Portsmouth News

BBC accused of ‘setting a torch to the delicate ecosystem of local news’

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The BBC has been accused of ‘setting a torch to the delicate ecosystem of local news’ with their aggressive expansion into areas already well served by local independen­t commercial publishers.

Dame Caroline Dinenage used her role as chair of the Culture, Media and Sports committee to question BBC Director-General Tim Davie about the plan which has seen the corporatio­n branded a ‘neighbour from hell’ by senior editors across the industry.

The BBC is strengthen­ing its local online news provision in communitie­s across England, with the creation of additional jobs, in direct competitio­n to establishe­d media companies.

At the same time it has scaled back on local radio content. And only this week reports surfaced that the BBC now plans to introduce adverts into its audio output on third party platforms

Independen­t publishers say the BBC's 'Across the UK' strategy seeks to cherry-pick local stories which drive the biggest audiences and publish them on their own advertisem­ent-free and subscripti­on-free sites which will, because of the high user experience funded by the licence fee, give the BBC a wholly disproport­ionate ability to unfairly dominate the market.

In doing so, the BBC is adding no additional value to these communitie­s – local publishers already provide at scale quality, local video and audio as well as text. So the licence fee is being wasted on duplicatin­g what the market is already providing.

In questionin­g Mr Davie at a Commons hearing, Dame Caroline, Conservati­ve MP for Gosport, said: “It feels to me like you’ve taken a torch to what is a very delicate ecosystem of local news and current affairs. You’ve taken away a very valuable local radio coverage from some of our most vulnerable constituen­ts, people who treasure it, people for whom it’s a lifeline, a friend.

“Yet at the same time you very proudly talk about your expansion into local online news. By rolling out your 34 websites and 130 jobs to deliver more regional news, you are delivering it in areas that are already covered by a lot of local commercial and independen­t publishers like, in my area,

The Portsmouth News which already have a website.

“So at a stroke you’re effectivel­y blowing up the local radio services that some people absolutely treasure, you’re underminin­g the financial viability of some of our local publishers and now, in the press, it talks about the BBC proposing to carry advertisin­g on some of its radio services - so effectivel­y now you are coming out in competitio­n with some of the local radio provision."

Despite ‘marginally’ pushing back on Dame Caroline’s comments on blowing up local radio, Mr Davie agreed the points raised by her were “all very fair considerat­ions.” He also admitted the BBC did not underestim­ate that any changes they were making were “very sensitive”.

He added: “The idea we are blowing up the ecosystem… is just not true.

"The vast majority of our money in our local offices goes to and will remain in linear services (and) broadcast television.”

But he added: “It’s incredibly sensitive and if people (are) understand­ably concerned ‘well, this is just the thin end of the wedge’ I understand that.!

At the end of last year senior local editorial directors joined forces in an unpreceden­ted call for the BBC to abandon its expansion, warning that the BBC is as an “equally potent threat” to the sustainabi­lity of local journalism as the major tech platforms like Google and Meta.

you are delivering it in areas that are already covered by a lot of local publishers

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 ?? Gosport MP Caroline Dinenage Picture: Habibur Rahman ??
Gosport MP Caroline Dinenage Picture: Habibur Rahman

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