Imagine for a moment a silly situation. Imagine that legislation is alive. Now imagine you sit down with the proposed Online Streaming Act, also known as Bill C-11, for a private evening chat. Just you, C-11, and a nice crisp lager. C-11 sits back and, reflecting on its life, the bill sighs, looks you in the eye, and quotes the famous author, Hermann Hesse: “Whither will my path yet lead me? This path is stupid, it goes in spirals, perhaps in circles, but whichever way it goes, I will follow it.”

I am sure we can all sympathize with our animated paper friend. For those of us following C-11’s meander through the House of Commons and the Senate, it has been quite the ride. The Liberal administration has introduced the bill in two different parliaments. It has been in and out of committees, and in and out of the Senate. Given C-11’s controversial nature, it has made the headlines quite a bit.

Because of all of this, it can be tricky to understand exactly what C-11 says now. So, we thought we would give you a rundown of exactly that – what the bill says.

In our view, the Senate made four amendments of consequence that the House of Commons considered.

First the good news:

While it is true that a cap-and-trade system does not meet the definition of a tax, the study did not label the statement misinformation for that reason (because calling a cap-and-trade system a “job-killing carbon tax” is an obvious bit of political hyperbole). No, it labelled it misinformation because the Council disagreed with the economic conclusion drawn by that statement – i.e., that a cap-and-trade system would reduce jobs. Unfortunately, all too often, laws about misinformation or disinformation (the terms often merge) focus on viewpoint censorship and not on creating actual transparency.

Now the bad news:

To sum it all up, the House of Commons has accepted minor improvements but rejected any amendments that would constitute major improvements. Despite Senate efforts, C-11 is still a bad bill. Giving a government body the power to regulate what people say online is just a bad idea. As Professor Michael Geist points out, if C-11 passes, Canada will be the only democratic country in the world to regulate user content.

Will Bill C-11 become law now?

The House of Commons has sent the bill back to the Senate after addressing the amendments mentioned above, but that does not mean the Senate will accept the changes. The Senate does not have to let C-11 move on to get Royal Assent and become the law of the land. The Senate has considerable constitutional power. The Senate may reject a bill for as long as it likes, and no bill can become law unless it has passed the Senate. It is conceivable that the Senate could just send Bill C-11 back to the House of Commons one more time for further amendments.

Typically, however, the Senate does not reject bills from the House of Commons over and over. There is an unwritten understanding that the unelected Senate should not ultimately stand in the way of the elected House of Commons. The Senate may lean toward passing C-11 because this is the third time that C-11, or its predecessor C-10, has reached the Senate. Of course, this is conjecture. Initial debate in the Senate shows that certain Senators are still quite unhappy about C-11 having the potential to give the CRTC the power of policing people’s online opinions.

So, while we all wait through yet another turn on C-11’s spiralling path, we ask you to keep following up on this issue by writing an Easy Mail to your Senators, urging them to re-introduce their amendments or vote against C-11 altogether.

It has been quite some time since we’ve talked about Bill C-11, the controversial bill that could affect online privacy and freedom of expression.

Despite the controversy and concerns surrounding Bill C-11, the government has continued to push for its passage. After passing from the House, Senators added an amendment to ensure that Bill C-11 will not regulate content that everyday Canadians post to social media. The Senate also added an amendment that would require age verification before a user could access pornographic content online. Both of these amendments would have significantly improved this bill but were rejected by the House of Commons.

The bill is now being considered by the Senate for the second time.

While the overall legislation is complex, our ask right now is simple: encourage your provincial Senators to either re-insert these Senate amendments or vote against this legislation entirely.

Go to easymail.staging.arpacanada.ca to send that EasyMail.

Bill C-11, also called ‘The Online Streaming Act,’ amends Canada’s Broadcasting Act. This broadcasting act from 1991 provides the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) with its mandate, including the power to regulate the Canadian broadcasting system (cable, tv, radio, etc.). It is also intended to “support Canada’s creators, artists, and creative industries, and ensures that Canadian music and stories are available and accessible.” The details of the Broadcasting Act are challenging, and while this is not ARPA’s area of expertise, there are some concerns about the scope of Bill C-11 that need to be addressed.