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BBC may ask over-75s to give up free TV licence | BBC may ask over-75s to give up free TV licence |
(about 9 hours later) | |
People over 75 may be asked to give up their free TV licence or make a voluntary contribution to it, under plans being considered by the BBC. | People over 75 may be asked to give up their free TV licence or make a voluntary contribution to it, under plans being considered by the BBC. |
The corporation is due to take on the £650m cost of free licences for the over-75s from 2020 as part of a funding deal agreed with ministers last year. | The corporation is due to take on the £650m cost of free licences for the over-75s from 2020 as part of a funding deal agreed with ministers last year. |
A report on ways to appeal for voluntary contributions is due in 2016. | A report on ways to appeal for voluntary contributions is due in 2016. |
The BBC has refused to comment on suggestions that older celebrities might front a publicity campaign. | The BBC has refused to comment on suggestions that older celebrities might front a publicity campaign. |
The Times reported that such a campaign could be run by personalities such as Sir Michael Parkinson and actress Dame Helen Mirren. | The Times reported that such a campaign could be run by personalities such as Sir Michael Parkinson and actress Dame Helen Mirren. |
'Loophole' | |
Funding free licence fees for over-75s cost the government £608m in 2013-14 - about a fifth of the BBC's budget. | Funding free licence fees for over-75s cost the government £608m in 2013-14 - about a fifth of the BBC's budget. |
The corporation's responsibility for them will be phased in from 2018-19, with sole responsibility transferred from 2020-21. | |
At the time of the announcement in July, the BBC said it was the "right deal... in difficult economic circumstances". | |
In return, the government agreed the corporation could ask for voluntary payments from those who currently receive free licences. | |
Ministers also agreed the BBC could look into ways of closing the "iPlayer loophole", which at present means that if people only watch catch-up TV and do not watch any live TV, they do not need a licence. | |
The BBC has said, though, that there is no proposal to make people pay to watch catch-up TV on iPlayer on top of the licence fee. | |
* £271.4m of the total licence fee pot is used by the government to fund Welsh language channel S4C, the local TV scheme and broadband rollout. | |
Labour peer Dame Joan Bakewell - formerly a government-appointed champion of the elderly - told BBC London the licence fee represented "enormous value for money" for pensioners, adding that those who had the means to pay should do so. | |
But she said the BBC should not be in a situation where it had to ask. | |
"The government pulled a fast one recently because what they did was this... transgress from one enterprise, which is government policy about [cutting] welfare, into the BBC's licence fee - which is a completely original and outrageous undertaking." | |
Roger Laughton, a former BBC and ITV executive, agreed the BBC was "between a rock and a hard place". | |
But Dot Gibson, general secretary of National Pensioners, warned the corporation against using celebrities to try to persuade ordinary pensioners to give up their free licence. | |
"Many older, vulnerable people might be taken in by this when they should be protected," she said. | |
"The government needs to take back responsibility for the free TV licence or we're going to see it cut by stealth and then eventually removed altogether." | |
The BBC confirmed that Frontier Economics, a consultancy led by former cabinet secretary Lord O'Donnell, would report back within months on the best approach to asking people for contributions. | |
It said it would then "look at the best way forward, including whether to run a campaign". |