Well, yes, and it wasn't only Lord Birt who made the comment. The shocking thing is the total lack of consultation although the Green Paper and this HoL inquiry are effectively that, but how many people in the general public know the process and how many will respond? Those of us with long experience of these things are in a small minority. Should the BBC advertise this review process and encourage people to respond?
I joined the broadcasting world in 1974 and so have seen 4 previous charter reviews plus the several Black Spot events that lost large numbers of staff in the 90s and after. There has been a steady erosion of the BBC bulk over the last 2 reviews eg outsourcing of much of the production process and also loss of Transmission, which is now with Arqiva which is itself the remnant of the old IBA [dissolved in 1990] that regulated ITV and ran Ch4 - as well as Designs and Equipment Departments which were at Chiswick but no longer exist. Research Department at Kingswood Warren closed several years ago [and the site has been sold for high value property - salubrious Surrey - with a remnant now at White City but even some of that site is closing too.
The BBC of today is a small part of what it was - how much smaller can it get before it becomes ineffective and operates as a publisher? I think we shall find that out in the first few years of this new, possibly final, Charter when this government will continue its dismantllng. Someone in that HoL inquiry did suggest that the Charter, as a means of establishing the BBC has had its day - possibly Birt himself.
The notion that the BBC is independent of government - ie the Treasury - has become farcical. I know from experience that it is the Treasury that holds all the face cards and years ago both the old DTI and now BIS, DCMS, and Ofcom to some extent, have had to toe the line from the Treasury.
I joined the broadcasting world in 1974 and so have seen 4 previous charter reviews plus the several Black Spot events that lost large numbers of staff in the 90s and after. There has been a steady erosion of the BBC bulk over the last 2 reviews eg outsourcing of much of the production process and also loss of Transmission, which is now with Arqiva which is itself the remnant of the old IBA [dissolved in 1990] that regulated ITV and ran Ch4 - as well as Designs and Equipment Departments which were at Chiswick but no longer exist. Research Department at Kingswood Warren closed several years ago [and the site has been sold for high value property - salubrious Surrey - with a remnant now at White City but even some of that site is closing too.
The BBC of today is a small part of what it was - how much smaller can it get before it becomes ineffective and operates as a publisher? I think we shall find that out in the first few years of this new, possibly final, Charter when this government will continue its dismantllng. Someone in that HoL inquiry did suggest that the Charter, as a means of establishing the BBC has had its day - possibly Birt himself.
The notion that the BBC is independent of government - ie the Treasury - has become farcical. I know from experience that it is the Treasury that holds all the face cards and years ago both the old DTI and now BIS, DCMS, and Ofcom to some extent, have had to toe the line from the Treasury.
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