BBC lobbyists and senior Ofcom executives involved in furious row over the size 
of public subsidy needed for ITV regional news
The tussle over the future of regional news programming on ITV has descended 
into a furious row between Ofcom and the BBC, after corporation lobbyists and 
senior executives at the regulator clashed over the degree of public subsidy 
needed.

Senior Ofcom insiders are understood to be "furious" that the BBC is rubbishing 
the regulator's estimates that a replacement service for ITV's regional news, 
provided by independent consortia involving media companies around the country, 
could cost £40m to £60m a year for a basic offering or £80m to £100m annually 
for something more fully developed.

Yesterday the Financial Times quoted BBC officials saying Ofcom's figures were 
"fantasy".

A senior Ofcom executive directly involved with the issue said today: "This is 
an extraordinary development, for the BBC to say that our numbers are fantasy. 
It makes them look foolish, engaging in name calling, attacking Ofcom directly, 
at a key moment for the industry. I am furious.

"We have not overstated the figures. In our initial public service review 
[published in September 2008] we put a figure of between £30m-£50m to meet the 
gap, but we were quite tentative about it."

The row centres around the future use of the so-called "switchover surplus" - 
money left over from the £130m a year of licence fee funding set aside to help 
the most vulnerable and disadvantaged get digital TV receivers between now and 
2012.

Sir Michael Lyons, the BBC Trust chairman, has already set out the 
corporation's stall, arguing in a speech last month that the licence fee should 
not be used to pay for "things that have nothing to do with the BBC's public 
purposes".

Lyons' comments were seen as a riposte to Ofcom chief executive Ed Richards' 
suggestion that the digital surplus could provide funding for the independent 
consortia he envisages will take over ITV regional news provision.

The BBC is fighting a concerted last minute rearguard action ahead of the 
publication of communications minister Lord Carter's final Digital Britain 
report later this month, which will set out the government's plan for the 
future of UK public service broadcasting, among other things.

BBC officials want to prevent the licence fee being "top sliced", or used 
directly, to fund an ITV regional news service once ITV pulls out of providing 
the programming in 2012.

The BBC is also insisting that the use of any switchover surplus until 2012 
should be directed into universal broadband provision.

At the government's behest, £650m of licence fee money was earmarked to 
subsidise the digital switchover between 2007 and 2012 – £130m a year. However, 
based on lower-than-forecast takeup of the switchover subsidy scheme so far, it 
is estimated a £250m surplus could be left between now and 2012.

Most senior civil servants involved in drafting the final Digital Britain 
report, due to be published on June 16, are today finalising their 
contributions to the document, which will then be presented to cabinet 
ministers.

At the same time, the BBC's offer to form a local news partnership to help ITV 
out in the short term, by sharing its newsrooms, studios and camera crews is 
said to offer such modest savings, of around £7m, on a cost base of between 
£50m-£60m a year, that ITV has reservations about the project. The commercial 
broadcaster is understood to consider Ofcom's independent consortia plan to be 
a better long-term solution.

In yesterday's FT BBC insiders asserted that their ITV local news partnership 
proposal was worth more than £20m a year, not £7m - in effect reducing the 
amount of licence fee money that would be required to subsidise a replacement 
service further.

An ITV spokesman said: "We are committed to helping find a solution to secure 
the future viability of regional news on Channel 3 and the BBC partnership 
might make a modest but valuable contribution to this."

• To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email [email protected] or 
phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian 
switchboard on 020 3353 2000.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/jun/02/bbc-ofcom-clash-itv-regional-news
-Jaisakthivel, Chennai, India


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