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Rogers sends framework for TTC service deal to federal industry minister

The company says it鈥檚 confident it will be able to reach deals with the other carriers
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Telecommunications company Rogers Communications signage is pictured in Ottawa on Tuesday, July 12, 2022. Rogers has said it is committed to working with all carriers so they can provide service to their own customers through the network on the Toronto subway. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

Rogers Communications Inc. in May sent federal Industry Minister Fran莽ois-Philippe Champagne a framework for reaching a deal with other telecom providers over wireless service in Toronto鈥檚 subway system, the company said Monday.

In a post on its website Monday evening (June 5), the telecom company said it proposed a framework to reach agreements with all carriers to join the network under 鈥渃ommercially reasonable terms鈥 in a timely manner.

The company said it鈥檚 confident it will be able to reach deals with the other carriers.

However, Rogers said it also proposed a dispute resolution process in case it鈥檚 unable to reach deals with the other carriers. It did not share details of the framework or of the dispute resolution process.

In April, Champagne asked the executives of Rogers, Bell Canada, Telus Communications Inc. and Quebecor Inc. to respond within 30 days detailing their status on the issue of wireless service on the Toronto subway.

Rogers is buying the Canadian operations of BAI Communications Inc., which previously won the contract to build and operate the TTC鈥檚 public Wi-Fi and cellular network in 2012, but only Freedom Mobile had signed on to provide coverage to its customers through BAI鈥檚 network. (Freedom Mobile is now owned by Quebecor鈥檚 Videotron Ltd.)

That means customers not with Freedom have been unable to use BAI鈥檚 network other than for 911. Calls to make the system work for all Torontonians have surfaced after a run of violent incidents on the TTC.

Champagne said in his April letter that he wants the telecom companies to reach agreements that would allow any company to access the TTC network.

Rogers has said it is committed to working with all carriers so they can provide service to their own customers through the network, which Rogers is upgrading.

The existing network covers around a quarter of the subway鈥檚 underground tunnels. Rogers will also build a 5G network for the entire system.

After Champagne鈥檚 letter posted to Twitter April 19, Bell president and CEO Mirko Bibic said his company would only take part in the network if it would have a chance to help build it with the other carriers. At the time, Telus said it agreed that 鈥渁 consortium approach to building the TTC network鈥 would be the best way forward.

The TTC rejected that proposal, calling it a 鈥渘on-starter.鈥

Rogers president and CEO Tony Staffieri has said the company would not prevent any of the other telecom companies from offering service on Toronto鈥檚 subway system once Rogers has control of the infrastructure.

In the post Monday, Rogers said the current network can鈥檛 handle customer traffic from the three major carriers, but that it signed a deal to modernize and expand the network so that everyone, regardless of their carrier, will have full wireless coverage.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 5, 2023.

Companies in this story: (TSX:RCI.B)

The Canadian Press





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