Canadian Telecoms Will Try to Justify Their 'Ripoff' TV Plans Today (vice.com) 141
Starting today, Canada's top telecom companies will have to answer to the government for "skinny" TV packages -- more popularly known as "ripoff" by Canadians. Motherboard reports: In 2015, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) ruled that companies must offer a $25 "skinny" cable package, partly to benefit people earning a lower income. However, additional fees and installation charges added up so that the packages often cost a lot more than that -- in some cases, up to $100 per month. In response, Canadians called bullshit and complained to the CRTC en masse. Over two days of hearings beginning on Wednesday, Canada's top cable providers will have to prove that their skinny plans are in compliance with the CRTC's standards and that their packages meet the "spirit" of the skinny initiative. These hearings are part of the regulator's annual broadcasting license renewal process, meaning that if the companies aren't compliant, they could theoretically lose their license to operate in Canada.
This almost makes me want to move to Canada... (Score:2)
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There's no such thing as unlimited media streaming, and prices are usually $30/gigabyte at best for prepaid.
See for yourself. Here are comanies that offer full nation-wide coverage (not just small urban areas). Make sure you check the prices for additional data.
Telus [telus.com], Bell [www.bell.ca], Rogers [rogers.com], Virgin [virginmobile.ca], Koodo [koodomobile.com].
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It is cheaper to buy an unlock phone and go in the US to take a tmobile plan, then use it in Canada.
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For example SaskTel, which operates only in the rather small (population-wise) province of Saskatchewan, has towers that cover 94% of the populated area of the province. Now, how many towers does "nation-wide" carrier Bell have in Saskatchewan? How many does "nation-wide" Telus? Answer: Zero.
While roaming in Saskatchewan, Telus and Bell customers use SaskTel towers. While
Re:This almost makes me want to move to Canada... (Score:5, Insightful)
Socialism! Or at least a stronger version of it than you're used to. The first question when I go to a doctor is 'How can I help you' not, 'Lemmie see your insurance card'.
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When I go, the doctor sheepishly tells me I can't be helped because my medical records were locked when my insurance claim was declined, and I can't continue talking to the doctor until I straighten out my past-due bill. American healthcare at its finest!
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I call bullshit. Medical records don't get "locked" for non-payment, and any random doctor that you go see isn't going know if you've paid your bill in the past. Now if you're saying your current primary care physician won't see you again until you pay your bill, sure that seems reasonable, you have to keep the lights on, however just because you haven't paid a bill doesn't mean you can't go to another doctor, or the ER (not suggested). If you think that records are locked and patients can't see doctors
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Computerized medical records DO get locked out from access along with all other records in the system when flagged by accounting as past due. At least that is the default with two of the largest billing and records systems.
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That's nice. I am glad it works for you, for a sample of how it would work in the US, take a look at any recent story about medicare/medicaid or the VA health system, as those are examples of socialized medicine in the US.
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12 years later and my new doctor wants to get it dealt with... I'm back on a waiting list for the same doctor that brushed me off before.
Some competition is not always a bad thing.
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Whats going on with the cable companies isn't socialism... its customer protection... "basic" cable prices have sky rocketed and this is how the regulatory body is bringing them back in line...
It would be nice to see one or two of them to lose their licence to operate over this so they will stop screwing customers over...
25$ basic cable that has nearly 75$ in service charges? Come on now..
Re: This almost makes me want to move to Canada... (Score:2)
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Well, that's the trade off isn't it? Some things are natural monopolies due to infrastructure costs - you don't want a dozen different companies all putting up their own utility poles or digging their own trenches, even if they could somehow do so profitably(which they probably couldn't). So instead you have three choices:
1) Leave them unregulated and let one company abuse the client-base as badly as they can without making it profitable for a competitor to step in - with the understanding that the monopo
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"Breaking Bad, Canada" would be a very short show.
http://imgur.com/MKybStQ [imgur.com]
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Your meme is garbage. Let me tell you what would happen.
You've got cancer, you have an appointment with a specialist in 5-7 weeks. Providing of course it's not stage 4 cancer, you're free to choose a variety of treatments at your specialists discretion. Now, if it *is* stage 4, you're easily looking at 5weeks to 15 weeks before seeing a specialist, then up wards of another 15 weeks before they start the targeted radiation therapy to reduce the cancer size so it's not so big and you can have a few months
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The first question when I go to a doctor is 'How can I help you' not, 'Lemmie see your insurance card'.
It's the secretary who asks you for the medicare card. And, believe me, you won't go past her if you don't have it...
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Unfortunately, "how can I help you" is followed by, "come back in a week" so the doctor can bill a second visit to the province.
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Unfortunately there is a lot of truth to this.
Recently i tried to find a family Dr. After being "interviewed" for 10 mins, and flat out told that NO, i may not ask questions.. at the end i was told to book an appointment "next week" to ask the question i had originally went there for. i was also informed that i may ask only one question per appointment. This is a great use of my time.. waited for 25 mins, did a "meet and great" for 10 mins, and told to book two more appointments so i can wait another 25
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Considering my question was around why my shoulder was sore, no, it did not answer my question.
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I can tell you want the doctor will say:
Don't do anything with that arm/shoulder for a week, come back and then we'll see how it is. Oh, you have to use both arms for your work. Can you take the week off?
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Sounds pretty much exactly like the typical doctor's appointment in the US. I think that aspect of medical abuse has less to do with socialism or capitalism than with perverse incentives of the billing structure. If doctors (or hospitals) get paid by the visit, they're going to act to maximize visits, regardless of who is paying. Making patients pay out of pocket might mitigate things a bit, but only a bit, as they're already paying "out of pocket" in terms of copays and lost income/opportunities while si
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I found the US system to be more friendly to be honest. At least there i could see a "specialist" without having to go find a "family dr" and get them to refer me costing me time and several visits.
Here (Ontario, Canada) it really does seem to be around maximizing the number of trips you make. That may be OK, but they waste a huge amount of your time as they book an appointment at 10:00 but wont see you until it is closer to 11:00. If you wanted to see me at 11:00, why not just book the appointment then?
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It certainly does sound like there's some playing to perverse incentives that needs to be addressed, but still a huge step up from having a large portion of the population be denied medical care entirely because they can't afford it. The ACA(Obamacare) in the US helped dramatically, but there's still large gaps where people have too much income to qualify for government insurance or insurance assistance, but too little to be able to afford private insurance worth the name. I've heard the $15k-$25k income
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Socialism! Or at least a stronger version of it than you're used to. The first question when I go to a doctor is 'How can I help you' not, 'Lemmie see your insurance card'.
Apparently you don't live in Canada. Let me show you want happens when you go to a doctor, you hand them your insurance card. It looks like this: If you're from Ontario. No you don't get free treatment if you don't show up without one. [blogspot.com] The first thing they ask you for is...did you guess "your insurance card?" No? You poor deluded soul. You're billed directly if you don't have one, if you've been to a healthcare provider in your area(doctor/hospital) in the last 30-45 days they'll waive billing for 90d
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Your doctor;s office is supposed to swipe your OHIP (assuming you are in Ontario) every single time you show up.
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Socialism! Or at least a stronger version of it than you're used to. The first question when I go to a doctor is 'How can I help you' not, 'Lemmie see your insurance card'.
Not socialism when you have only 1 national provider and 10 large provincial providers. Your choice is only A or B
Re:This almost makes me want to move to Canada... (Score:5, Informative)
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http://www.factcheck.org/2009/... [factcheck.org]
Re: This almost makes me want to move to Canada... (Score:2)
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Re:This almost makes me want to move to Canada... (Score:4, Informative)
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The wait times are tracked and have targets. In Ontario the goal is 14 days from referral to seeing a specialist, and 28 days from seeing a specialist to starting treatment. 80% of people get to see a specialist within 14 days, and 70% start treatment within 28 days. That's an average for all types of cancer. Some do better, some do worse (e.g. with skin cancer is a bit less than 50% of people start treatment within 28 days). These numbers are published every month, and you can even get a breakdown by hospi
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Or if you're in the US, hope you don't get cancer because most people can't afford medical insurance plans that would cover all the necessary costs.
