ITV station to be closed down

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Thursday, September 25, 2008
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This is Cornwall

PLYMOUTH’S ITV station will be shut down with the loss of dozens of jobs after Ofcom today announced plans to merge it with Bristol-based ITV West.

The merger will also see news bulletins shrunk from 30 minutes to just 15, and the programmes could even me made outside the region.

Staff are expecting to receive redundancy notices early next week.

It is feared nearly all of about 100 workers will be axed.

Under ITV plans, some journalists will be retained, but the numbers halved to a total of about 30 from both the merged stations.

Unions today said the mood at the Plympton-based home of ITV Westcountry was ‘grim’ even though staff had been expecting this announcement for a year.

They also said it would lead to a news service that would be ‘significantly diluted’.

John Andrews, the station’s National Union of Journalists’ spokesman, said: "This will almost certainly lead to the closure of the Plymouth studio.

"Everybody is expecting to get redundancy notices at the beginning of next week.

"We will fight for whatever jobs remain, but people are not happy, it’s a pretty grim prospect."

Media regulator Ofcom today publishes details of the second stage of its public service broadcasting review.

Amongst a raft of changes to the ITV network it proposed: "ITV West and Westcountry news to be merged, but with separate 15-minute sequences in the flagship bulletin and separate late evening bulletins."

A consultation period now extends until December, but ITV staff are expecting the company to announce next week that it is going ahead with the merger anyway, as part of a £40million cost-saving programme because the station is struggling with falling advertising revenue.

Staff expect the new system to be in operation by January 1.

This system would see reporters, some of whom would also be cameramen, scattered throughout the South West.

They would report to a newsroom which could be set up anywhere in the region but is unlikely to be at the existing centres in Plymouth or Bristol because they are too big.

The material will be ‘pulled together’ by correspondents who appear on screen, backed up with the team of reporter/cammeramen.

But the actual news programme, which will be 30 minutes long but divided between Devon and Cornwall news and a bulletin from the rest of the region, could be put together at a ‘hub’ anywhere in the country.

This would mean there would be no need for technical or support staff to be based in the South West.

"We are waiting until the beginning of next week when ITV produce its definitive plan of where the newsroom will be and how many staff there will be," said Mr Andrews, who is also the stations defence correspondent.

The ITV Westcountry station successfully won a franchise bid in 1992 and began broadcasting from new studios at Langage.

It succeeded Westward and TSW which had previously been based at Derry’s Cross.

At the height of its success, ITV Westcountry employed about 180 people, but later saw that number whittled away.

It still, however, maintains its district coverage, with reporters based in regional centres such as Truro, Exeter, Weymouth and Taunton.

But there are concerns the focus of regional broadcasting will be lost under the proposed changes.

"People in Devon and Cornwall have a similar attitude to life and share the same problems," said Mr Andrews. "But putting it in with places like the Cotswolds, a London commuter area, and the M4 silicon valley of Swindon to Bristol, it’s a completely different area to the one people here love."

ITV Westcountry is not the only station affected by the Ofcom proposals under which regional news face changes to ease pressure on ITV as it suffers an advertising slowdown.

Ofcom said between £145 million and £235 million of additional public funding would be needed by 2012 to keep public service broadcasts at current levels on channels other than the BBC – ITV1, Channel 4 and Five.

The regulator’s report did however propose to maintain ITV1’s quotas for original UK productions, independent productions and national and international news in the face of increased competition and the digital switchover.

ITV1 could have quotas for programmes made outside London reduced from 50 per cent to 35 per cent under the proposals.

The minimum quota for ITV’s regional non-news programmes should also be cut from 30 minutes to 15 minutes on average a week, Ofcom suggested.

ITV is seeking to rationalise its regional news delivery in England and the Scottish borders from 17 separate main programmes to nine.

The report’s provisional conclusions said the BBC should remain the ‘cornerstone’ of public service content and its core programme and services budget should be secure.

It said audiences should have a choice of providers in most areas of public service content, which the market alone would not provide.

Ofcom is proposing a number of models for providing public service broadcasting in the future.

These include an evolution of the current model, a system where only the BBC and Channel 4 receive public funding, or a competitive model where broadcast, online and multi-channel providers can compete to deliver the content.

Ofcom said its findings so far had shown that there was virtually no support for a BBC-only model.

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20 Comments

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Jeremy Gardner, Somewhere in Somerset

    Monday, September 29 2008, 1:23PM

    “Providing we still get the news items relevant to our area it shouldn't be a problem. The main thing is that we aren't goverend by London. Bristol isn't so far away and they have provided excellent news coverage for the Somerset area for years. I dont have a problem with it and I think the SW needs to start acting together as one region and stop all this sub-regional quarrelling. Whenever we do this we loose out to Wales and the West Midlands. And I'm sorry, but Gus Honeybun!!! We're in the 21st century now. We need to get real and modernise and stop acting like a region of retired people. Please!”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Mel, Plymouth

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 9:20PM

    “Yes I agree. BRING BACK GUS HONEYBUN.”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by mac, west park

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 7:04PM

    “BRING BACK GUS HONEYBUN !”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by fahrenheit451, plymouth

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 6:56PM

    “This is a sad day for us down here - all about saving money again though how much would they save if they stopped having two presenters each finishing each others sentence!”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Molly, Sutton

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 5:23PM

    “Perhaps itv could give the half hour slot over to local community groups or broadcasters for a week each and see what very local output from various parts of devon and cornwall might produce?”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Molly, Sutton

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 5:22PM

    “perhaps itv could give the half hour slot over to local community groups or broadcasters for a week each and see what very local output from various parts of devon and cornwall might produce?”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Harvey, Plymouth

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 3:11PM

    “I feel sorry for the people who are going to lose thier jobs but the programming is no loss, Have you seen Westcountry Live? Its purgatory. The'witty' bantor the presenters fake makes me feel quite bilious.”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Sukie, Mannamead

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 2:00PM

    “Oh dear, they seem to have cut off half my comments. All I said was that I wish they would bring back Gus Honeybun. I do prefer the BBC though, can't be doing with all those ads. Ken, I really don't have the time today to read your version of War & Peace.”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Sukie, Mannamead

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 1:58PM

    “Mr Crazee, did Gus Honeybun (not "bum" !!) ever read out your your birthday? I was lucky enough. He was the highlight of my day, I hope they bring him back. I have to say that I prefer the BBC, can't be doing with those dreadful ads. Ken, again your comment is too long and I just don't have the time to read it, talk about War & Peace!”

  • Profile image for This is Cornwall

    by Ken, Greenbank

    Thursday, September 25 2008, 12:11PM

    “Ken from Saltash; nice to see you using paragraphs at last!!!!”

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