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Government document considers Channel 4 'privatisation options' | Government document considers Channel 4 'privatisation options' |
(about 17 hours later) | |
The government says it has made no decisions about reforming Channel 4 after an official was pictured holding papers that proposed its privatisation. | The government says it has made no decisions about reforming Channel 4 after an official was pictured holding papers that proposed its privatisation. |
The photograph of the memo was posted on Twitter by photographer Steve Back. | The photograph of the memo was posted on Twitter by photographer Steve Back. |
The Department for Culture, Media and Sport said the government was looking at a "range of options" on reform. | The Department for Culture, Media and Sport said the government was looking at a "range of options" on reform. |
Channel 4 commented that its "not-for-profit model enables it to deliver significant public value to viewers and the UK economy." | Channel 4 commented that its "not-for-profit model enables it to deliver significant public value to viewers and the UK economy." |
The "official - sensitive: commercial" document is dated 24 September 2015 and headed "Assessment of Channel 4 Corporation Reform Options". | The "official - sensitive: commercial" document is dated 24 September 2015 and headed "Assessment of Channel 4 Corporation Reform Options". |
It says there has been a "recent meeting" between Cabinet Office minister Matthew Hancock and two unnamed secretaries of state. | It says there has been a "recent meeting" between Cabinet Office minister Matthew Hancock and two unnamed secretaries of state. |
The document reads: "You agreed that work should proceed [to] examine the options for extracting greater public value from the Channel 4 Corporation (C4C), focusing on privatisation options in particular, whilst protecting its ability to deliver against its remit. | The document reads: "You agreed that work should proceed [to] examine the options for extracting greater public value from the Channel 4 Corporation (C4C), focusing on privatisation options in particular, whilst protecting its ability to deliver against its remit. |
"This submission outlines the options we propose to explore." | "This submission outlines the options we propose to explore." |
In response to the photograph, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport said: "Channel 4 has an important remit and we are looking at a range of options as to how to continue to deliver this, including options put forward by Channel 4." | In response to the photograph, the Department for Culture, Media and Sport said: "Channel 4 has an important remit and we are looking at a range of options as to how to continue to deliver this, including options put forward by Channel 4." |
Channel 4 was launched in 1982 as a publicly-owned, commercially-funded public service broadcaster. It does not receive public funding and has a remit to be "innovative, experimental and distinctive". | |
In August, culture secretary John Whittingdale said a sale of Channel 4 was not currently being discussed. | |
"The ownership of Channel 4 is not currently under debate. Do I say there are no circumstances in which I would ever consider it? No I don't," he told the Edinburgh International Television Festival. |
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