Of course, not every social program is required to copy from Canada. Our Medicare/Medicaid in the US is not bad, if only it could be expanded to cover more than old people. You will always be able to get better care if you're rich though, but that's not the goal of social medical programs.
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>You just have to live in a state that signed up for it
And be poor enough to qualify. Which is pretty damn poor (generally 138% of the Federal Poverty Level, which currently translates to an annual household income of $16,243, or one person working full time at $7.80 per hour.)
What would be a nice compromise is if *anyone* could buy into Medicaid at whatever their average cost-per-person is, the so-called public option that was dropped from ACA. That would help keep the private insurance companies hones
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Most people in the U.S. NO LONGER have medical insurance through their employer. The ACA made insurance policies too expensive for any employers but the largest corporate giants.
The personal cost for a mediocre policy subsidized by an employer is now as high as purchasing an individual policy was before the ACA. Out of pocket cost went from $470 a month to $1450 a month for a $1500.00 deductible with 20% co-pay thereafter with implementation of the ACA. If you want health
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A friend of mine had colon cancer, clinic visit in morning, straight to hospital for CT scan, and in the operating room that evening. Three (I think) operations and other treatments later and he's now cancer free. Total out of pocket expenses, $0.00.
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You want to move to Canada because the CRTC legislated $25 skinny basic cable packages and the telcos responded nastily by bundling a handful of local channels with some streaming radio? In Toronto or Vancouver, you probably get better channel coverage using an HD antenna... for free.
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Well the CRTC did open up the NOCs for the incumbents (Bell, Rogers, Telus, etc) so that the other ISPs use their wires for the last mile so we have a choice of ISP here. I haven't been with a telco or a cable company in over 15 years. I wouldn't say the prices are great compared to Europe but I'm paying less for my Internet access over cable than if I went directly to the cable company.
I hope that the CRTC expands their ruling to fibre.
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It's not even 30/10 here. It's 30/5 and it's $62
http://www.vmedia.ca/en/intern... [vmedia.ca]
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The only reason why that happened was because the government of the day(conservatives) threatened to rip the CRTC's mandate away on their ability to open up areas like that, and they were going to create a new parliamentary body to specifically deal with it. That was also at the same time that the CRTC was going humm-hawww-lllaaaaa... and listening to what Bell and Rogers were telling them, and were going to jack up the GAS and last mile rates so high that you'd have been paying twice the cost of what thos
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"Well, if it wasn't so cold. :) "
Is your area under yet another "heat warning"?
http://www.google.org/publical... [google.org]
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"Well, if it wasn't so cold. :) "
Is your area under yet another "heat warning"?
It may be warm in Canada now, but it's all the frozen stuff in multiple months of winter that I don't like. Sure, it's in 90's (F) where I am now, but I can deal with that; I just don't like it to be below freezing.
Re: This almost makes me want to move to Canada... (Score:1)
It's called the FCC.
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Forget it. The CRTC is late to the party.
I mean, in Canada, you are forced to buy the cable boxes they sell - and while one Canadian provider supports say, TiVo, the other's don't, and no, you CANNOT activate a non-provider provided box - the providers don't allow it. Even though they're the same boxes you can buy in the US. So if you want TiVo, or Ceton, or HDH
There are low income Canadians? (Score:1, Funny)
But how? Canada is a socialist utopia?
Re:There are low income Canadians? (Score:5, Interesting)
High and low are relative terms, knucklehead. "Low income" in Canada is about a 25% higher actual income than "low income" in the US.
http://www.demos.org/blog/1/5/... [demos.org]
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Are you retarded? Unless they're getting creative with their shopping they're spending Canadian money in Canada. The exchange rate is irrelevant.
