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Licence Fee Frozen. (Read 3644 times)
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Licence Fee Frozen.
Sep 16th, 2010, 9:02am
 
TV licence fee to be frozen for two years


The TV licence fee is to be frozen for two years at its current level, the BBC Trust said today.

It has proposed the freeze - which will mean a £144 million drop in the BBC's budget - to the Government and it is expected to be approved later today.

The move is in response to the "exceptional pressures" of the economic climate.

The fee will remain at £145.50 for the remainder of the current settlement period, to March 2013.

The BBC had been entitled to increase the fee by 2% in the next financial year and up to 2% for the following 12 months.

However the BBC Trust is also entitled to keep the BBC's needs under review to make sure that spending is appropriate.

It asked the corporation's executive board to examine budgets in June to look into short-term savings.

The aim was to weigh up savings and prudent planning to "return to a zero borrowing position by the end of the current licence fee period and to maintain the broad pattern of current services", the trust said today.

The cost savings will require "on-air changes", at a time of continuing capital spend on infrastructure projects and digital switchover, the executive decided.

But the trust concluded savings could be made while minimising on-air impact.

By Anthony Barnes, PA

Source The Press Association via "The Independent"

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tv-radio/tv-licence-fee-to-be-frozen-for...
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Re: Licence Fee Frozen
Reply #1 - Sep 16th, 2010, 9:03am
 
Licence fee to be frozen for two years to 2013


The BBC Trust today announced that it has proposed to Government that the licence fee should be frozen at its current level of £145.50 for the remaining two years of the current settlement, through to March 2013. This would mean taking an estimated £144m out of planned BBC budgets.

Under the terms of the current multi-year settlement, the BBC is entitled to a two per cent increase in 2011/12, with the amount for 2012/13 to be determined within the range of zero to two per cent.
But the BBC Agreement also requires the Trust to keep the financial needs of the BBC under review to ensure that the Executive Board is not authorised to spend more public money than is needed to appropriately fulfil the BBC's responsibilities.

Given the exceptional pressures that the current economic climate is placing on licence fee payers, the Trust asked the Executive in June to scrutinise its budgets and assess whether short-term savings could be made.

The aim was to work out whether the BBC would be able to forego any increase in the licence fee for the next two years, while also planning prudently to meet its commitment to return to a zero borrowing position by the end of the current licence fee period and to maintain the broad pattern of current services.
The Executive presented its findings to the Trust earlier this month. They made clear that the loss of £144m will require some on-air changes, particularly at a time of continuing capital spend on infrastructure projects and digital switchover. Nevertheless, the Trust concluded that there are ways of making the necessary savings while keeping any on-air impact within acceptable limits. Detailed work continues on how to implement those savings.

The proposal to freeze the licence fee was made in a letter to the Secretary of State.

BBC Trust chairman, Sir Michael Lyons, said:
"The Trust remains committed to the principle of ring-fenced multi-year licence fee settlements. It is a key part of the BBC's independence that the Government grants such settlements and does not re-open them before they come to an end.

"However, we also recognise that the British public is facing an exceptionally tough financial climate. In June, as part of the Trust's role in ensuring value for money at the BBC, we asked the Executive to see if they could make further savings on top of the existing three per cent year-on-year efficiencies, so that the BBC does not ask licence fee payers to pay any more than they need to for BBC services.
"A freeze in income will not be pain-free, and this decision was not taken lightly. But the Trust is satisfied that the BBC can manage the impact while continuing to deliver the range of programmes and services that the public loves."

In addition, there is a pan-BBC review under way to establish what level of long-term efficiencies can be found after 2013 – including whether new structures and working cultures could help to reduce the BBC's cost base.

The Trust will be assessing and interrogating this work in the coming months, in the run-up to discussions about the next licence fee settlement, and it has asked the NAO for any assistance it can give.


Source:-

BBC Press Statement.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbctrust/news/press_releases/september/licence_fee.shtml
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Re: Licence Fee Frozen.
Reply #2 - Sep 17th, 2010, 7:29am
 
Government accepts BBC's offer to freeze licence fee for two years

The Government has left the way open for a cut in the BBC licence fee in 2012 after the Corporation's governing body yesterday offered to freeze the annual charge at £145.50 for the next two years in recognition of the economic difficulties being faced in many British households.

Jeremy Hunt, the Culture Secretary, reacted to the offer by the BBC Trust by saying he was "pleased" at the suggestion, and that the Government would be implementing it next year. But Mr Hunt retained the option of cutting the fee in 2012-2013, a decision that will be made as part of the next long-term licence fee settlement.

The freezing of the licence fee is a blow to the BBC's management, which had been promised a 2 per cent increase next April by the previous Labour government with a smaller increase to come in the following year.

Sir Michael Lyons, the outgoing chairman of the BBC Trust, predicted that the budgets of television and radio programmes would have to be cut. "A freeze in income will not be pain-free, and this decision was not taken lightly," he wrote in a letter to Mr Hunt. BBC management estimates that the loss of the anticipated increase in the licence fee equates to a cut of £144m.

Nonetheless, the Trust chairman, who this week announced that he would not be standing for re-appointment when his four-year contract ends in May, added: "The trust is satisfied that the BBC can manage the impact while continuing to deliver the range of programmes and services that the public loves."

In an interview with the BBC, Sir Michael said: "Our concern about the remainder of this licence fee period has increased because of the difficult circumstances facing the whole country. Households are all facing the prospect of higher taxes, lower benefits and in many cases reduced incomes. The BBC lives in that world, understands the pressures that are on licence fee payers and we have a duty to ask for no more than we need."

In accepting the freezing of the fee for next year, Mr Hunt said: "I have made it clear that the BBC needs to take proper account of the current economic climate and this move, which comes with the Trust's assurances that it will not significantly impact on the quality of services provided to licence fee payers, will be welcomed by the public."

It will now fall to the incoming chairman of the BBC Trust to convince the Government that the licence fee should not take a cut. News of the increased pressure on BBC budgets came as the Corporation is attempting to persuade thousands of staff from taking strike action in protest at planned changes to the Corporation's pension scheme. The BBC director-general Mark Thompson yesterday addressed BBC offices via video-link in order to convince them to accept an alternative proposal to change the scheme, which is facing a shortfall of £1.5bn. BBC members of the Bectu, NUJ and Unite unions are threatening to stage walk outs next month to disrupt coverage of the Conservative Party conference in Birmingham.

By Ian Burrell


Source:-

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/tv-radio/government-accepts-bbcs-offer-t...
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