S4C ... The DCMS/BBC Agreement

So many balls are currently in the air with regard to the future of S4C and, although I'm working on it, I haven't quite got to grips with all the possibilities and ramifications as yet. But there is one thing that I would like to post now, to give people the hard detail of what was actually agreed between Jeremy Hunt of the DCMS and the BBC.

The full text of the letter is here, and Mabon ap Gwynfor has already linked to it here on his blog. But this an edited version as it applies to S4C:

Letter from Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport
to Sir Michael Lyons, Chairman, BBC Trust

 

BBC FUNDING SETTLEMENT

I am writing to confirm the Government’s decision to determine the level of the licence fee until the end of March 2017.

The BBC is one of the most respected broadcasters in the world and a national asset of extraordinary importance both to our country’s culture and its democracy.

I believe the agreement we have reached provides certainty and security for the BBC over the settlement period. The requirement on the BBC to take on important new funding obligations and efficiencies provides the value to licence fee payers necessary in the current economic climate.

This Government will respect the BBC’s editorial and operational independence both as a matter of principle and as an obligation for the full duration of its Royal Charter to 31 December 2016. Consistent with the Charter, any decision affecting the scale and scope of the BBC’s UK public services, and its commercial and other operations, will remain a matter for the BBC Trust. The Government undertakes to provide a full financial settlement to the end of the year 2016/17, with no new financial requirements or fresh obligations of any kind being placed on the BBC and/or licence fee revenues in this period except by mutual agreement. All necessary legal and other steps, including any necessary legislative changes and State Aid notifications that are required to give this agreement force will be sought and effected by the Government, in consultation with and where appropriate by agreement with the BBC Trust.
 

Financial parameters

•  Under the current licence fee settlement, the fee will remain at £145.50 in 2011/12 and 2012/13. This level will then be maintained in a new four-year settlement to 2016/2017.

•  The current ring-fence of approximately £133m per annum will be raised to, and capped at, £150m per annum from 2013/4 to 2016/17 but re-purposed for broadband, consistent with the BBC’s public purposes.

•  The BBC will assume responsibility for funding the World Service, BBC Monitoring, and S4C from the licence fee as detailed below.

•  The overall effect of this settlement will require the BBC to achieve a 16% cash-releasing efficiency target, net of implementation costs, over the four years to 2016/17.

•  The BBC will maintain its present borrowing limits for the BBC Group and BBC Commercial Holdings to the end of the Charter.
 

BBC commitments

As part of this new settlement, the BBC has undertaken to provide funding for some new broadcasting activities, set out below. We will now seek to agree with you the necessary amendments to the BBC Agreement.
 

Local media
( ... detail not shown)

 

BBC World Service
( ... detail not shown)

 

New partnership and funding model for S4C

•  The Government remains committed to a strong and independent Welsh language TV service, but has concluded that the S4C model is not sustainable in its present form.

•  The S4C service must retain its brand identity and editorial distinctiveness, as well as its special relationship with the independent production sector in Wales.

•  Public funding for the service must be maintained at agreed levels over the period covered by the Comprehensive Spending Review.

•  Having decided to reduce its own funding for S4C as part of the CSR, HMG holds that a new partnership model with the BBC is the best way of securing the long-term future of the service.

•  Under the partnership, funding for S4C in future will come from three sources: the licence fee, a continued but reduced subvention from the Government, and commercial income

•  There would be a BBC and S4C partnership along similar principles to BBC Alba to begin by 2013/14, with S4C coming under a BBC Trust Service Licence or other operating agreement which would be jointly agreed with the S4C Authority and which would set out the strategic goals and broad editorial requirements of the service.

•  A combined Board of the Authority and Trust would oversee delivery of the Service Licence or operating agreement.

•  The S4C service will be operated by a joint management board with a majority of independent directors, appointed by the BBC Trust and the Authority. The management board will operate its own commissioning structure.

•  Further discussion will be required about the exact form of the partnership, and the Government will play its part in those discussions.

•  The service would not be a BBC branded service

•  The total content commissioning budget will be for independent producers (outside of the BBC's ongoing statutory commitments)

•  In 2011/12 and 2012/13, the Government will continue to fund the service.