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Having worked in Canada on a Visa; I have a good feeling for the differences between the U.S. and Canada. Canadian taxes take a larger bite out of the paycheck but, if you are a Canadian citizen, you actually get some value for the taxes. The U.S. federal government tends to squander way too much on pork barrel projects and let the infrastructure decay.
If you are not a citizen; it is extremely hard to get medical care in Canada anywhere but in an emergency room. At least in O
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its much harder to end up in the street with no way to bounce back, or be born completely fucked from the get go.
But its possible to be at an income level low enough that a tiny home, food, and health care is all you have. Homeless people in Canada generally either really fucked up, or god REALLY unlucky, not just a little.
Not like in the US where if you fuck up (not just heroin addict kind of fuck up), you have very little safety net (beyond a couple of super expensive social safety net placebos that only
I've got the best deal! (Score:5, Interesting)
$0
Cord cut years ago and it's so much better to live in a world where commercials are a novel occurrence (like watching TV in bars/family homes).
I spend much of the difference on media (Bluray, yes I still buy dead-dinosaur-discs) and streaming services.
Theoretically (Score:5, Insightful)
> These hearings are part of the regulator's annual broadcasting license
> renewal process, meaning that if the companies aren't compliant,
> they could theoretically lose their license to operate in Canada.
Just like Hillary Clinton could "theoretically" go to jail for running her own email server for government business. Don't worry about the fat cats. They just need to shoot a round of golf with the CRTC commissioners, and nothing will happen.
Well... (Score:3)
Re:Well... (Score:5, Informative)
According to the corporate world, you're not paying enough if you still have money and/or all of your internal organs.
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According to the corporate world, you're not paying enough if you still have money and/or all of your internal organs.
Still too long, try:
According to the corporate world, you're not paying enough
Because I'm sure that even if you don't have any money or internal organs left, they'd find a way to make you pay more...
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And which cable company is it that you work for? You work someplace with office cuties!? Those are banned at my workplace.
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The tl;dr (Score:2)
Canadian Government imposes a price ceiling on a market, then proceeds to run around like a chicken with its head cut off wondering why the markets managed to react the way they did.
Price ceilings and price floors have predictable consequences, and for some reason we keep ignoring them.
It's also a great way to reduce competition, a direct result of left-shifting the supply curve of the supply/demand plot.
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Actually what happened is every vendor on the planet turned around and bared their collective asses at every BDU and tried to extort them, AMC is asking X dollars a subscriber (whether they subscribe to AMC or not) [I'm not gonna disclose the amount], but it's more than the price of the damn channel a'la carte and they are playing chicken like I imagine they did with Dish years back. And that is just one; imagine 100 hungry jackals who both want to be in the under 25 channel range and want to be paid for
Re: The tl;dr (Score:1)
Bullshit, what you say would be true if they had only offered skinny packages containing shitty unwanted channels, but charged the correct price. Instead they tacked on a bunch of fees for the sole purpose of making free money. They already have an infrastructure built, they have minimal upkeep costs, and very little operating costs. There's no excuse for how they handled the situation. The correct response to the market pressures was to reduce or change the channels in the packages until it was cost ef
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How about letting monopolies charge whatever they want. The market will sort it out, right? Has that ever worked? Ever?
The monopoly telecoms in Canada were, and still are, given a great deal in concessions and also protection from foreign competition. The government (aka the people) has every right to impose rules and restrictions on their operations.
Let them charge what they want (Score:1)
TV is a luxury and not a requirement. Plus there are ways to view some channels without cable or satellite.
Fix this before Trump wins (Score:2)
A much better approach (Score:2)
Then when the telcos catch their breath the CRTC could then tell them that this will be reviewed every 6 months and if the general con
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"Mettle". Or were you suggesting that they were miners?
Prepare for Variations of This (Score:2)
"But we reeeeeeeaaaaaaallllllly like money, and it's so much sweeter when we've hornswoggled it from people who can barely afford it."
Bullshit! (Score:2)