Sunderland Echo

BBC to review free licences for over 75s

- By Echo Reporter echo.news@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @sunderland­echo

More than ten thousand pensioner households in Sunderland could lose their free TV licence after 2020.

The BBC has started a consultati­on on free licences for the over 75s.

Official figures show there are 17,633 households in Sunderland that qualify for a free licence.

The scheme is currently funded by the Government but the responsibi­lity shifts to the BBC in 2020.

The broadcaste­r says that paying for it would take a fifth of its budget and the cuts needed would “fundamenta­lly change the BBC”.

An annual TV licence costs £150.50. A review commission­ed by the BBC says that funding the scheme across the UK would cost £745million by 2021, rising to £1billion in a decade.

The cost of a licence for every household over 75 in Sunderland is £2.7million.

Projection­s from the Offee fice for National Statistics show that the growth in the aging population will mean 30,000 over-75 households in Sunderland by 2041. The potential bill for free TV licences would be £4.5million.

Options being considered include a discount for over 75s, increasing the qualifying age to 80, or restrictin­g free licences to the most needy.

The BBC said it wanted to hear from viewers before making a decision next summer.

Chairman David Clementi said: “We will listen to their views and balance all the options and arguments before making a decision.

“The board does not underestim­ate the significan­ce of the decision, its implicatio­ns for the BBC and its audiences.”

Caroline Abrahams, charity director at Age UK, said: “Despite recent progress, there are still significan­t numbers of older people living on very low incomes who would genuinely struggle to pay the licence if required to do so.

“There are two million people aged 75-plus, one-intwo of whom is disabled and one-in-four of whom view the television as their main form of companions­hip.

“For many others, including those who are chronicall­y lonely ... the TV is a precious window on the world.”

She added: “Our initial appraisal is that any of the options set out would introduce significan­t practical difficulti­es.”

A Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport spokesman said: “The BBC will take on responsibi­lity for free licences for the over75s from 2020 and it is right that they’ve confirmed no decisions will be taken until the public have been fully consulted.”

 ??  ?? The BBC has been told to consider scrapping free TV licences for the over-75s to save money.
The BBC has been told to consider scrapping free TV licences for the over-75s to save money.

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