The Citizen (KZN)

Smartphone­s may need TV licence

STILL ON TABLE: PUBLIC BROADCASTE­R WANTS TO TARGET PERSONAL COMPUTERS, TABLETS SABC has plan to increase revenue as TV licence returns plummet.

- Nkululeko Ncana news@citizen.co.za

Only about 45% of licence holders complied in the 20162017 financial year. Kaizer Kganyago SABC spokeseper­son

The SABC’s outrageous plan to smack South Africans who own smart devices and personal computers with additional TV licence fees is still on the table.

The idea was presented by the public broadcaste­r’s former disgraced acting CEO James Aguma, who wanted to amend the Broad- casting Act to allow the SABC to collect licence fees from owners of smartphone­s, tablet and personal computers.

Aguma told parliament earlier this year that his idea was motivated by projection­s of lower revenue from TV licence collection­s budgeted by the SABC this year.

SABC spokespers­on Kaizer Kganyago did not write off Aguma’s idea.

“It must be noted that this was a suggestion by the then acting group CEO, James Aguma.

“Should the SABC decide to pursue this, the proper process will be followed and an official public notice published in the

Government Gazette, as payment of TV licence fees is a legislated obligation in the Broadcasti­ng Act,” he said.

Kganyago also revealed that noncomplia­nce by licence holders increased drasticall­y during the 2016-2017 financial year.

“Only about 45% of licence holders complied. The major step is for the SABC to restore its relationsh­ip with the licence holders. This will be done through various positive marketing and advertisin­g campaigns, with the first phase launched in April 2017,” he said.

The SABC would revert to its old model of collecting TV licence fees using its own staff. However, Kganyago said the public broadcaste­r would also still use the services of debt collection agencies, but on a limited scale, to collect licence fees on accounts that are in arrears.

About 13 million families currently own TV sets in South Africa.

Aguma dropped a bombshell before MPs when he informed them the SABC had written off an astounding R17.7 billion in licence fees after it found that 400 000 accounts on its database were invalid and that over a million other accounts worth R4 billion were problemati­c.

He said the scrapping of the fees came as a result of the SABC conducting a database clean-up in which dead people and foreigners living in other countries were found to have been issued with licences. Following the clean-up, the amount owed on TV licences, including penalties, stood at just more than R6 billion. –

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