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BBC offers STV a licence-fee lifeline for local news bulletins – but falling ad revenues force a cut in hours

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Published Date: 17 June 2009
A LIFELINE has been thrown to STV to let it to continue to produce alternative news coverage to the BBC in Scotland – by allowing it to compete for funds raised by the licence fee.
STV currently spends around £7 million a year providing TV bulletins for its two regions covering central and north Scotland.

But it has been forced to cut back its coverage from five hours 20 minutes a week to four hours as a result of a fall
in advertising revenue brought on by the recession.

Scotland was announced yesterday as one of three UK TV regions where a three-year pilot would be run by using up to £5m a year of cash – being raised via the licence fee for the digital switchover, a large amount of which is underspent – to subsidise national news.

However, there is confusion about how this will work in practice. STV believes that, if it wins the contract, expected to begin in 2010, then it will make its news bulletins available to other TV stations and rival websites.

However, a UK government source told The Scotsman that the pilot would enable rival news outlets to bid to produce the news that goes out on STV.

Bobby Hain, managing director of broadcasting at STV, told The Scotsman: "We are very pleased that the Digital Britain report recognises the value of STV news to viewers in Scotland and lays out a pathway of safeguarding that news by introducing public funding.

"We have been campaigning for that and we are very pleased that our voice has been heard by the regulator and the government."

STV was also granted greater freedom to accept commissions from other broadcasters to produce TV programmes. Mr Hain said this would boost TV production north of the Border.

Jim Murphy, the Scottish Secretary, said: "Local news is an integral part of the broadcasting mix in Scotland and the lifeline which will be extended to STV – and which will allow it to sell programmes as an independent producer – means we will continue to see Scottish news from both the BBC and STV in Scotland and a thriving creative and production sector."

Labour MP David Cairns, chair of the all-party group on Scottish broadcasting, said the proposals would ensure competition for BBC Scotland, provide other sources of funding for STV and increase the number of programmes made in Scotland.

He said: "This report clears the way for financial support to come from the TV licence fee for other providers of Scottish news such as STV.

"The government recognises how critical this is in Scotland by making us one of the pilot areas for this radical new proposal.

"All in all this is a good report for the broadcasting industry in Scotland, but more importantly it is excellent news for Scottish viewers."





The full article contains 489 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 16 June 2009 10:08 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: The BBC
 
1

brianmca3,

auld reekie 17/06/2009 07:24:41
Jim Murphy, the Scottish Secretary, said: "Local news is an integral part of the broadcasting mix in Scotland and the lifeline which will be extended to STV – and which will allow it to sell programmes as an independent producer – means we will continue to see Scottish news from both the BBC and STV in Scotland and a thriving creative and production sector."
yes especialy when the tv stations only want to promote labour and sod the other political parties
back scratching each other to rid themselves of the fleas caught ,with sleeping together
2

sam the god,

17/06/2009 08:08:58
why should the bbc have the monopoly on the tv licence money it is there choice not to fund themself by adverts
3

Willie Mor,

17/06/2009 12:46:54
Kirsty Wark, Alan clemments, Douglas Fraser, Alan Sugar and many many more are all living comfortably thanks to the taxpayer funded BBC sinecure for Labour party supporters and their friends.

And now with ITV struggling in the recession and an election coming up, our great democrat Gordy Brown announces that he will divert some taxpayer money to keep the failing commercial news alive.

Wonder what the payback is if the private news stations don't sing the Labour party line - life line removal perhaps!

This corruption just goes on and on, and the little people seem to be able to do nothing about it.
4

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 17/06/2009 13:02:35
Why don't they double the licence fee and get rid of all the adverts on TV?

That would be a far better solution.

 

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