Storer68
New member
At last.
No more Southampton/Portsmouth/.Hampshire bias.
ITV is planning to cut its regional news budget by half, or up to £40m, and slash the number of local bulletins from 17 to nine.
The cuts will leads to hundreds of job cuts, according to broadcasting unions.
As part of ITV's plan, which would need to be approved by industry regulator Ofcom, the Border region news service is to be merged with Tyne Tees, while the separate Westcountry and West of England bulletins will become one programme.
In a letter to staff, ITV executive chairman Michael Grade said the broadcaster was seeking savings of between £35m and £40m a year from its £120m regional programming budget.
Out of this, ITV spends around £85m a year on regional news, according to the National Union of Journalists.
Six local "opt-out" bulletins - where viewers in different parts of a region get a more localised service - are also being axed in the Central, Meridian, Yorkshire and Anglia franchises.
However, ITV is proposing to provide short recorded opt-outs in Central and Meridian until digital switchover is completed in 2012.
There would be no changes to the ITV regional news services in London, Granada or Wales.
"The new combined programmes we are proposing today - if approved by Ofcom - will be well resourced, well produced and able to offer viewers high-quality journalism and content that celebrates the life of our regions," said Michael Jermey, ITV Regions director, in a letter to staff.
Ofcom would consider the proposals, said the letter, as part of its review of public service broadcasting that continues until the end of next year. If approved, the changes would take effect from early 2009.
"We appreciate that major change is difficult but if we keep the end goal in mind, to build an affordable network of regional news services, making high quality, well-resourced programmes that viewers want to watch we will be successful," Mr Jermey added.
Mr Grade said the company was moving towards "a fully digital market with all the commercial challenges that brings - we have to make sure ITV remain competitive".
"The commercial reality is that we're spending more than regional news than can be justified," he added.
No more Southampton/Portsmouth/.Hampshire bias.
ITV is planning to cut its regional news budget by half, or up to £40m, and slash the number of local bulletins from 17 to nine.
The cuts will leads to hundreds of job cuts, according to broadcasting unions.
As part of ITV's plan, which would need to be approved by industry regulator Ofcom, the Border region news service is to be merged with Tyne Tees, while the separate Westcountry and West of England bulletins will become one programme.
In a letter to staff, ITV executive chairman Michael Grade said the broadcaster was seeking savings of between £35m and £40m a year from its £120m regional programming budget.
Out of this, ITV spends around £85m a year on regional news, according to the National Union of Journalists.
Six local "opt-out" bulletins - where viewers in different parts of a region get a more localised service - are also being axed in the Central, Meridian, Yorkshire and Anglia franchises.
However, ITV is proposing to provide short recorded opt-outs in Central and Meridian until digital switchover is completed in 2012.
There would be no changes to the ITV regional news services in London, Granada or Wales.
"The new combined programmes we are proposing today - if approved by Ofcom - will be well resourced, well produced and able to offer viewers high-quality journalism and content that celebrates the life of our regions," said Michael Jermey, ITV Regions director, in a letter to staff.
Ofcom would consider the proposals, said the letter, as part of its review of public service broadcasting that continues until the end of next year. If approved, the changes would take effect from early 2009.
"We appreciate that major change is difficult but if we keep the end goal in mind, to build an affordable network of regional news services, making high quality, well-resourced programmes that viewers want to watch we will be successful," Mr Jermey added.
Mr Grade said the company was moving towards "a fully digital market with all the commercial challenges that brings - we have to make sure ITV remain competitive".
"The commercial reality is that we're spending more than regional news than can be justified," he added.