air broadcasters.
Recommendations
Labor Senators oppose the genre-based content definition
of datacasting and call upon the Government to withdraw from that approach.
Labor Senators support an approach that favours
flexibility, minimises barriers to entry, and allows new services to develop
over time.
ABA regulatory power
The definition of datacasting in the legislation according
to Category A prohibitions and Category B restrictions is likely to cause a
“regulatory nightmare”[29]
from the perspective of potential datacasters, although the Federation of
Australian Commercial Television Stations considers the definition imminently
workable.[30]
Notably, the ABA considers itself well-positioned and
well-qualified to make determinations according to the genre-based definition.[31]
However as a matter of practice, the ABA will make determinations only where
there is a dispute over content transmitted by datacasting and decisions as to
content for transmission will, in the first instance, be made by datacasters.
As such, it is troubling that datacasters are so uncomfortable with the
existing definition.
Labor Senators are similarly concerned that the Bill denies
interested parties the ability to access stay powers or to seek interlocutory
injunctive relief in relation to decisions of the ABA. The ABA failed to
adequately justify this breadth of the ABA’s power in the context of concerns
raised by Fairfax Ltd that section 57 (Schedule 1) of the Bill does not permit
the courts to grant interlocutory injunctive relief relating to ABA
determinations that are appealed.[32]
The national broadcasters have objected to the impact of the
ABA’s regulatory role in datacasting on their ability and right to determine
their programming as they consider such decisions as properly being the
province of their Boards as regulated by their Acts.[33]
As discussed above, concerns at the extent of the ABA’s decision-making powers
have been disclosed to the Committee,[34]
especially in light of the perceived complexities and the difficulty in
objectively defining datacasting.
Recommendations
Labor Senators note the Bill denies interested parties the ability
to access stay powers or to seek interlocutory injunctive relief in relation to
decisions of the ABA. Labor Senators urge deletion of the relevant exclusions
in the Bill.
The definition of datacasting in the Bill gives occasion to
concern that the genre-based content definition of datacasting might impinge on
programming decisions properly the province of their Boards. Specific
provisions that might apply to datacasting by the ABC and SBS might more
appropriately be contained within the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Act 1983 and Special Broadcasting Service Act 1991.
The national broadcasters and datacasting
The national
broadcasters have expressed their opposition to the overall restrictiveness of
the scope datacasting permitted by the Bill; particularly that it prevents them
from broadcasting radio programs for datacasting purposes..[35]
This will preclude utilisation of that spectrum to deliver radio broadcasts to
regional and remote areas which presently cannot access these broadcasts.[36]
Additionally, the national broadcasters consider the
imposition of the licensing charge on them illogical, as should Government
funded broadcasters be required to pay that fee to the Government, the
Government will have to increase their funding accordingly.[37]
This is in the context of the recent triennial funding decisions by the
Minister, which have not provided funding for the fee. In effect, a refusal by
the Government to provide funding for payment for the fee would be a reduction
in the funding of the national broadcasters, whilst provision of the additional
funding would be tantamount to paying the datacasting fee to itself. This
situation is nonsensical and requires resolution.
Recommendation
That the ABC and the SBS be exempted from payment of the
datacasting licence fee.
Datacasting
transmission licences after the broadcasting moratorium
The decision that licences for datacasting will be for 10
years with a 5-year option poses a problem regarding the termination of the
moratorium period on broadcasting at the end of 2006. Potential datacasters
have expressed concern at the uncertainty of ongoing licensing arrangements.[38]
At this time, datacasters will hold datacasting licences, but what they will be
permitted to do with those is presently unclear. A review is scheduled into the
regulation of datacasting regulatory and revenue arrangements for 2007, however
precisely what services a datacasting transmission licence will permit should
be determined prior to that time so that datacasters have some degree of
certainty.
The Department has indicated that use of the spectrum
occupied by a datacaster will be able to be used “for any licensed services
under the BSA”. A datacasting transmitter licence will not automatically
convert to a broadcasting licence, rather it will leave open the option of
taking out a broadcast licence.[39]
Recommendation
Labor Senators believe it is important that the post-moratorium
arrangements be considered by early review.
Multi-channelling
by the national broadcasters
It has been made patently clear, by the national
broadcasters, that they regard multi-channelling as critical to their future.
