Originally posted by Resurrection Man
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"DMI was eventually axed earlier in May by BBC director general Tony Hall after he said it had "wasted a huge amount of licence fee payers' money" – £98.4m." NB it is the Trust's job to safeguard licence fee payers' money - that is Patten, not Hall. Yet it was Hall who took the decision within weeks of taking office while the Trust faffed about and saw millions more lost.
The problem with the Trust is that none of them - nor their support group - have first hand knowledge of the issues. The Executive and management know all about them, but they see their job as spending the money. The Trust are supposed to be 'independent' but they rely on what they're told by management (the 'professionals'). They themselves don't seem able to grasp the essentials of subjects they know nothing about.
Thompson leaving, followed by the Entwistle saga (good choice, Trust) complicated matters, but if Thompson hadn't gone the project would probably have continued anyway. Did he voice an opinion?
Proof of the pudding (just before cancellation): did Hall read this article?
"Problems with DMI were first exposed during the coverage of the death of Baroness Thatcher last month, when BBC News staff were unable to access archive footage of the late prime minister via computers in New Broadcasting House and were reduced to ferrying tapes from the corporation's archive storage facility in Perivale, north-west London, in taxis or on the tube."
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