The Crisis of Public Interest Broadcasting: Lessons from the CPAC Cuts
The recent decision by the Cable Public Affairs Channel (CPAC) to cancel flagship programs like PrimeTime Politics and L’Essentiel serves as a canary in the coal mine for public interest media. When a non-profit entity dedicated to unfiltered political coverage is forced to cut 15 per cent of its staff, it signals a systemic failure in how we fund democratic transparency.

For years, the industry relied on a predictable per-subscriber model funded by cable, wireless, and satellite companies. Although, the rapid acceleration of subscriber erosion—which has nearly doubled since 2024—has left this model obsolete.
The Shift from Cable Subscriptions to Streaming Frameworks
The primary trend facing broadcasters today is the “hole” created by the abandonment of traditional TV. CPAC’s experience highlights a dangerous gap: the time between the collapse of classic revenue streams and the implementation of latest ones.
While the CRTC approved a modest $0.03 rate increase to help weather the storm, such adjustments are short-term fixes. The real future lies in the implementation of the Online Streaming Act.
The goal of this legislation is to ensure online streamers pay their fair share, creating a modernized funding framework. Until this is fully realized, non-profit networks remain in a state of precarious uncertainty, unable to predict long-term stability.
Why “Unfiltered” Content is at Risk
In an era of soundbites, the value of long-form, unfiltered coverage of parliamentary proceedings and political conventions is immense. CPAC has been the only outlet to carry all three main federal political parties’ conventions in their entirety.
The trend toward “lower-impact cuts”—such as cancelling nightly roundups to protect live archives—shows a strategic pivot. Broadcasters are prioritizing raw data and primary sources over curated analysis to maintain their core utility to journalists and the public.
The Regulatory Bottleneck and Democratic Impact
The current crisis is not just financial; it is regulatory. The delay in modernizing the broadcasting system has left entities like CPAC without a stable funding mechanism. This creates a ripple effect across the democratic landscape.
When staffing cuts affect journalists and hosts, the capacity to provide bilingual, comprehensive coverage of government functions diminishes. The loss of 12 staff members at CPAC, including host Michael Serapio, illustrates the human cost of these regulatory delays.
Future trends suggest that public interest media may need to move away from purely wholesale rates paid by TV providers and toward diversified funding models that include contributions from the digital streaming giants that have disrupted the market.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why were PrimeTime Politics and L’Essentiel cancelled?
The programs were cancelled due to accelerating revenue declines driven by a significant drop in cable subscribers and delays in modernizing the broadcasting funding system.

How is CPAC funded?
CPAC is a non-profit entity owned by cable companies and is primarily funded through wholesale rates paid by TV service providers on a per-subscriber basis.
What is the Online Streaming Act’s role in this?
The Act is intended to modernize the broadcasting system and create a new funding framework, ensuring that online streaming services contribute to the support of Canadian content and services.
How much revenue has CPAC lost?
CPAC has seen a total decline approaching 25 per cent of its primary revenue source over recent years.
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