Members of Parliament have called CBC president Catherine Tait to testify about her announcement the public broadcaster would cut 10 per cent of its workforce, while not ruling out bonuses for executives.
The House of Commons heritage committee unanimously agreed on Thursday to have the president of the public broadcaster address the cuts and potential bonuses.
The committee summoned Tait to appear at its first meeting in the new year following the holiday recess, but a date has yet to be set.
MPs on the committee also agreed to report to the House that given the job cuts, it would be inappropriate for the CBC to grant bonuses to executive members.
CBC spokesman Leon Mar said in an email Thursday that the public broadcaster was aware of the motion passed at committee.
鈥淲e look forward to answering the committee members鈥 questions,鈥 he wrote.
Because the public broadcaster is independent, members of Parliament cannot decide how CBC and its French-language service, Radio-Canada, spend their money.
The Canadian Broadcasting Corp., a Crown corporation, said Monday it planned to cut 600 jobs and not fill 200 vacancies over the next year as the public broadcaster grapples with a $125-million shortfall.
Following the announcement, Tait appeared on the flagship CBC 亚洲天堂 show 鈥淭he National鈥 and was asked whether executives would be getting rewarded this year despite the cuts.
鈥淚鈥檓 going to presume no bonuses this year,鈥 said host Adrienne Arsenault. 鈥淐an we establish that鈥檚 not happening this year?鈥
Tait responded: 鈥淚t鈥檚 too early to say where we are for this year. We鈥檒l be looking at that, like we do all our line items in the coming months.鈥
Mar confirmed following Tait鈥檚 remarks the public broadcaster will not be reconsidering the bonuses it would have paid under existing contracts.
鈥淐hanges to our existing compensation agreements with employees, whether union or non-union, are not under review at this time,鈥 Mar said in an email to The Canadian Press.
Liberal, Conservative and NDP MPs on the heritage committee expressed their shock over Tait鈥檚 comments.
鈥淎s a former CEO I cannot possibly imagine having fired employees before Christmas and then contemplated taking a bonus,鈥 said Liberal MP Taleeb Noormohamed on Thursday.
He also serves as the parliamentary secretary to the minister of Canadian Heritage.
鈥淭he government does not control the CBC and therefore we can鈥檛 tell them what to do,鈥 he said.
鈥淏ut I think it鈥檚 very important for us as parliamentarians to ask Ms. Tate those very questions about the appropriateness of executives contemplating bonuses when she does appear.鈥
CBC documents that were previously released through the access-to-information law show over $99 million in bonuses was awarded to employees at the public broadcaster between 2015 and 2022.
That includes $16 million doled out last year to over 1,100 employees, the highest amount in at least seven years.
CBC defines its bonus program as a 鈥渟hort-term incentive plan.鈥
It is intended to encourage 鈥渆mployee retention and to motivate employees to achieve or exceed business targets that are aligned with our strategic plan,鈥 the CBC spokesman said earlier this week.
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