The grounds for their request that they be exempted from the prohibition on
multi-channelling are noteworthy. The ABC and the SBS believe that the capacity
to multi-channel, pursuant to their Charters, is important because it will:
- enable them to better fulfil their Charters – giving viewers real
additional choice by allowing more programming to be showcased, and at times
that suit their audience;[40]
- allow the ABC and the SBS to program content with a regional
focus, and for the SBS to program additional Australian and multi-cultural
content with that focus;[41]
- be cost-effective;[42]
- encourage take-up of digital technology to the benefit of the
industry as a whole.[43]
The rationale for the decision to prohibit multi-channelling
by the national broadcasters is not easily ascertained. Interestingly the
commercial stations have indicated that they do not oppose multi-channelling by
the ABC and SBS provided that the multi-channelling is:
“... very definitely within their
charters and provided that the focus [is] very much on complementary
programming, rather than quasi commercial programming or programming that is
likely to compete in a serious sense with commercial television.”[44]
The ABC and SBS dispute that their ability to multi-channel
will have a detrimental impact on the pay television and free-to-air commercial
television broadcasting industries.[45]
FACTS indicated in evidence to the Committee that it competes with the ABC and
the SBS for audience, and with the SBS for advertising.[46]
Mr. S. Fist agreed; “if the ABC gets better, the commercials are going to lose
out”.[47]
Labor Senators consider that the SBS’s share of one per cent
of advertising revenue is insufficient to justify prohibition of
multi-channelling by the national broadcasters for competitive reasons.
Furthermore, Labor Senators do not believe the national broadcasters compete
with commercial broadcasters in the true sense of that word.
Other sections of the industry have come out in support of
permitting multi-channelling by the ABC and SBS. The Community Broadcasting
Association of Australia indicated its regret that multi-channelling of
national broadcasting services has been ruled out in the Government’s
legislative proposals. The CBAA has canvassed its interest in the potential
alternative carriage option for community television, arising from the national
broadcasters being permitted to multi-channel; namely the use of a digital
multiplex shared with one or other of the national broadcasters.[48]
The Screen Producers Association of Australia (SPAA)
conveyed its perplexity at the Government’s prohibition of multi-channelling by
national broadcasters, and its opinion that permission to multi-channel would
complement the broadcasters’ charters.[49]
The pay television industry does not support multi-channelling
generally, and considers any multi-channelling by the national broadcasters to
be in competition with their industry.[50]
Labor Senators do not agree with the subscription television
industry’s view that the national broadcasters are in competition with them,
and its conclusion that as such, the ABC and SBS should not be permitted to
multi-channel for the same reasons commercial broadcasters are prohibited from
multi-channelling. As such Labor Senators see no valid justification for
denying the national broadcasters the ability to multi-channel, particularly
when those arguments are balanced against the resultant benefits.
Recommendation
That the prohibition on the ABC and the SBS be removed to permit
them to multi-channel within the constraints of their respective Charters.
Spectrum
loan to commercial television stations and HDTV
There has been some industry criticism during the Inquiry of
the Government’s policy decision to loan spectrum to the commercial free-to-air
television broadcasters for the purpose of conversion to digital and HDTV
transmission, and of the policy decision to mandate transmission in high
definition format. The Television Broadcasting Services (Digital Conversion)
Act 1998 implemented the Government’s policy for digital conversion and
provided for transmission in high definition format. Subsequently, as reflected
in the Bill, the Government adopted a triplecast regime whereby broadcasters
are required to transmit digital broadcasts in standard definition, with
prescribed high definition quotas commencing in 2003.
