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Sunday, 20th July 2008

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BBC admits failing to pay £106,000 to charity



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THE BBC failed to pay £106,000 to charity from phone votes in over 20 programmes, including last year's UK Eurovision final, it said today.
In the case of Eurovision: Making Your Mind Up 2007, a presenter mistakenly told viewers to vote when phone lines had not yet opened.

The other programmes, which have not been named, relate to Audiocall, part of BBC Worldwide, retaining all money
raised from premium-rate calls made by the audience who were mistakenly voting despite lines being closed.

For the first time, the BBC Trust has instructed the Corporation to apologise on air for breach of trust.

It has also asked the director general to consider disciplinary action against a small number of BBC Worldwide staff.

The BBC said the sums that should have been paid to charity have now been repaid with interest.

The problems, published in a report commissioned by the BBC, occurred between October 2005 and September last year.

BBC chairman Sir Michael Lyons blamed "unacceptable behaviour from a small number of staff".

He said that while a "clear editorial failure" led to the problem with Eurovision, where the phone lines were also being handled by Audiocall, in the other cases "the problems were entirely with Audiocall".

Sir Michael said the BBC Trust was "shocked to find another problem".

It follows the spate of scandals that have engulfed the BBC and the rest of the broadcasting industry.



The full article contains 245 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 09 May 2008 1:34 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

09/05/2008 13:57:30
"It has also asked the director general to consider disciplinary action against a small number of BBC Worldwide staff."

If I took in over a hundred grand for charity and didn't hand it over, the disciplinary action would be the sack and being frogmarched to the cop shop. There wouyldn't be much considering to be done about it either.

These luvvies must think they live on an entirely different planet. Sed the fraud squad in now and clap 'em all in handcuffs.
2

,

09/05/2008 14:10:34
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
3

,

09/05/2008 14:32:49
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
4

John Blackley,

Florida 09/05/2008 15:33:03
I wonder if any paper will report on the fallout from this - or if it'll quietly disappear.

Auntie Beeb has many problems now - most of them due to failures in direction and management. This latest -a "clear editorial failure" may or may not result in a few low-level oiks getting sent to the farm. I wonder if anyone at the editorial level will pay for the "clear editorial failure"?
5

Boy Wonder,

09/05/2008 16:04:10
Time to put an end to ALL of these phone-in programmes!

Let's have some decent dramas instead ... and not soaps, sitcoms, cops and/or medical programmes

 

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