> Thanks Richard, is there a way I can get past the newspaper subscription 
> requirement to read this article?
> 
> Mike

   Using Google news gets around the paywall

   Also see Sydney Morning Herald and 
their sister paper The (Melbourne) Age.


Radio Australia first up for job cuts as ABC restructures  
|
 The Australian  |
 July 14, 2014 12:00AM 

Michael Bodey

Media and Entertainment Writer
Sydney


 THE ABC will confirm a wave of job cuts today, with Radio Australia.s services 
the first major victim.  
  
A management proposal for a new .converged service. for its international 
broadcasting outlets will be outlined to staff today as the ABC rearranges its 
overseas obligations after the axing of the Australia Network television 
service.

Staff at Radio Australia fear tens of jobs will go from it and the Australia 
Network, and they expect a number of its services within the region to be 
abandoned as the public broadcaster.s $35 million annual budget for 
international broadcasting, which was a combination of the Department of 
Foreign Affairs and Trade.s $20m annual budget for the Australia Network and 
RA.s $15m, contracts to approximately $15m.

These job cuts will be on top of a number of redundancies for Australia Network 
staff and the closing of its transmission in September, after only one year of 
its 10-year contract with DFAT to deliver the service.

Radio Australia will feel the squeeze as ongoing funding for TV.s international 
obligations are grabbed from the ABC.s international radio and online service. 
A number of RA.s language services are expected to be axed.

The ABC News 24 channel is expected to become the foundation of the 
international service, with some specialised news and current affairs content 
featuring on the service.

It is not known whether ABC News 24 will expand its broadcast reach through the 
Asia-Pacific region in lieu of Australia Network or whether the Radio Australia 
name will be subsumed.

The proposal outlined today in Melbourne by the director of news, Kate Torney, 
and ABC International director Lynley Marshall is not definitive but will begin 
what is anticipated to be a long process of negotiations and politicking over 
job losses and service cuts.

The process is complicated by the fact that DFAT is yet to finalise the terms 
of the decommissioning of the Australia Network service in September, including 
the allocation of money for redundant staff and outstanding contracts.

The ABC Charter requires the public broadcaster to .transmit to countries 
outside Australia, broadcasting programs of news, current affairs, 
entertainment and cultural enrichment. that will, in part, .encourage awareness 
of Australia and an inter-national understanding of Australian attitudes on 
world -affairs..

While the efficacy of the Australia Network was questioned before its axing by 
DFAT under the Abbott government, the impact of Radio Australia.s service 
during times of political crisis in the Pacific region has been substantial.

Even so, the recent efficiency review of the ABC and SBS overseen by Peter 
Lewis recommended Radio Australia discontinue its shortwave service.

This recommendation came despite advice from DFAT that shortwave delivery is 
the only current source of RA in .some sensitive areas in Vanuatu, Solomon 
Islands and Papua New Guinea..

The public broadcaster has already confirmed a number of its news and current 
affairs foreign bureaus will be affected by the closure of the Australia 
Network service which cross-subsidised some of the news division.s 
international reporting shown on ABC News 24 while also employing its own 
correspondents.

The union representing ABC staff, the Commonwealth Public Sector Union, was yet 
to be notified of the proposal by Friday and expected to be briefed today.

Radio Australia and ABC management would not comment on the proposed changes.

The international cuts come as the ABC and SBS work through the recommendations 
of the recent efficiency review, including the notion to co-locate the ABC and 
SBS. It appears that will not happen in Sydney although a possible move by SBS 
into the ABC.s new Southbank office in Melbourne has gained favour.

http://www.google.com.au/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=5&cad=rja&uact=8&sqi=2&ved=0CEEQqQIwBA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.smh.com.au%2Fentertainment%2Ftv-and-radio%2Feighty-jobs-to-go-at-abc-news-and-australia-network-20140714-zt6t8.html&ei=oBfEU7TPCpTAoAT2koGoBQ&usg=AFQjCNGjwh-ytPTpSFAKiMtzT08ZpfuSTw&bvm=bv.70810081,d.cGU
 
         
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