Criticisms of the high definition requirement have centred
on international digitisation strategies.[51]
In the context of the international experience, the mandating of HDTV and the
consequent significant spectrum requirements are alleged to significantly
compromise the efficacy of the Bill in effecting the digital conversion.[52]
No other country in the world has mandated HDTV quotas.[53]
It has been suggested that there is no reason to mandate
HDTV and that it should be left to market forces to determine whether demand
will drive transmission in that format rather than to accept the restrictive
consequences arising from directing that it be provided.[54]
That HDTV is not necessary to receive new digital services
(it may in fact reduce the diversity of digital services)[55],
and that the improved picture quality is not distinguishable to the average
consumer on normal size television screens (and as such may not warrant the
substantial cost), are factors that will influence likely take-up rates in
Australia.[56]
The Federation of Australian Commercial Television Stations
(FACTS) verified its support for high definition to the Committee stating:
“We are effectively betting our
future on our ability to persuade Australian viewers to make the digital
transition with us. To be successful we will need to be able to offer viewers a
wide range of digital services. High definition will be very significant in
promoting digital television, although we would not expect large numbers of
high definition sets to be sold in the early years.”[57]
The production sector of the broadcasting industry (through
SPAA) has expressed concern at the mandated HDTV quota. Should high definition
continue to be mandated in the legislation, it is considered appropriate that
Australian content quotas be imposed to ensure that the Australian production
industry and the cultural importance of Australian content are retained in the
digital environment
The Community Broadcasting Association of Australia (CBAA)
has endorsed the Productivity Commission’s finding that the mandating of HDTV
and the restriction against multi-channelling will discourage consumer uptake
of digital.[58]
The ABC has noted that should they ultimately be permitted
to multi-channel the obligation to triplecast will essentially preclude them
from offering datacasting services due to the resultant unavailability of
spectrum.[59]
Recommendation
Labor Senators believe that the arrangements mandating HDTV
require early review to assess the continued mandating of HDTV broadcasting.
Enhanced
programming
It has been argued to the Committee that the scope of
enhanced programming permissible pursuant to the Bill is significantly wider in
scope than allowed under the policy articulated by the Minister for
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts on the 21st
December 1999.[60]
Those arguments have opposed the new definition contending that the enhanced
services permitted by the Bill are tantamount to multi-channelling, contrary to
the Government’s express policy to prevent multi-channelling.
FACTS has disputed that the provisions differ in substance
from the preceding policy announcement, and is of the opinion that the
provisions simply “spell out some of the things that were implicit or slightly
uncertain in the form of words that we have been operating on since 1998.”[61]
The Television Broadcasting Services (Digital Conversion)
Act 1998 provided for additional ‘incidental and directly linked
programming’ by commercial free-to-air television broadcasters. The term ‘incidental
and directly linked’ was not defined in the legislation.
The Minister’s policy announcement on the 21st
December 1999 stated that:
“The Government will allow the
free-to-air broadcasters to provide digital enhancements to their main
simulcast programs, provided they are directly linked to, and
contemporaneous with, the main program. This could take the form of
additional camera angles on a sports match, statistics about a player or
additional information about a segment in a lifestyle or magazine program. The
Government will allow the broadcasters to multi-channel when dealing with
“overlaps” – for example to allow the end of a sporting match to be shown even
if it runs overtime and clashes with a news bulletin which commences at
its scheduled time.”[62]
Category A enhancements
The primary concerns with the Bills provision for Category A
digital program enhancement content is the breadth of the definition to
include:[63]
- content in the form of text, data, speech, music or other sounds,
visual images or any other form or combination of forms,
- transmitted in digital mode,
- which has a “sole purpose” of enhancing a television program,
- has a subject matter which is closely and directly linked to the
subject matter of the primary program,
- is transmitted simultaneously with the primary program, and
- where the primary program is transmitted in analog and SDTV mode.
The pay TV industry is concerned that there is no limit on
the amount of video that can be broadcast and as such, significant amounts of
video programming would be permitted as the secondary program, amounting to de
facto multi-channelling.[64]
The fear is that ‘Category A’ program enhancements would allow broadcasters to
broadcast a re-run or different program of the same series of a sequential
drama program, sitcom or miniseries at the same time as the primary program.
Similarly the broadcast of a secondary program in which an actor stars could be
broadcast where that actor was a special guest on a primary program. These
broadcasts are considered multi-channelling by the pay television industry.[65]
The pay TV industry believes that this kind of enhancement is permissible under
the provisions of the Bill and believe the example in the section that ‘video
highlights from past matches’ would be considered a program enhancement
pursuant to ‘Category A’ supports their argument.
Category
B enhancements
‘Category B’ digital enhancement content is a program
providing simultaneous, live transmission of two sports events, in the same
sport, at the same venue.[66]
This enables free-to-air broadcasters to broadcast separate and distinct
sporting matches at the same time. The pay television industry considers the
impact of this provision to be particularly noteworthy for the reason that
sport programs give pay television a competitive edge, and this competitive
edge is used to justify the anti-siphoning regime.[67]
Overlap
multi-channelling
The Bill makes specific provision for ‘overlap
multi-channelling’ in the amendments to clause 6(8), Schedule 4, of the BSA.