•  In 2013/14 and 2014/15, the BBC will contribute £76.3m and £76m respectively in cash in addition to its statutory commitments, while the Government will fund at £6.7m in 2013/14 and £7m in 2014/15.

•  There will be a further review of S4C’s strategy and finances, to conclude in good time before the end of the period covered by the Comprehensive Spending Review.

•  The exact level of BBC funding is not set beyond 2014/15. Whilst future funding will reflect continuing synergies and efficiencies it will remain consistent with the commitment to a strong and independent Welsh language TV service, with future services informed by the outcome of the proposed review.

•  In the event that a new partnership model does not prove viable for any reason, the Government will not take licence fee money itself for this purpose. But in this situation the Trust will propose a one-off reduction in the level of the licence fee which would be equivalent to the contribution that the BBC would otherwise have made to S4C.
 

BBC Monitoring
( ... detail not shown)

I also welcome the BBC’s plans to enhance its national DAB coverage in the period of this agreement, and to match its national FM coverage as a switchover date draws near.
 

Thank you for your constructive co-operation in reaching this settlement. It represents a good deal for all parties and reflects the economic environment we are in, while maintaining the independence and funding certainty of the BBC and, most importantly, giving value for money to licence fee payers.

To put the funding for S4C into perspective, this spreadsheet shows the DCMS planned expenditure for S4C, to give the following:

2011/12 ... £90.0m
2012/13 ... £83.0m
2013/14 ... £6.7m (+ £76.3m from BBC) = £83.0m
2014/15 ... £7.0m (+ £76.0m from BBC) = £83.0m

The total reduction in DCMS expenditure is 94%, the total reduction in S4C funding is 24%. In terms of its frozen licence fee funding, offset against these additional commitments, the BBC only faces a cut in funding of 16%.

I'll save the comment for later, except to repeat that this is an agreement between the DCMS and BBC, without any input from or consultation with S4C ... and certainly without their agreement. To that extent it only represnts the intention of the DCMS, since new legislation would be required in order to implement any changes to S4C's current funding arrangements.

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6 comments:

MH said...

Just in case it isn't clear, the BBC's "ongoing statutory commitment" is to provide 10 hours a week of original programming to be broadcast on S4C. The BBC currently provides 12 hours a week, but recently announced it plans to cut this back.

Anonymous said...

I think a Rubicon has been passed this week in Wales. The penny is finally dropping with many people that
a) that although most would agree with cuts and changes to a large extent it can no longer be argued that Wales will be 'dependent' on London for finance. We're pretty well evens. That is, the old (Labour) argument, 'we're too weak/poor without London' is no longer carrying weight.

b) I think also a lot of people are now thinking 'what can we do differently and better in Wales?' - if only from Labour's blatant hypocritical and opportunistic stance. Labour are basically saying 'Plaid were right'.

So, looking to the future, broadcasting needs to under the Assembly's remit and it seems the DCMS and Westminster couldn't give a damn if it did.

MH - what's the feasibility of the Assembly looking after two Welsh channels, one in Welsh one in English, budgets of about £90m each on this year's sums. Part paid from the licence fee (yes, Welsh people do pay it), part maybe advertising and part directly from the Assembly?

Macsen

Ian Titherington said...

I see the current British proposal (and I can confirm that there was no Welsh input whatsoever) as a temporary stop gap, until there is some stability in S4C and the WAG budget. Then I see a strong movement for the devolution of both BBC Wales and S4C, as clearly neither are safe in the hands of an increasingly antagonistic London media establishment.

Cibwr said...

I think it also needs to be seen with the Murdoch empire ambitions - they want the BBC to take over all public service broadcasting, while restricting their commercial arm - reducing competition to them. Wales unfortunately is an after thought. This isn't malice, this is simply a tidying up exercise.

Anonymous said...

The obvious response to cutting the money is to make better programmes with less money .... it isn't impossible.

The real issue is who contols the channel and two channels funded by the assembly .... with a share of the licence poll tax ... is surely the way to go.

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