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It said the record shows the most vulnerable members of the public are seniors, people with disabilities and Canadians whose first language isn’t English or French.

The report was compiled after five days of testimony at public hearings in October and months information gathering by the CRTC.

The inquiry focused on the sales practices of 12 Canadian providers of wireless and internet services, with much of the attention focused on BCE’s Bell Canada — the country’s biggest telecommunications company.

Bell said repeatedly in documents and testimony it has a stringent code of conduct for employees and contractors and a relatively good track record, but that it could be improved.

Other publicly traded companies under scrutiny were Rogers Communications, Telus Communications, Quebecor’s Videotron, Cogeco Communications and Shaw Communications.

The 41-page report doesn’t spell out which companies have the worst track records.

Instead, the CRTC said it plans to follow up its report with measures to address the problems identified through the inquiry — although many of them will require additional, time-consuming regulatory proceedings.

Among the most certain actions is a “secret shopper” program the CRTC plans to create to periodically target specific sales channels or locations across Canada.

“The CRTC intends to publish the results of the secret shopper program for consumers to use as another piece of information when making decisions about their communications services,” the report says.