The circumstances where this kind of multi-channelling is permitted are
considerably more extensive originally contemplated, as understood by the pay
television industry. The Minister’s announcement of the 21st
December 1999 clearly indicated that multi-channelling would be permitted where
events ran into a ‘news bulletin’.[68]
The new clause allows multi-channelling where the overlap is into any scheduled
program.
The concern that the provisions of the Bill might allow
simultaneous, multiple broadcasts of distinct substance, so as to permit de
facto multi-channelling[69]
is not an unreasonable conclusion on the evidence. This will negatively impact
the pay television industry, in its view, by allowing the free-to-air
broadcasters to use their free spectrum to unfairly compete with the
multi-channelling services offered by the pay TV sector.[70]
It is clear to Labor Senators that these proposed provisions
may cross the boundary between what was conceived to comprise ‘enhancements’
pursuant to the Act and the Minister’s media release of 21/12/99, into the
domain of de facto multi-channelling. The provisions are substantively
different from those previously proposed. Labor Senators believe that the Bill
should be consistent with the Minister’s previous policy indications of what enhanced
programming would comprise.
ASTRA and Fox Sports are seeking the deletion of Category B
enhancements, and amendment of Category A so as to exclude the simultaneous
broadcast of stand-alone, separate programs.[71]
The pay TV operators present an point of view which is
irreconcilable with that of the free-to-air industry. Their concern is for the
continued viability of the pay television industry, and they are apprehensive
at the impact the effective multi-channelling on their industry particularly as
to how it will affect their capacity to continue to provide a wide range of
sporting events, in regional areas in particular. [72]
The Bill in its present form is likely to have a detrimental
impact on the services offered by subscription television to Australians living
in regional and rural Australia, particularly in terms of sports programming.[73]
The reasons for this impact on the regions are stated to be:[74]
- that the commercial free-to-air broadcasters will have the
capacity to ‘starve’ pay TV of the rights to, for example secondary sporting
matches, by utilising anti-siphoning rules to their advantage; or
- the pay TV sports channels might decide not to broadcast those
programs because they do not have the metro market available to them or that is
being whittled away. This would result in a loss of existing programming.
Recommendation
Labor Senators believe that the Bill should be consistent with the
Minister’s previous policy indications of what would comprise enhanced
programming and when multi-channelling in the case of an ‘overlap’ would be
permitted, so that commercial free-to-air stations do not engage in de facto
multi-channelling.
Reviews
In recognition of the transitional nature of the
legislation, it is highly desirable that its consequences and efficacy are
measured over the coming years to ensure that Parliament’s policy objectives
are being properly and effectively implemented. Due to the doubts that have
been raised during the process of this inquiry, it has become apparent that any
reviews undertaken in analysis of the legislative scheme should be conducted as
early as practicable.
Concerns have also been elicited relating to the
transparency of these reviews. Transparency is best achieved by making the
reviews statutory and required by this legislation and hence open and
accountable to Parliament. Many witnesses before the Committee have concurred
with the view that it is appropriate for the reviews to be statutory.
The ABC has expressed a general preference for the reviews
to be statutory:
“We start from the premise that
the ABC reports to Parliament, so we will always be more comfortable in any
review that assumed that that was the process we go through.”[75]
There have been indications that there is a general
preference for the reviews to be done sooner rather than later in the interests
of certainty, that transparency of these review processes is critical, and that
it is, as a consequence, appropriate for the reviews to be statutory.[76]
ABA review – video/audio streaming
In the second reading speech,[77]
the Government indicated that the ABA would undertake, “over the next 12
months” a review of whether transmission of audio and video streaming are
regulated by the Broadcasting Services Act. How these transmissions are
characterised is determinative of the nature of regulation, or if indeed, they
are regulated at all by the BSA. The ABA has indicated that the terms of
reference for the inquiry have not yet been formulated, and the ABA has not
formally commenced the inquiry. [78]
The ABC has indicated that it would prefer that the matter
to be investigated was a matter for the Board. However, Mr. Shier, Managing
Director of the ABC, agreed that “if it was to be done by the ABA, much as I
would prefer that not to be the position, I think the review should be done
earlier rather than later”.[79]
The Australian Consumers’ Association indicated that it favours a statutory
review over investigation by the ABA.[80]
Overall there was a general eagerness within the industry
for the review to be completed without delay to provide certainty prior to the
commencement of broadcasting of the regulatory scheme applicable to video and
audio streaming. It is noteworthy that this issue reflects the difficulties
associated with technological convergence of the industry and the present
regulatory structure which is transmission mode specific.
