Daily Mail

TV licensing bosses paid thousands in bonuses to get cases to court

- By Glen Keogh Mail Investigat­ions Unit

TV LICENSING bosses have earned thousands of pounds in bonuses for gathering evidence used to haul people to court.

Managers of the firm collecting the licence fee on behalf of the BBC were given generous cash incentives for pushing door-to-door officers to fill out as many ‘prosecutio­n statements’ as possible.

The practice meant vulnerable people were made to face magistrate­s only to see their cases thrown out when new evidence emerged, or when it it was shown they had paid for a licence.

Bonus scheme documents, leaked to the Daily Mail by a whistleblo­wer, also raise concerns that TV Licensing executives misled MPs last year during an inquiry into the collection of the fee.

Last year, a BBC spokesman said that a TV Licensing incentive scheme used by private firm Capita, paid £59million a year to collect the licence fee, ‘operates purely on licence fee sales, never on prosecutio­n statements taken’.

And appearing before a Commons select committee, a Capita boss said officers are ‘purely incentivis­ed on revenue collection’.

However, he did not make clear that TV Licensing area managers were paid hefty bonuses for obtaining prosecutio­n statements, and that it was in their interest to encourage their field officers to collect as many as possible.

The news comes as the TV licence fee rose this month for the second consecutiv­e year to £150.50, netting the BBC an extra £90.3million.

Last night Labour MP Meg Hillier, chairman of the Public Accounts Committee, said she would be writing to senior figures at the BBC and Capita to demand clarificat­ion over the ‘very concerning’ allegation­s.

‘There is real confusion about exactly who was incentivis­ed for what and when so we need to get to the bottom of this,’ she said. ‘We had been assured by the BBC that prosecutio­ns were a last resort but this raises questions about Capita’s priorities.’

An undercover exposé by this newspaper in February last year revealed how staff can earn up to £15,000 a year on top of basic salaries if they catch 28 people a week. At the time, a spokesman for the BBC said: ‘ Capita’s incentive scheme operates purely on licence fee sales, never on prosecutio­n statements taken, and Capita has confirmed that this is how it operates.’

But documents show more than one third of a Capita area manager’s £ 7,000- per- year bonus was based on their field officers taking enough ‘prosecutio­n statements’.

There are more than 30 area managers operating across the UK, each in charge of about 12 field officers.

Crucially, the scheme offered separate financial bonuses for the taking of prosecutio­n statements and sales of licence fees.

Capita and the BBC said the bonus scheme seen by the Mail – dated 2016 and said to be in use at the time of the Parliament­ary inquiry – was ‘ out of date’. Capita refused to disclose when it was taken out of circulatio­n. Capita keeps costs awarded in magistrate­s’ courts, but denied it makes a profit from prosecutio­ns.

The whistleblo­wer, who worked as a TV Licensing area manager, said: ‘Taking people to court was part and parcel of the job. We all knew what the prosecutio­n statements were for.

‘We could make a licence sale without taking a prosecutio­n statement, but that wasn’t the way we operated.

‘You had to take a prosecu- tion statement to make a sale. If they [ field staff] hit my prosecutio­n target I get a bonus, if they hit my sales target I get a bonus.’

A BBC spokesman said the Corporatio­n ‘had been assured’ by Capita that no staff are or have ever been incentivis­ed on prosecutio­ns.

A Capita spokesman said: ‘Capita does not, and will not pay commission for records of interviews taken. The document you refer to was drafted in 2016 and is no longer in use. All of the informatio­n provided to the Public Accounts Committee was accurate.’

‘Very concerning allegation­s’ ‘Part and parcel of the job’

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