You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Britain
Alarm over BBC future as UK proposes fee changes
2020-02-06
Elections have consequences, as they say. Especially for organizations that planted their flag firmly on the wrong side.
[AlAhram] The consultation comes at a particularly challenging time for the BBC

The British government on Wednesday announced plans to stop prosecuting people who do not pay the BBC's compulsory subscription fee, sparking concerns about the broadcaster's future funding.

Culture Secretary Nicky Morgan said that in an era of streaming services such as Netflix, all public service broadcasters "must adapt".

And she said it was "an anachronism" that anyone refusing to pay the licence fee -- an annual levy on everyone watching BBC television -- could face a fine or even jail.

But the proposal to decriminalise non-payment sparked alarm, against a backdrop of tensions between the BBC and Prime Minister Boris Johnson
...pro-Brexit British prime minister, succeeding no-Brexit Theresa May. BoJo is noted as much for his sparkling personality and his hair as for his Conservative policies....
's Conservative Party.

The Tories have accused the broadcaster of political bias -- a charge it denies.

Johnson refused to take part in a major BBC interview in December's election, while ministers are now boycotting the flagship BBC news show, Radio 4's "Today".

Currently set at £154.50 (183 euros, $202) a year, the licence fee generated £3.69 billion for the BBC last year, allowing it to operate free from commercial constraints.

In a speech in London, Morgan admitted that removing the threat of prosecution would "almost certainly" see a funding cut.

The BBC previously said it would cost around £200 million.

But Morgan denied the proposed change was "any kind of attack on the BBC", which she said was an "incredibly important organization".

The corporation's latest annual report found that 91 percent of UK adults use BBC television, radio or online each week, for an average of 18 hours -- both down slightly on previous years.

'UNDERMINING THE BBC'
The consultation, for changes due to come into effect in April 2022, comes just five years after a review into licence fee enforcement recommended no change.

"There is a question about what issue this repeat consultation is trying to solve," a BBC spokeswoman said.

Philippa Childs, head of the broadcasting trade union Bectu, said it "makes no sense".

"It appears it is wholly motivated by the current government's apparent obsession with undermining the BBC at every opportunity," she said in a statement.

Morgan noted that in 2015, a licence fee was not required to watch BBC content online. Since then, the BBC has also decided to scrap free licences for people aged over 75.

But Tracy Brabin, culture spokeswoman for the main opposition Labour party, warned: "The future of the BBC is under serious threat from this Conservative government.

"Decriminalising non-payment of the licence fee will leave the corporation without a predictable income and potentially hundreds of millions of pounds short.

"The BBC as a public broadcaster is highly valued and something we should fight to protect."

The consultation comes at a particularly challenging time for the BBC.

Its director-general, Tony Hall, is stepping down later this year and it recently announced plans to cut 450 newsroom jobs.

The licence fee model is guaranteed until 2027 but the government has indicated it is looking at different ways to do this in future.

In 2018, more than 121,000 people were convicted of evading the licence fee and fined an average of £176, the government said.

The BBC said only five people in England and Wales were placed in durance vile
Drop the rosco, Muggsy, or you're one with the ages!
for non payment of such fines.
Related:
BBC: 2020-02-05 'My African name stopped me getting job opportunities'
BBC: 2020-02-04 Mark Steyn - Rooting for Rush
BBC: 2020-02-04 We bought a crumbling French château - but restoring it was no fairytale
Posted by:trailing wife

#14  Brits get ready for pledge breaks.
Posted by: Abu Uluque   2020-02-06 11:11  

#13  I'm out in the boonies and the only source of high speed internet is Comcast which requires I take basic cable TV. Well, that includes the local tv stations that enjoy a tax on the cable because they obviously don't make enough money from commercial open broadcast under FCC licensing, so they got the Congresscritters to endow them with a new revenue stream even if those so taxed don't watch. Beeb indeed.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2020-02-06 10:05  

#12  If the mandatory fee goes, so goes the BBC. And they know it.
Posted by: DarthVader   2020-02-06 09:33  

#11  Boris is having the same problems as Trump. Media on constant attack and anti Brexit BBC.
Posted by: Dale   2020-02-06 09:29  

#10  "BBC a Raj? But why, Dad?"
"Because it's Indian!"

Posted by: Blossom Glesh7427   2020-02-06 08:57  

#9  I seem to remember this discussion earlier in the Brexit process when the question was "Why does the BBC hate Brexit?"

The answer as almost always was "follow the money".
Posted by: AlanC   2020-02-06 08:12  

#8  Raj, as soon as I saw your nym as the latest commenter, I had a feeling this was coming,:)
Posted by: charger   2020-02-06 07:55  

#7  charger - I'm not in the broadcasting business!

If you need help with your tax returns, though...
Posted by: Raj   2020-02-06 07:53  

#6  The BBC is nothing but a broadcast Raj, run by functionaries that are hostile to the native population.

The consultation comes at a particularly challenging time for the BBC


Poor babies.

But the proposal to decriminalise non-payment sparked alarm

Kinda says it all about these paladins of Teh Troof.

Even as they whinge about Muh Fascism, they're happy to see people imprisoned for failing to pay tribute.

Posted by: charger   2020-02-06 07:45  

#5  If one substitutes BBC for NYT, CNN, MSNBC, you can again a much clearer understanding. It's simply a tool of the British Deep State. We are after all, cousins.
Posted by: Besoeker   2020-02-06 07:39  

#4  The BBC doesn't represent the British people. End of story. Like the rest of the media it despises the British people.

Why people should be forced to pay for a service that mocks and ridicules them is beyond me.
Posted by: Herb McCoy   2020-02-06 06:55  

#3  Do the same here for PBS and NPR - remove taxpayer funding
Posted by: Frank G   2020-02-06 05:36  

#2  plans to stop prosecuting people who do not pay the BBC's compulsory subscription fee

Tyranny! Fascism! Unprecedented violation of Human Rights!
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2020-02-06 03:24  

#1  Axe the TV-Tax

In the meantime Make non-payment something civil and not for the courts.

Go subscription, taxpayer to hold title on back-catalogue as they paid for it.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2020-02-06 03:22  

00:00