Public consultation 16 July - 8 October
There's an online survey with 19 questions. In case people want to give them some thought first, here they are:
These questions look at the BBC’s mission, purpose and values.
Q1: How can the BBC’s public purposes be improved so there is more clarity about what the BBC should achieve?
Q2: Which elements of universality are most important for the BBC?
Q3: Should Charter Review formally establish a set of values for the BBC?
These questions look at what the BBC does in terms of its scale and scope.
Q4: Is the expansion of the BBC’s services justified in the context of increased choice for audiences? Is the BBC crowding out commercial competition and, if so, is this justified?
Q5: Where does the evidence suggest the BBC has a positive or negative wider impact on the market?
Q6: What role should the BBC have in preparing for the future technological landscape including in future radio switchover?
Q7: How well is the BBC serving its national and international audiences?
Q8: Does the BBC have the right genre mix across its services?
Q9: Is the BBC’s content sufficiently high quality and distinctive from that of other broadcasters? What reforms could improve it?
Q10: How should the system of content production be improved through reform of quotas or more radical options?
These questions look at how the BBC is funded.
Q11: How should we pay for the BBC and how should the licence fee be modernised?
Q12: Should the level of funding for certain services or programmes be protected? Should some funding be made available to other providers to deliver public service content?
Q13: Has the BBC been doing enough to deliver value for money? How could it go further?
Q14: How should the BBC’s commercial operations, including BBC Worldwide, be reformed?
These questions look at BBC governance and regulation.
Q15: How should the current model of governance and regulation for the BBC be reformed?
Q16: How should Public Value Tests and Service Licences be reformed and who should have the responsibility for making these decisions?
Q17: How could the BBC improve engagement with licence fee payers and the industry through research, transparency and complaints handling?
Q18: How should the relationship between Parliament, Government, Ofcom, the National Audit Office and the BBC work? What accountability structures and expectations, including financial transparency and spending controls should apply?
Q19: Should the existing approach of a 10-year Royal Charter and Framework Agreement continue?
More to the point, what does anyone think about the questions (never mind answering them)?
There's an online survey with 19 questions. In case people want to give them some thought first, here they are:
These questions look at the BBC’s mission, purpose and values.
Q1: How can the BBC’s public purposes be improved so there is more clarity about what the BBC should achieve?
Q2: Which elements of universality are most important for the BBC?
Q3: Should Charter Review formally establish a set of values for the BBC?
These questions look at what the BBC does in terms of its scale and scope.
Q4: Is the expansion of the BBC’s services justified in the context of increased choice for audiences? Is the BBC crowding out commercial competition and, if so, is this justified?
Q5: Where does the evidence suggest the BBC has a positive or negative wider impact on the market?
Q6: What role should the BBC have in preparing for the future technological landscape including in future radio switchover?
Q7: How well is the BBC serving its national and international audiences?
Q8: Does the BBC have the right genre mix across its services?
Q9: Is the BBC’s content sufficiently high quality and distinctive from that of other broadcasters? What reforms could improve it?
Q10: How should the system of content production be improved through reform of quotas or more radical options?
These questions look at how the BBC is funded.
Q11: How should we pay for the BBC and how should the licence fee be modernised?
Q12: Should the level of funding for certain services or programmes be protected? Should some funding be made available to other providers to deliver public service content?
Q13: Has the BBC been doing enough to deliver value for money? How could it go further?
Q14: How should the BBC’s commercial operations, including BBC Worldwide, be reformed?
These questions look at BBC governance and regulation.
Q15: How should the current model of governance and regulation for the BBC be reformed?
Q16: How should Public Value Tests and Service Licences be reformed and who should have the responsibility for making these decisions?
Q17: How could the BBC improve engagement with licence fee payers and the industry through research, transparency and complaints handling?
Q18: How should the relationship between Parliament, Government, Ofcom, the National Audit Office and the BBC work? What accountability structures and expectations, including financial transparency and spending controls should apply?
Q19: Should the existing approach of a 10-year Royal Charter and Framework Agreement continue?
More to the point, what does anyone think about the questions (never mind answering them)?
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