HDTV review
The legislation provides for a review of the HDTV
transmission requirements in 2003 to assess the efficacy of digital uptake and
the mandating of HDTV transmission by broadcasters.
The pay television industry, represented by ASTRA, has
indicated that the review of the HDTV arrangements should be an open statutory
review. Furthermore, it should be brought forward immediately because, in
ASTRA’s opinion, HDTV is not going to work and once this is recognised
Australia can “get on with the digital development...”.[81]
The ABC, however, expressed the contrary view that it was
advisable for the review to take place later rather than earlier for HDTV to
allow for consumers to have opportunity to see the technology before take-up
rates are analysed, and policy changes made pursuant to that analysis.[82]
The apparent problems that broadcasters will face in
sourcing the requisite content for high definition quotas will have a
disproportionate impact on the ABC, in the opinion of the ABC. The ABC
anticipates problems with sourcing original content because much content comes
from Europe where an HDTV standard has not been adopted. The ABC cannot
commence production until probably 2003, hence a delayed timetable for the
review will suit the ABC.[83]
Recommendation
Labor Senators believe that the arrangements mandating HDTV
require early review to assess the continued mandating of HDTV broadcasting.
Simulcast review
The Broadcasting Services Act 1999 already requires a
review be conducted before 31 December 2005 into the amendment or repeal of the
requirement that a broadcaster must broadcast the same program in both analog
and digital mode during the simulcast period. It has been recommended to the
Committee that it is critical that analog transmissions cease as soon as
possible. This cannot be done, however if adequate levels of digital take-up
are not achieved. Accordingly, Labor Senators recommend that the implementation
of digital policy be closely observed with the aim of achieving analog
disconnection as soon as possible.
Review of datacasting arrangements
There are two reviews provided for in the Bill which are of
particular significance to datacasting. The Bill requires a number of reviews
to be undertaken before 1 January 2004, and one of these relates to whether any
amendments should be made to Schedule 6, dealing with datacasting services. In
light of the potential for this review to alter the arrangements applying to
providers of licensed datacasting services and holders of datacasting
transmitter licences, those interested in the emerging industry are keen for
this review to be completed as soon as possible. Timeliness will afford the new
industry with the certainty that it seeks.
Review of regulatory and revenue arrangements for
datacasting licences
The Bill provides for a review of regulatory arrangements
that should apply to, and the revenues to be raised by the Commonwealth in
connection with the operation of, a datacasting transmitter (under a
datacasting transmitter licence) to transmit licensed broadcasting services on
or after 1st January 2007.
The timing of this review appears to be tardy considering
the moratorium on the issue of broadcasting licences ends on 31st
December 2006. Fairfax lends its support to the significance of expeditious
completion of the review.[84]
Similarly, C & W Optus considers certainty for datacasting licensees to be
critical, and if a shorter timeframe for this review will bring that certainty,
then that is welcomed.[85]
Recommendations
Labor Senators consider it critical that all of these proposed
reviews are instigated, completed and findings considered in a timely manner
consistent with the industry’s requirement for certainty.
Labor Senators believe it is pertinent for the reviews to be
transparent and accountable to parliament. As such they should be statutory and
required by this legislation.
Community
Broadcasting
The Community Broadcasting Association of Australia (CBAA)
has expressed concern at the omission of provisions in the Bill for the digital
transition of community broadcasters.
The Minister for Communications, Information Technology and
the Arts announced on the 24th March 1998 that:
“... the community television
sector ... will be guaranteed free access to the spectrum needed to broadcast one
standard definition digital channel.”[86]
Since then, the Minister’s announcement of the 21st
December 1999, has been the only further indication that the Government intends
to fulfil its original promise:
“Community television will be
broadcast in digital. This will be done in conjunction with datacasting
services, as part of a ‘multiplex’.”[87]
In evidence to the Committee the Department of
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts conceded that the Department
has not been asked or directed to do the policy work on community broadcasting
which is preparatory to the technical work on the allocation and planning of
spectrum. Nor is the Department aware of any plans to allocate the promised one
standard definition digital channel in the next 12 months.[88]
The CBAA appealed to the Committee for legislative provision
of the regulatory detail that will apply to the digital conversion by
commercial broadcasters.[89]
Labor Senators concur with the CBAA that some degree of legislative certainty
consistent with the Minister’s undertakings is warranted and appropriate for
the continuation of this important industry.
