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ПОСЛЕДНИЕ НОВОСТИ |
£106,000 держат BBC, котор наличных дег призрения
Суббота 9-ое май 2008
В самый последний скандал для того чтобы ударить индустрию телевидения над телефон-ins, BBC также впустило что телезрители делать ваш разум вверх, BBC1 выставка которая выбрала вход last year UK для состязания песни Eurovision, Scooch, были введены в заблуждение в голосовать прежде чем телефонные линии раскрыли. В тот случай, BBC сделало £6,000 от ineligible звоноков которое также шло к призрению. Руководитель доверия BBC, господин Майкл Lyons, сегодня сказал что деньг теперь была отплащена к призрению, включая totalling £123,000 интереса. Доверие также приказывало BBC для того чтобы сделать onscreen извинение - the first time управление и полномочный орган корпорации наводили такой санкцию. Lyons сказал вопрос включил BBC всемирное дополнитеельное Audiocall, которое снабубежит телефонные линии наградн-тарифа много выставок BBC. Он добавил то около 2 выставки дюжины, котор были повлияны на между октябрями 2005 и сентябрей 2007, хотя он отказал назвать их. Новыа виды технологии Lyons сказанный с тех пор был введен намеревался проблема была разрешена. Доверие спрашивало, что генеральный директор BBC, Марк Thompson, смотрит дисциплинирующ «пригорошню» штата. Lyons сделал им ясность управленческий персонал в пределах BBC всемирно и корпорации не знало о проблеме и ни укомплектовал штаты работало на affected программах. Он добавил что он не знал почему штат на Audiocall не сообщил вопрос. Сказанный Lyons: «Не будет законного impropriety но будет отказом в поведении этих штат и системы BBC собственные. «Было делом серьезного misjudgment немного людей и серьезного терпеть неудачу в как BBC контролирует свои PRS [телефонные обслуживания наградн-тарифа] и свое отношение с телезрителями и избирателями. «Эти проблемы не могут продолжать в будущее и будут уроки, котор нужно выучить и дисциплинарная мера может осуществить amongst штат.» Он добавил: «Не будет комнаты для самоуспокоенности здесь. Это будет цель организации на жить самыми высокими стандартами в индустрии.» Эти самые последние откровения обмана TV следуют за показателем £5.675m отлично наведенным на ITV вчера Ofcom над скандалом коммерчески передатчика phone-in. In an email to staff, Thompson described the situation as a “serious oversight”. But he said there was “no evidence” of any “impropriety or intention to defraud”, adding that the £106,000 represented only 1.3% of the approximately £8m raised for charity through BBC telephone votes during the relevant period. “All the money has been paid to the charities involved, with interest,” Thompson added. “The oversight has been remedied. Clearly, this must never be allowed to happen again.” He said that while the new incidents were “disappointing”, they were both “historical’. “We’re confident that the measures we’ve put in place mean they won’t happen again,” Thompson added. “The whole BBC has made enormous progress on the topic of trust over the past nine months, a fact backed up by all of our surveys of the public themselves. “We need to go on doing everything possible to restore fully the public’s trust in us. But we’ve made real progress on that score, while delivering some spectacular creative successes and starting to make our vision of the BBC’s future a reality.”The BBC today apologised for keeping £106,000 made from premium-rate phone calls on about two dozen shows that should have been given to charity. In the latest scandal to hit the television industry over phone-ins, the BBC also admitted that viewers of Making Your Mind Up, the BBC1 show that chose last year’s UK entry for the Eurovision song contest, Scooch, were misled into voting before phone lines had opened. In that case, the BBC made £6,000 from ineligible calls that has also gone to charity. The BBC Trust chairman, Sir Michael Lyons, today said that the money had now been repaid to charity, including interest totalling £123,000. The trust has also ordered the BBC to make an onscreen apology - the first time the corporation’s governance and regulatory body has imposed such a sanction. Lyons said the issue involved the BBC Worldwide subsidiary Audiocall, which provides premium-rate phone lines to many BBC shows. He added that about two dozen shows had been affected between October 2005 and September 2007, although he refused to name them. Lyons said new technology had since been introduced which meant the problem had been resolved. The trust has asked the BBC director general, Mark Thompson, to look at disciplining a “handful” of staff. Lyons made it clear that senior staff within BBC Worldwide and the corporation did not know about the problem and nor did staff who worked on the affected programmes. He added that he did not know why staff at Audiocall did not report the issue. Lyons said: “There is no legal impropriety but it is a failure in the behaviour of these staff and the BBC’s own systems. “It was a matter of serious misjudgment by a small number of people and a serious failing in how the BBC controls its PRS [premium-rate phone services] and its relationship with viewers and voters. “These problems can’t continue into the future and there are lessons to be learned and disciplinary