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Dear Colleagues

I'd be interested to hear from any colleagues who think that the BBC's monopoly of use of the licence fee must be questioned from a public service perspective.

I'm particularly interested in a view that in aggregating local terrestrial frequencies to form the UK wide radio and later TV networks - at a time of the first war, then industrial unrest, then war again leading to cold war - the UK has become firmly dominated by a public service that is unaccountable - even hostile - towards representing devolution and to further local accountability or subsidiarity that local frequencies would allow and relative digital abundance permits. 

With regards,


Dave
Dr David Rushton
Institute of Local Television


On 26 Feb 2015, at 12:13, Messenger, Davies Maire wrote:

Colleagues may be interested in the VLV's  swift response to the CMS select committee report on the future of the BBC. If you are planning events connected with the future of the BBC, do please let this list know. 

best wishes

Máire MD

Máire Messenger Davies PhD, FRSA, MBPsS
Professor of Media Studies
School of Media, Film and Journalism
University of Ulster
Cromore Rd
Coleraine, BT52 1SA
N. Ireland, UK

Twitter: @mairemd
New book: 'Star Trek and American Television', by Roberta Pearson and Máire Messsenger Davies, see 

http://www.ucpress.edu/book.php?isbn=9780520276222

From: Info [[log in to unmask]]
Sent: 26 February 2015 12:05
To: Info
Subject: VLV comments on CMS Select Committee Report on The Future of the BBC

Dear Members

 

For information VLV issued the following press release today.

01/2015
 
Press release from Voice of the Listener & Viewer
For immediate release: 26 February 2015
 
VLV comments on CMS Select Committee Report on The Future of the BBC
 
The VLV believes that the Select Committee Report is an important contribution to the debate on the future of the BBC, ahead of decisions on the renewal of its Charter. We welcome the emphasis that the views of licence fee payers must play an important role in this debate. 

 

"We share the Committee’s view that the licence fee remains at present the most effective and practical way of funding the BBC" said VLV Chairman Colin Browne.  "This should be set at a level that provides value for money for licence fee payers, while enabling the BBC to provide services that reach out to all parts of society and to invest in distinctive original, UK production." 

 

The VLV believes that the BBC should remain at its present size and scale in order to be able to act effectively as the cornerstone of public service broadcasting.  It would not want to see any increase in its size or dominance in the market and do not agree with the Committee’s suggestion that it is too large.

 

The VLV welcomes, in principle, the proposal that funding decisions should be removed from the political arena.  As the Committee notes, the 2010 licence fee arrangement was negotiated behind closed doors, with no public consultation, resulting in a highly unsatisfactory agreement that threatened to prejudice the BBC’s independence.  At least £20 of the current licence fee of £145.50 a year now funds activities which have little to do with what we hear on our radios or see on our television screens - such as broadband rollout,  BBC Monitoring, local television and the World Service.  We are opposed to ‘top-slicing’ of the licence fee.

 

It is clearly right that alternatives to the licence fee need to be considered for the longer term.  In assessing these, we will consider how effectively they meet the key criterion of providing a universal service, free to users at the point of reception.  We would not support subscription, as this undermines the principle of universality.

 

We will study the recommendations on governance carefully to determine how the interests of consumers and licence payers are met in the most cost-effective way.
...........ends
26 February 2015
Further information from Colin Browne on [log in to unmask]
01285 740433 or 07733 103800
 

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------------------------------------------------- MeCCSA Policy mailing list W: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/meccsa-policy.html

Please visit this page to browse list's archives, or to join or leave the list.