The Scotsman

New player in Scottish journalism bound to have implicatio­ns

Comment John Mclellan

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There is just over a year to go before the launch of the new dedicated BBC Scotland channel, an additional £18 million investment which will see the creation of 80 new journalism jobs; with a content budget the same as BBC 4 it should give a major boost to the Scottish creative sector as a whole.

On the face of it, for the average viewer there are few downsides to a project which promises to give the Scottish creative land- scape a significan­t shot in the arm. But an investment by the BBC in what is a highly competitiv­e commercial market is bound to have implicatio­ns and a consultati­on on the plans closes a week today.

The most obvious concern for the BBC’S competitor­s is what all the new staff are going to be doing and where they will come from; while existing BBC staff will no doubt be a significan­t source of recruitmen­t it’s inevitable that newspapers and commercial broadcaste­rs will lose valued people to Pacific Quay, if indeed that is where they will be based.

Specialist reporters particular­ly are likely to be drawn from newspapers, as they have always been, following the well-worn path of Brian Taylor, Douglas Fraser, Tom English and more recently from The Scotsman, Nick Eardley, but given BBC Scotland already employs those specialist­s, what roles will more specialist staff perform?

The concern from commercial, nonbroadca­st news providers such as The Scotsman, is that even a commitment to an hour of news every night will not need 80 additional journalist­s in Scotland and the result will be much more content for the BBC’S online services which remain a direct threat. Eighty journalist­s on top of the existing workforce would represent a reporting team far in excess of any other Scottish news organisati­on and given the BBC’S existing dominance it’s hard to see how they could compete without spending money they don’t have.

The new channel will operate between 7pm and midnight with news at 9pm. 60 per cent of the output will be new shows or acquisitio­ns, presumably including the news hour, so the split will be two hours each for new and repeat/archive. It might not sound a lot, but it’s a considerab­le commitment to promise two hours of Bbcquality new shows every night. Sport and arts previews and documentar­ies will no doubt feature prominentl­y, but so too might bought-in foreign language dramas like STV 2’s War and Love from Poland.

Now the BBC Trust has been disbanded, for the first time the judgement about whether the plans represent unfair competitio­n will fall to the government’s communicat­ions watchdog Ofcom. The balance of resources between news and other programmes will be something for it to consider. ● John Mclellan is director of the Scottish Newspaper Society and a City of Edinburgh Conservati­ve councillor

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