action may take place amongst staff.” He added: “There is no room for complacency here. This is an organisation intent on living by the highest standards in the industry.” These latest TV deception revelations follow the record £5.675m fine imposed on ITV yesterday by Ofcom over the commercial broadcaster’s phone-in scandal. In an email to staff, Thompson described the situation as a “serious oversight”. But he said there was “no evidence” of any “impropriety or intention to defraud”, adding that the £106,000 represented only 1.3% of the approximately £8m raised for charity through BBC telephone votes during the relevant period. “All the money has been paid to the charities involved, with interest,” Thompson added. “The oversight has been remedied. Clearly, this must never be allowed to happen again.” He said that while the new incidents were “disappointing”, they were both “historical’. “We’re confident that the measures we’ve put in place mean they won’t happen again,” Thompson added. “The whole BBC has made enormous progress on the topic of trust over the past nine months, a fact backed up by all of our surveys of the public themselves. “We need to go on doing everything possible to restore fully the public’s trust in us. But we’ve made real progress on that score, while delivering some spectacular creative successes and starting to make our vision of the BBC’s future a reality.”The BBC today apologised for keeping £106,000 made from premium-rate phone calls on about two dozen shows that should have been given to charity. In the latest scandal to hit the television industry over phone-ins, the BBC also admitted that viewers of Making Your Mind Up, the BBC1 show that chose last year’s UK entry for the Eurovision song contest, Scooch, were misled into voting before phone lines had opened. In that case, the BBC made £6,000 from ineligible calls that has also gone to charity. The BBC Trust chairman, Sir Michael Lyons, today said that the money had now been repaid to charity, including interest totalling £123,000. The trust has also ordered the BBC to make an onscreen apology - the first time the corporation’s governance and regulatory body has imposed such a sanction. Lyons said the issue involved the BBC Worldwide subsidiary Audiocall, which provides premium-rate phone lines to many BBC shows. He added that about two dozen shows had been affected between October 2005 and September 2007, although he refused to name them. Lyons said new technology had since been introduced which meant the problem had been resolved. The trust has asked the BBC director general, Mark Thompson, to look at disciplining a “handful” of staff. Lyons made it clear that senior staff within BBC Worldwide and the corporation did not know about the problem and nor did staff who worked on the affected programmes. He added that he did not know why staff at Audiocall did not report the issue. Lyons said: “There is no legal impropriety but it is a failure in the behaviour of these staff and the BBC’s own systems. “It was a matter of serious misjudgment by a small number of people and a serious failing in how the BBC controls its PRS [premium-rate phone services] and its relationship with viewers and voters. “These problems can’t continue into the future and there are lessons to be learned and disciplinary action may take place amongst staff.” He added: “There is no room for complacency here. This is an organisation intent on living by the highest standards in the industry.” These latest TV deception revelations follow the record £5.675m fine imposed on ITV yesterday by Ofcom over the commercial broadcaster’s phone-in scandal. In an email to staff, Thompson described the situation as a “serious oversight”. But he said there was “no evidence” of any “impropriety or intention to defraud”, adding that the £106,000 represented only 1.3% of the approximately £8m raised for charity through BBC telephone votes during the relevant period. “All the money has been paid to the charities involved, with interest,” Thompson added. “The oversight has been remedied. Clearly, this must never be allowed to happen again.” He said that while the new incidents were “disappointing”, they were both “historical’. “We’re confident that the measures we’ve put in place mean they won’t happen again,” Thompson added. “The whole BBC has made enormous progress on the topic of trust over the past nine months, a fact backed up by all of our surveys of the public themselves. “We need to go on doing everything possible to restore fully the public’s trust in us. But we’ve made real progress on that score, while delivering some spectacular creative successes and starting to make our vision of the BBC’s future a reality.” See More:BBC Money UK NewsHave Your Say: BBC kept £106,000 of charity cash Please note, only selected comments will be published. Or discuss this report in our our new forums One Response to “BBC kept £106,000 of charity cash”
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If the BBC want to be trusted they should first reveal the source for their bewildering report on the collapse of the Solomon Brothers Skyscraper (WTC building 7) on September 11 2001. Anyone that’s seen seen this revealing report will likely find it impossible to trust the BBC again.