This Aug. 13 image provided by Sylvia Webster shows smoke rising from wildfires near Yellowknife, NWT.SYLVIA WEBSTER/AFP/Getty Images
Residents of the Northwest Territories are feeling the effect of the news vacuum on Facebook as they flee communities that are under threat by wildfires.
But industry observers say the regional media landscape was barren long before Meta – Facebook’s parent company – pulled news content from its platforms in Canada, and that the current situation highlights a long-standing dearth of local news coverage.
Up to 50 per cent of Canadians use Facebook to find out what’s happening in cities and towns across the country, Dwayne Winseck, professor of communication and media studies at Carleton University, said Thursday in an interview.
Meta’s decision to block news in Canada is irresponsible, especially in times of crisis, he said. “It’s reprehensible.”
An emergency situation such as the fires in the Northwest Territories underscores the importance of social media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp in disseminating news, Prof. Winseck said. “When these pathways to news are brutally shut down, as they have been with Meta, banning the distribution and sharing of news on its services here in Canada, we are right to be very concerned.”
Yellowknife’s 20,000 residents and two nearby First Nations have been ordered to evacuate by noon on Friday, as crews battle more than 200 blazes in the Northwest Territories. The wildfires have burned an area about four times the size of Prince Edward Island, but no deaths have been reported.
Meanwhile, news outlets have been unable to post on Meta’s social media sites since earlier this month after the digital giant, in response to federal legislation, began rolling out its restrictions on Canadian news. The federal government’s Online News Act requires some tech giants to pay for news content shared or repurposed on their platforms. In response, Meta decided it would simply block news to evade the law’s reach.
In a statement Thursday, Meta said Canadians can use its platform to get help and check on loved ones in times of crisis.
“People in Canada can continue to use our technologies to connect with their communities and access reputable information, including content from official government agencies, emergency services and non-governmental organizations,” the company said in an unsigned e-mail.
But Canadians can no longer access news on Facebook. Daniel Tsai, a lecturer in communication, culture, information and technology at the University of Toronto, said Meta’s actions are harming society and putting people’s lives at risk.
“People are not getting critical information such as what’s happening in Yellowknife, with the prospect of an entire town being burned down. It’s insane,” Mr. Tsai said.
“You have a town of 20,000 people that could be wiped out of existence, and no one can get any information on it through using social media apps like [Facebook]. It strikes me that this is a terrible decision by Meta. It shows how heartless and oblivious they are to their responsibility to society as a large corporation.”
For media industry observers such as Jeffrey Dvorkin, former director of the journalism program at the University of Toronto, the lack of news options for Canadians was a reality long before Meta’s ban. The dearth of local news on social media platforms such as Facebook merely reflects a larger crisis in the country’s media ecosystem.
Smoke from the McDougall Creek wildfire fills the air and nearly blocks out the sun in Kelowna.DARRYL DYCK/The Canadian Press
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Evacuees from Yellowknife are greeted by Aurora Borealis as they arrive to a free campsite provided by High Level, Alberta.Bill Braden/The Canadian Press
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The McDougall Creek wildfire burns in the hills of West Kelowna, B.C..DARREN HULL/AFP/Getty Images
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Residents who plan to shelter in place stock up on groceries as an evacuation order draws near in Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Residents board buses to the airport at the Yellowknife Flight Registration Centre at Sir John Franklin high school.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Evacuees from Yellowknife queue up to get gas at Big River Service in Ft. Providence, Alberta.Bill Braden/The Canadian Press
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People watch from downtown Kelowna, B.C., as the McDougall Creek wildfire burns in the hills above West Kelowna, B.C.Aaron Hemens/The Globe and Mail
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A satellite image shows smoke rising over Yellowknife, Northwest Territories on August 15, 2023.MAXAR TECHNOLOGIES/Reuters
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The City of Kelowna, B.C., declared a state of emergency overnight while fire crews responded to spot fires coming across Okanagan Lake.Shawn Talbot/The Globe and Mail
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Smoke from the McDougall Creek fire rises over Okanagan Lake, across from Kelowna, B.C.Joe O’Connal/The Canadian Press
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The McDougall Creek wildfire spreads around Okanagan Lake near Kelowna, B.C.Shawn Talbot/The Globe and Mail
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People watch from downtown Kelowna, B.C., as the McDougall Creek wildfire burns in the hills above.Aaron Hemens/The Globe and Mail
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People line up outside a Yellowknife school to register to be evacuated as wildfires threaten the Northwest Territories’ capital city.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Vehicles line up for fuel at Fort Providence, N.W.T., on the only road south from Yellowknife.Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press
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As wildfires threaten the Northwest Territories city of Yellowknife, the sky turns pink overhead.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Flames from the McDougall Creek wildfire advance during the night near Kelowna, B.C.Shawn Talbot/The Globe and Mail