It is pertinent to note that review of the arrangements
applying to community broadcasters will be necessary should the Bill ultimately
be amended to provide for multi-channelling by the national broadcasters.[90]
Recommendation
Labor Senators recommend that some degree of legislative
certainty consistent with the Minister’s undertakings be provided for the
community broadcasting industry.
Captioning
arrangements
Accessibility to broadcasting services is a crucial policy
objective. The Bill provides mandatory quotas for captioning for free-to-air
commercial television broadcasters which will empower those with hearing
impairments or deafness to understand programs. The National Working Party on
Captioning (NWPC) and Mr. N. Tayeh, who have long been campaigning for
increased captioning on Australian television, have welcomed this initiative.
Criticism has arisen on two grounds:
- that the Bill does not go far enough in that it does not
prescribe future increases in captioning quotas facilitating eventual full
captioning;[91]
- that the captioning requirements place an undue burden on
regional broadcasters.[92]
Compared with the United Kingdom and the United States,
Australia’s achievements in advancing the interests of those with deafness or
hearing impairments are deficient at best.[93]
That does not deny the fact that the provisions are a necessary improvement.
Regional broadcasters have expressed dismay at the
provisions arguing that the financial burden on their organisations is
untenable. They have submitted to the Committee that regional broadcasters
provide a higher proportion of local content in regional news and current affairs
than metropolitan stations. Consequently, they will be forced to either cut
into their already low profit margins or make the commercial decision to reduce
local content to the detriment of regional communities.[94]
Suggestions that remote stenocaptioning would overcome the
difficulties associated with attracting properly qualified staff to regional
areas were refuted by Prime and WIN Corporation. Prime and WIN consider the
impracticality of remote captioning (as a result of regional services’ last minute,
multiple news bulletins and the cost of transmission of the news to and from
the remote stenocaptioner) as excluding the viability of this option.[95]
Prime requested that the requirement for captioning of local
news by regional and remote broadcasters be relaxed until such time as
affordable technology is available to facilitate the process in a cost
efficient and affordable manner.[96]
Whilst it is acknowledged that regional television
broadcasters will inevitably bear a disproportionate burden of costs of the
captioning requirements relative to metropolitan stations, the importance of
captioning to those with hearing impairments or deafness cannot be
under-estimated. This is the cost of achieving an important policy goal, and
was provided for in the Act, which provided the framework in 1998. Broadcasters
have been given ample notice and opportunity to investigate the most efficient
means of achieving this goal.
Further, there is evidence that
the requirements imposed by the Bill do not represent significant change to the
existing captioning levels by the networks. The most significant consequence of
the Bill is that the captioning levels are now legislatively imposed and become
enforceable. Particularly for the Seven Network, the legislation does not require
significant change to existing captioning levels, and the Nine and Ten Networks
figures for overall captioning have not been improving over time. [97]
This supports the conclusion that legislative captioning requirements are
necessary for real industry improvements to the amount of captioned programming
provided by broadcasters.
Conclusions and recommendations
Datacasting
Definition
The definition of datacasting, as it stands, is overly
restrictive, complicated and goes beyond restricting datacasting to services
that do not constitute broadcasting. Labor Senators believe that while
datacasting cannot be de facto broadcasting, the definition should be amended
to remove the artificial and unnecessary limitations on datacasting.
Labor Senators believe it is crucial that this emergent
industry is not stifled in its development and innovative capacity by overly
restrictive regulation and that the benefits for Australia’s technological
advancement, improved consumer services and employment and economic opportunities
should not be constrained.
Labor Senators oppose the genre-based content definitionof
datacasting and call upon the Government to withdraw from that approach.
Labor Senators support an approach that favours flexibility,
minimises barriers to entry, and allows new services to develop over time.
