November 22, 2024

Lawmakers Show Anger Over BBC Severance Pay

Differences between the chairman of the BBC Trust, Chris Patten, and a former director general of the BBC, Mark Thompson, were less dramatic than the anger of lawmakers over the apparent inability of BBC executives and regulators to understand why the size of the severance payments was so shocking.

Chris Heaton-Harris, a Conservative legislator, described the three-hour hearing before the Public Accounts Committee as “the most bizarre game of Whac-A-Mole I’ve ever seen in my life, where you hit something down and it throws up another load of questions.”

Chairwoman Margaret Hodge of the Labour Party called it “a grossly unedifying occasion which can only damage in my view the standing and reputation of the BBC.”

In particular, the decision in 2010 to pay the deputy director of the BBC, Mark Byford, nearly £950,000, or $1.5 million — two years’ salary, half of it paid in lieu of notice that he would be let go — and then retain him and pay him for eight more months was discussed at great length.

The payments were made largely when Mr. Thompson, now the president and chief executive of The New York Times Company, was the director general of the BBC. Mr. Thompson ran the BBC from 2004 to 2012.

Mr. Thompson said the deal for Mr. Byford was done to move ahead with staff reductions under public pressure, while keeping Mr. Byford on hand to continue handling important tasks. He insisted that the BBC Trust was fully informed and that his position had the support of the executive remuneration committee.

While some severance payments were high, he said, the rapid reduction in senior management — as many as one-quarter of positions — initially saved the BBC £35 million, or $55 million, and reduced its future salary and expenses by as much as £19 million a year, or about $30 million.

“I was under tremendous pressure from the trust to do something big and quick,” Mr. Thompson said. “We were focused on getting the pay bill down, and we did that.”

But Mr. Patten and others said members of the trust, which did not have responsibility over severance payments, had not been fully informed, in that Mr. Thompson had told them that Mr. Byford’s severance was contractual, without making the full arrangements clear.

Because Mr. Byford was given formal notice only in June 2011, Mr. Thompson argued that his settlement was contractual, while others said that it was beyond the terms of the contract because Mr. Byford knew the previous October that his job was disappearing, and that his salary for those eight months ought to have been deducted from his year’s pay in lieu of notice but was not.

While there was much discussion of this issue, Mr. Thompson said that both The Daily Mail and The Daily Telegraph had details of the size of Mr. Byford’s settlement in October. “Why would we brief The Daily Mail and not the trust?” Mr. Thompson asked.

The National Audit Office has found that, of 150 senior executives who left in the three years ending December 2012, which cost the corporation £25 million, or $39 million, the BBC paid more salary in lieu of notice than contractually mandated in 22 cases, for an extra cost of £1.4 million, or $2.2 million.

The chairwoman, Ms. Hodge, was incredulous. A typical British worker would have to labor “40 years,” she said, to get the sum Mr. Byford was paid for leaving the BBC. The size of the payments, she said, was “offensive.”

Michael Lyons, Mr. Patten’s predecessor as chairman of the trust, said he largely supported Mr. Thompson. The trust was pressing the executive to reduce senior managers quickly, he said. He told Ms. Hodge: “The sums for the ordinary person in the street look eye-watering; of course they do. But actually that goes for many other places, whether in civil service or in private industry.”

Ms. Hodge said bluntly, “You could have done it for less.” Mr. Lyons answered, “I’m not personally convinced that that is the case.”

Asked if he would support a similar payment to Mr. Byford today, Mr. Thompson said no, that the context now was different and that the BBC was less top-heavy, so there was less urgency and there were smaller savings to be gained.

The BBC is a delicate issue for Britons, since everyone who watches television pays a license fee that represents about 72 percent of the corporation’s income.

Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura contributed reporting.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/10/world/europe/bbc-severance-dispute-goes-to-parliamentary-panel.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

DealBook: News Corp. Sells Russian Unit

MOSCOW — The News Corporation, Rupert Murdoch’s media conglomerate embroiled in scandal, sold its billboard company in Russia to a consortium of investors led by a Kremlin-controlled bank, the bank announced on Friday.

The sale of News Outdoor Russia had been under negotiation for at least months. The timing was apparently unrelated to the turmoil around the News Corporation in Britain, where Parliament is investigating a tabloid newspaper’s practice of hacking into cell phones to obtain information.

Still, the Russian asset had a troubled history of its own. The News Corporation opened the company here in 1999 while maneuvering to gain a foothold in the former Soviet and Eastern European markets to compliment its media holdings in China.

While News Outdoor Group, which is based in Moscow, operates in the Czech Republic, Romania and Ukraine, Russia has been by far its most lucrative market. News Outdoor Russia billboards are frequently provided for pictures of Vladimir V. Putin, the former president and now prime minister, reportedly on a pro bono basis at times.

Despite these gestures that were reported in the Russian media, the News Corporation had been in discussions to sell the billboard company since the fall of 2008 amid a general worsening of the investment climate in Russia at the time, and apparent inability to win backing from the government.

In a 2008 interview with The Financial Times, Mr. Murdoch expressed concern the billboard company would be “stolen.” He added that “better we sell it now.”

Mr. Murdoch had initially proposed to sell the Russia asset for $1.6 billion. But as regulators pressed a tax claim and the recession deepened, the price dropped.

The company this week sold its 79 percent stake for $270 million, according to Kommersant, a Russian business newspaper. The Russian bank that organized the buyout consortium, VTB, did not disclose its price in a statement confirming the deal issued on Friday.

News Outdoor Russia is the country’s largest outdoor advertising operator with boards, banners and other advertising surfaces in more than 90 cities, according to the company’s Web site.

The Russian asset has been important to the News Corporation. Advertising revenues are mostly flat in developed markets like the United States, where the company operates the Fox television channel. But revenues are growing in emerging markets. In China, the News Corporation operates a satellite television company. In the former Soviet Union, the focus had been largely billboards managed through the Moscow-based company.

In 2008, News Outdoor Russia came under pressure, culminating in a back tax claim that was resolved two years later. Still, that year the company provided pro bono a large banner showing Mr. Putin’s face on a central Moscow building near Red Square, the RBK business newspaper reported.

Company-owned space in St. Petersburg this month carried advertisements for the People’s Front, a new political group established by Mr. Putin ahead of Parliamentary elections later this year.

Jason E. Senior, chief operating officer of News Outdoor Group, wrote in an email that the company would not respond to inquiries about the report of pro bono advertising provided to Mr. Putin in 2008 or the current advertising for the People’s Front organization on News Outdoor surfaces in St. Petersburg. He also declined to respond to questions about the sale.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=0a330aa693f343a5cae614db070e777d