Tag: impartiality

  • Governors’ report stresses need for BBC to improve quality of comedy, drama

    MUMBAI: The BBC’s board of governors has published the pubcaster’s Annual Report and Accounts for 2004/05 which records a year of radical change throughout the corporation. The report covers the first full year term of BBC chairman Michael Grade     

    The Governors said that on BBC Television much progress had been made in responding to audience expectations of quality and distinctiveness. However there is still more that must be done. There needs to be fewer repeats in peak-time on BBC One as well as increasing the quality of comedy and drama across television. BBC Two’s reach needs to be increased without endangering its new-found distinctiveness.

    There is also a need to improve the value-for-money proposition of the digital television channels. On the radio front the governors noted the success of Radios 1 and 2 and their distinctiveness from others in the commercial sector. But the Governors also recognised their responsibility for ensuring that BBC Radio continued to meet its public service remit. bbc.co.uk and BBC News were identified by the Governors as clear examples of how the BBC’s purposes articulated in Building Public Value have delivered greater responsiveness at the BBC.

    These include the six objectives which were set by the Governors last year. These covered journalism and impartiality; creativity and ambition; value-for-money; driving digital; and the BBC’s global reputation . Here, the Governors noted that significant progress was being made in the journalism arena which is driving the BBC’s digital and global reputation. On the value-for-money criteria the Governors were satisfied, having commissioned independent analysis, that the savings through job cuts and the selling of divisions like BBC Broadcast were achievable and in the interests of licence fee payers, but they recognised these changes had impacted on staff morale.

    Meanwhile the report also states that the new system of service licences will provide greater clarity on what management, staff, audiences and commercial competitors can expect from all the BBC’s services. It will enable the Board to judge performance transparently using consistent measures. The Governance Unit is developing the framework for the service licences. This will shortly be opened to consultation and the initial licences are scheduled for publication early next year, to ensure formal operation at the start of the new Charter in 2007.

  • Contentious issues are off limits for BBC journos

    Contentious issues are off limits for BBC journos

     MUMBAI: The BBC has announced changes to its guidelines covering the circumstances in which BBC journalists, presenters and freelancers can write regular columns for newspapers and magazines.

    The changes mean that no staff, or regular freelance journalists whose main profile or income comes from the BBC, will be able to write newspaper or magazine columns on current affairs or other contentious issues.
     
     
    The new arrangements have been approved by the BBC governing board. However, current contracts in place mean that some columns will continue until the middle of next year. Articles on specific BBC programmes that are part of an overall press and publicity plan will be allowed, as will columns on non contentious issues and food, film or music reviews, or syndicated articles that appear first on BBC News online.

    Freelance journalists whose main profile and income is not through the BBC will be exempt. Current staff and freelance contracts will not need amending. Senior news managers are already in discussion with the journalists affected, the majority of whom are staff employees.

    BBC News director Richard Sambrook said: “Impartiality is an essential element to the BBC’s reputation and to our journalism. When our journalists write in papers it is seen as an extension of their work for the BBC. Yet columns and newspaper articles on controversial issues depend on expressing opinions to an extent which is often incompatible with the BBC’s impartiality. The audience’s trust in the independence of the BBC’s journalism on all subjects is something we cannot afford to compromise.”

    The BBC producer guidelines dealing with conflict of interest will now be redrafted in line with the agreed changes.