ABA regulatory power
Labor Senators note
the ABA’s regulatory role in the area of determining datacasting content. Labor
Senators note the Bill denies interested parties the ability to access stay
powers or seek injunctive relief in relation to decisions of the ABA. Labor
Senators urge deletion of relevant exclusions in the Bill.
Labor Senators
acknowledge the legitimate concerns of the national broadcasters that the
genre-based content definition of datacasting might impinge on programming
decisions properly the province of their Boards. The definition of datacasting
in the Bill gives occasion to this concern. Specific provisions that might
apply to datacasting by the ABC and SBS might more appropriately be contained
within the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983 and the Special
Broadcasting Service Act 1991.
National broadcasters and datacasting
The nonsensical decision to impose datacasting fees on the
national broadcasters should be reversed, and they should be exempted from
payment of the fees.
National broadcasters should be allowed to broadcast
radio programs for datacasting purposes.
Datacasting transmission
licences after the broadcasting moratorium
The decision that licences for datacasting will be for 10
years with a 5-year option poses a problem regarding the termination of the
moratorium period on broadcasting at the end of 2006, and the licensing
arrangements applicable from that date. Labor Senators believe it is important
that the post-moratorium arrangements be considered by early review.
Multi-channelling
by the national broadcasters
There is broad support for allowing the national
broadcasters the ability to multi-channel. Labor Senators see no valid
justification for denying the national broadcasters the ability to
multi-channel, particularly when those arguments are balanced against the
resultant benefits.
Labor Senators do not believe the
national broadcasters compete with commercial broadcasters in the true sense of
that word, and that accordingly, there is no reason to deprive the national
broadcasters of the benefits multi-channelling will provide. Labor Senators
urge that the prohibition on the ABC and the SBS be removed to permit them to
multi-channel within the constraints of their respective Charters.
Spectrum loan
to commercial television stations and HDTV
There is some industry
criticism about the Government’s policy decision to loan spectrum to the
commercial free-to-air television broadcasters for the purpose of conversion to
digital and HDTV.
Labor Senators believe
that the arrangements mandating HDTV require early review to assess the
continued mandating of HDTV broadcasting.
Enhanced
programming
The concern that the provisions of the Bill allow
simultaneous, multiple broadcasts of distinct substance, so as to permit de
facto multi-channelling is not an unreasonable conclusion on the evidence. This
will allow the free-to-air broadcasters to compete with the multi-channelling
services offered by the pay TV sector.
It is clear to Labor Senators that these proposed provisions
may cross the boundary between what was conceived to comprise ‘enhancements’
pursuant to the Act and the Minister’s media release of 21st
December 1999, into the domain of de facto multi-channelling. The provisions
are substantively different to those previously proposed.
Labor Senators believe that the Bill should be consistent
with the Minister’s previous policy indications of what would comprise enhanced
programming and when multi-channelling in the case of an ‘overlap’ would be
permitted, so that commercial free-to-air stations do not engage in de facto multi-channelling.
Reviews
In recognition of the transitional nature of the
legislation, it is highly desirable that its consequences and efficacy are measured
over the coming years to ensure that Parliament’s policy objectives are being
properly and effectively implemented.
Labor Senators believe that it is critical for the proposed
reviews to be instigated, completed and their findings considered in a timely
manner consistent with the industry’s requirement for certainty.
Labor Senators believe it is pertinent for the reviews to be
transparent and accountable to Parliament. As such they should be statutory and required by this legislation.
Community
broadcasting
The Community Broadcasting Association of Australia (CBAA)
has expressed concern at the omission of provisions in the Bill for the digital
transition of community broadcasters, notwithstanding the Minister’s promises.
Labor Senators concur with the CBAA that some degree of
legislative certainty consistent with the Minister’s undertakings is warranted
and appropriate for the continuation of this important industry.
Captioning
arrangements
Whilst it is acknowledged that regional television broadcasters
will inevitably bear a disproportionate burden of costs of the captioning
requirements relative to metropolitan stations, the importance of captioning to
those with hearing impairments or deafness cannot be under-estimated. This is
the cost of achieving an important policy goal, and was provided for in the
framework Act in 1998. Labor Senators welcome this initiative which has
considerable benefit for a significant sector of the community.
_________________________
SENATOR MARK BISHOP
(A.L.P., W.A.) |
____________________________
SENATOR STEVE HUTCHINS
(A.L.P., N.S.W.) |
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