Enforcement, or lack thereof, of the regulations, as well as legal exceptions and simple circumstance, has led to instances where some Canadian cable and satellite subscribers are able to receive the original American channels in Canada without simultaneous substitution. Cable providers with less than 2000 subscribers are not legally required to have simultaneous substitution implemented. Many viewers in the
Greater Toronto Area can pick up American stations from
Buffalo, New York, over-the-air, as well as high-definition versions of the stations from both Buffalo and
Seattle,
Washington, on cable television. Similarly, cable television viewers in
Greater Vancouver may receive unmatched HD stations from
Detroit,
Michigan, and
Rochester, New York. However, high-definition feeds are also subject to simsub, and such substitutions began to increase as local broadcasters performed wider deployments of
digital terrestrial television.
Rule changes and Super Bowl simsub ban On January 29, 2015, the CRTC announced changes to the simsub rules as a result of ''Let's Talk TV'', a series of hearings which mulled reforms for the Canadian television industry. While the
CRTC did not completely eliminate the simsub rules, "despite certain reservations", it did propose that its policies explicitly state that only over-the-air channels may invoke simsubs, and that broadcasters and television providers be accountable for programming lost from improperly implemented simsubs: providers will be required to provide rebates as compensation, and stations could temporarily lose their ability to simsub programming. The CRTC also proposed that, citing viewer complaints over their inability to see what they felt was an "integral part" of the event, and that many ads were often seen multiple times throughout the game, it would ban the use of simultaneous substitution for the Super Bowl beginning in
2017, thus allowing U.S. feeds of the event and its
commercials to co-exist with Canadian simulcasts. However,
Bell Media, the current Canadian rightsholder to the Super Bowl through
CTV, filed an appeal, arguing that the move would devalue its exclusive broadcast rights to the game, and violates the
Broadcasting Act, which forbids the CRTC from making regulations that single out specific programs. The NFL itself has backed Bell Media's complaints. The order implementing these new rules was issued on August 19, 2016. The prohibition only applies to the game itself; the typically extended pre-game and post-game coverage is not covered by the policy, and thus may still be simsubbed by CTV. On November 2, 2016, after being denied an appeal because the CRTC had not yet issued official policy when the suit was filed, Bell was granted the right to appeal the ruling in the
Federal Court of Appeal. The telecast of
Super Bowl LI was available directly from
Fox affiliates carried on pay television in Canada. On May 18, 2017, the NFL testified to the
United States Department of Commerce that the CRTC's August 2016 ruling was a violation of copyright protections under
NAFTA. The NFL and BCE continued to fight to overturn this policy in the Federal Court of Appeal. On December 19, 2017, the Federal Court of Appeal dismissed Bell Media's case, ruling that the CRTC's policy was reasonable. Bell Media once again filed for an appeal in January 2018, this time in the
Supreme Court of Canada. On May 10, 2018, the Supreme Court of Canada agreed to hear the NFL and Bell's appeal of the Federal Court of Appeal's decision. In an unprecedented step, the top court announced that it intended to use this appeal as an opportunity to revisit the law governing standard of review of administrative tribunals. The appeal was tentatively scheduled to be heard in December 2018. On October 1, 2018, Canada agreed to the
United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement. The trade deal, which replaces NAFTA, contains an annexe that would require the CRTC to apply its simsub policies equally across the programming that it covers, and as such, withdraw its policy forbidding simsubs of the Super Bowl. NFL commissioner
Roger Goodell had lobbied for the condition, and praised U.S. president
Donald Trump after the agreement was announced. Following the announcement of the trade deal, Bell requested that the CRTC withdraw the policy in time for
Super Bowl LIII; Bell was denied due to the pending Supreme Court appeals hearing, as well as the fact that the agreement had not yet been ratified. On December 19, 2019, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in favour of Bell Media, arguing that the CRTC overstepped its power under the
Broadcasting Act by attempting to "impose terms and conditions on the distribution of programming services generally". Therefore,
Super Bowl LIV in 2020 was subject to simsub.
Specific television providers In terms of television providers, the practice of simsubbing is implemented in different ways, depending on the company, especially in the case of satellite providers, which operate on a national basis and not regionally as cable providers do; •
Shaw Direct invokes simsubs according to a subscriber's
postal code, and is implemented by the receiver's firmware; this method enforces simsubs only in areas where they are legally needed. Beginning in February 2012, however, Shaw Direct began implementing simsubs for the
Global network's HD feed (
channel 256) for all of their high-definition subscribers, which affects ABC East HD (
WXYZ-TV), CBS East HD (
WWJ-TV), Fox East HD (
WUHF) and NBC East HD (
WDIV-TV). It is speculated that this is due to the 2010 purchase of the Global Television Network by
Shaw Communications. At first, no other channels were simsubbed; Shaw Direct later began implementing simsubs for
Citytv, but it still does not do so for
CTV, its main competitor. •
Bell Satellite TV invokes simsubs to all subscribers nationwide, implemented by its uplink centre (which also provides services for other service providers); by doing so, simsubs for a particular channel are implemented nationwide, regardless of where the subscriber lives or which feed the subscriber watches. Notably, Bell's feeds also invoked simsubs on network programming being simulcast by specialty channels owned by
Bell Media, such as
TSN. This has since ceased due to CRTC rules that explicitly forbid this practice. • Similarly,
Rogers Cable invoked simsubs on U.S. network affiliates for sports programming simulcast on its
Sportsnet specialty channels (such as the
2013 World Series on Fox in lieu of the
MLB International feed). Sportsnet has since reverted to using the MLB International feed, tying into the current involvement of Sportsnet personality
Buck Martinez (who serves as play-by-play commentator for Sportsnet's regular-season broadcasts of the
Toronto Blue Jays). ==Other uses==