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People wait in line at the airport as they prepare to be evacuated from wildfires threatening Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Yellowknife residents embrace as they wait to be evacuated from wildfires.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Lines at the airport in Yellowknife as evacuations continue from wildfires.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Aerial view of Yellowknife as wildfires threaten the Northwest Territories’ capital.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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A helicopter carrying a water bucket passes a sign that warns of forest fire smoke outside Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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An evacuee from Yellowknife arrives at the airport in Edmonton with her dog.AMBER BRACKEN/Reuters
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Yellowknife evacuee Jamie Fradsham, her daughter Ivy Droesse, her mom Jackie Fradsham and son Sterling Droesse at Edmonton’s airport.AMBER BRACKEN/Reuters
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A person stands in Okanagan Lake near downtown Kelowna, B.C., as the McDougall Creek wildfire burns.Aaron Hemens/The Globe and Mail
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Vehicles line up for fuel at Fort Providence, N.W.T., on the only road south from Yellowknife.Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press
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Warrant officer Mike Albright updates people waiting in a school gym who registered to be evacuated by plane from Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Keith Swirlle rests in his truck after directing traffic from Yellowknife in Fort Providence, N.W.T.Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press
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The road is closed north to Yellowknife from Fort Providence, N.W.T.Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press
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A long line of cars evacuating from Yellowknife wait to fill up with gas at Fort Providence, N.W.T.,Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press
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Beatrice Bernhardt, Yellowknife resident since 2013, in Calgary’s airport after evacuating.Jude Brocke/The Globe and Mail
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A resident takes a photo of the burning McDougall Creek wildfire from downtown Kelowna, B.C.Aaron Hemens/The Globe and Mail
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Woman and her dog watching the wildfire from downtown Kelowna, B.C.Aaron Hemens/The Globe and Mail
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A group of people watch from downtown Kelowna, B.C., as the McDougall Creek wildfire burns.Aaron Hemens/The Globe and Mail
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A person watches smoke from the McDougall Creek wildfire from downtown Kelowna, B.C.Aaron Hemens/The Globe and Mail
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Chuck Davidson of Matrix Aviation, loads supplies for firefighters in Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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A resident waters the trees on his property in the neighbourhood adjacent to Grace Lake in Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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A city worker places hoses along the firebreak in Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Animals are offloaded in Edmonton from a Buffalo Airways plane coming from the Northwest Territories.ANDREJ IVANOV/AFP/Getty Images
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Darlene and Wes Churchill are reunited with their son’s dog, Rosco, in Edmonton, from a plane in Yellowknife.ANDREJ IVANOV/AFP/Getty Images
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Volunteer Edmund Gill clears dry branches to create a firebreak in Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Residents set up sprinklers to protect their homes in the neighbourhood adjacent to Grace Lake in Yellowknife.JENNIFER GAUTHIER/Reuters
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Smoke from the McDougall Creek wildfire fills the air in Kelowna.DARRYL DYCK/The Canadian Press
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Smoke from the McDougall Creek wildfire blankets the area on Okanagan Lake, in Kelowna.DARRYL DYCK/The Canadian Press
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Local newsrooms in the North and the rest of the country have been deeply damaged by years of declining advertising revenue, which has largely migrated to companies such as Meta and Google.
The danger here, Mr. Dvorkin said, is that people will be forced to rely on information that cannot always be verified.
“We’re in a real dilemma,” he said. “And we’re going to see that now, especially with the whole city of Yellowknife being evacuated. Where are people going to get their information? How are they going to find out what’s the best way to get out of there? What is the state of the fires?”
One of the reasons why Facebook is popular as a news source, Mr. Tsai said, is because it takes in people’s personal information and preferences and its algorithms spit out messages tailored to that person.
Big tech and social media platforms, he said, have used that knowledge not just to become dominant players but have changed people’s news consumption and entertainment habits.
Mr. Tsai said for the short term, people can go directly to news websites and get verified and reliable information.
“People can consume news back the way it was before Meta and other social media platforms took over complete dominance,” he said. “We have to relearn how to make the wheel.”
In the long term, he said, Canadian media companies could unite to create their own social media platform and shun companies such as Meta and Google.
“I think now is the time to get creative, and not necessarily rely on government to come up with solutions … but to take another approach, which would be co-operating among competitors to leverage as many viewers or readers as possible,” he said.
“Have this coalition of news so that they work together and build a platform where they can all profit from it. That’s my take on it.”
Burned ground and smoke from wildfires can be seen from the air over the hamlet of Enterprise in the Northwest Territories. Meanwhile, thousands joined road convoys to flee a looming wildfire approaching Yellowknife.
Harry Miller is a writer and editor based in Toronto who has Ten years of experience in the journalism industry. Before coming to Canada News Media as a National Online Journalist, Miller worked as a senior writer and a reporter-editor with the Canadian Press and a breaking news reporter with the Toronto Star.
Miller currently holds two bachelor’s degrees, one in journalism from Ryerson University and another in communications and film studies from Carleton University.