The Scotsman

2018 shapes as significan­t year for future of Scottish media

Comment John Mclellan

-

So, 2018 is already shaping up to be the most significan­t year for the Scottish media landscape for some time, kicking off tomorrow with a debate in the House of Lords about the new Data Protection Bill.

The legislatio­n is designed to introduce better safeguards for the handling of private informatio­n, but has been hi-jacked by Liberal Democrat and Labour peers, effectivel­y to re-open the Leveson Inquiry into phone hacking, on the basis that phone-hacking involved the misuse of personal data.

However, there has already been an extensive consultati­on by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport into whether the second part of the Leveson remit, the relationsh­ip between police and press which was suspended while the various criminal prosecutio­ns were under way, should be reactivate­d. A decision is expected soon, but after a £5.4 million inquiry and around 40 criminal trials the need for a further public inquiry isn’t exactly clear.

The Labour-lib Dem amendment calls for an inquiry into “allegation­s of data protection breaches committed by, or on behalf of, news publishers” and Conservati­ve Lords who oppose it fear the vote will be tight. This week also sees the completion of an Ofcom consultati­on about the BBC’S plans for a new Scottish channel. Now Ofcom’s remit extends to the BBC following the abolition of the BBC Trust, the broadcast regulator must decide whether to conduct a full assessment of the implicatio­ns for commercial media markets the BBC proposal could have.

Evidence gathering was completed just before Christmas, and the BBC argued their £32m plan will have wide benefits for the Scottish creative sector and in many ways that’s true, especially for programme-making. But commercial news operators, such as the newspapers I represent, do not accept the BBC’S claim that there are no implicatio­ns for commercial news operations, or the 80 journalist­s they want to recruit will only help them address gaps in the market. That there is a difference of opinion is perhaps justificat­ion in itself for a full market assessment and a decision will be made in Spring, but the expectatio­n is still that the new channel will launch later this year.

Also expected this year is a decision from Scottish justice minister Michael Matheson on whether to take forward the reform of defamation law proposed by the Scottish Law Commission. Its report and draft bill were submitted just before Christmas and with broad support and non-party political content there is every chance the bill might make it on to the legislativ­e programme for the next Scottish parliament­ary year. ● John Mclellan is director of the Scottish Newspaper Society and honorary professor of journalism at the University of Stirling

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom