The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)
BBC Four and CBBC victims of latest cuts
BBC Four and CBBC will end as linear TV channels over the next few years as part of the latest round of cuts at the broadcaster.
Director-general Tim Davie told staff 1,000 jobs will also be lost across the public-funded part of the corporation.
BBC World News and BBC News Channel will merge to create a single 24-hour TV news channel serving both UK and international audiences. Regional TV news programmes in Oxford and Cambridge are also among the services being scrapped as part of the “blueprint to build a digital-first public service media organisation”.
Mr Davie told staff: “This is our moment to build a digital-first BBC. Something genuinely new, a Reithian organisation for the digital age, a positive force for the UK and the world. Independent, impartial, constantly innovating and serving all. A fresh, new, global digital media organisation which has never been seen before.
“They want us to keep the BBC relevant and fight for something that in 2022 is more important than ever. To do that we need to evolve faster and embrace the huge shifts in the market around us.”
The news comes off the back of the BBC needing to save a further £285 million in response to the culture secretary’s announcement in January that the licence fee will be frozen at £159 for the next two years.
It has already undergone redundancies and cuts over the past decade prompted by below-inflation increases in the licence fee.
Mr Davie, who took over from Lord Tony Hall as BBC director-general in September 2020, has overseen a slimming down of the corporation since then, with the BBC losing around 1,200 staff in 18 months.
BBC Four, which is home to BBC Proms, BBC Young Dancer and BBC Young Musician, was launched in 2002 and has traditionally shown mainly arts and documentary content, as well as international dramas. However, last year the corporation announced it would become the “home” of archived content and it would broadcast fewer original programmes.
The BBC did not say whether BBC Four, as well as CBBC and Radio 4 Extra, would move online to the iPlayer service.
Philippa Childs, head of broadcasting union Bectu, said: “We recognise the need for organisations to change and adapt and welcome the BBC’s commitment to step up to the challenges of a changing media landscape and build a digital-first corporation.
“However, once again we see the impact of poorly judged political decisions on workers as the government’s decision to freeze the licence fee has instigated these real-term job cuts.
“Hugely talented and dedicated people who work hard to deliver critical services to the nation are now facing yet more job losses and uncertainty.”