Thanks to GPP for the extracts. Here are a few press cuttings, repoduced without comment, all from today (24/9, day after the leak) except the last one. Mostly speculation, but interesting all the same:
Daily Mail
Another quango in the firing line is Ofcom, which oversees TV and other media. Chief executive Ed Richards, who was forced to cut his £430,000 pay after public uproar, is a former adviser to Tony Blair and one of a number Ofcom officials with close links to Labour. Ofcom may escape abolition, but could lose several of its functions.
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Daily Telegraph data table:
Ofcom, Single Communications Regulator
NMD (Non-Ministerial Department)
Merged or Consolidated
810 staff
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V3 (formerly vnunet):
Leaked documents point to radical Ofcom reform Regulator could be merged with Postcomm in quango bloodbath Ofcom could be subjected to "substantial reform" as part of a series of mergers, cuts and overhauls to public sector quangos outlined by the coalition government.
Leaked documents (PDF) obtained by the BBC show that the government is seeking to overhaul the role of the media watchdog, as well as merging it with postal services regulator Postcomm.
The decision to combine the two organisations has been on the cards for almost two years, after a review backed by the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills in 2008 and this month.
"The responsibility for the regulation of the postal sector should be transferred to the communications regulator," said Richard Hooper, chairman of the Postal Services Sector Review Panel, in a report on the Royal Mail's future (PDF).
A spokesman for Ofcom claimed that the regulator is well aware of the possibilities of such a merger, and will work with the relevant authorities to oversee the change as and when it occurs.
"The government has made it clear that it plans to merge Postcomm into Ofcom, and we continue to work with the government and the relevant parties on this matter," he said.
The spokesman added that he is unable to comment on the "substantial reform" aspect of the leaked documents, as he is unaware of what this may entail.
Nevertheless, any changes that could be implemented would have a major impact on areas relating to telecoms and mobile technologies, where Ofcom plays a major role in setting rules and regulations.
In recent months Ofcom has given mobile operators permission to increase power limit levels for the coverage of 3G spectrum, commissioned studies on the mobile broadband market and warned errant telecoms companies over their behaviour.
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Public Service:
David Cameron has recently argued that too many quangos are actually producing policy (he points to Ofcom as a prime example) rather than executing policies set by politicians or democratically accountable bureaucrats. His view is that the proper roles of quangos are just three:
• Technical matters where the issue goes beyond the political horizon – such as the Nuclear Installations Inspectorate
• Issues about the actual distribution of taxpayers' money where political slant is not relevant (or may even be undesirable) – he gives the example of academic Research Councils
• Cases where the use of an independent body serves to create transparency concerning facts that might otherwise be distorted by politicians – he gives the example of the Office for National Statistics.
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Conservatives:
David Cameron, Open University 6 July 2009 (a whole year ago):
Six weeks ago at the Open University I set out our response to the crisis of trust in politics…
OFCOM is the regulator for the communications industry, and it's clear that it has an important technical function. It monitors the plurality of media provision for consumers. It licenses the spectrum in the UK. And it sets the charges and the price caps for BT's control of so much of the industry's infrastructure. OFCOM also has an enforcement function - ruling on breaches of the broadcasting code for instance. These matters relate to the operations of private companies in a commercial market and it is therefore right that they are free from political influence.
But Jeremy Hunt has concluded that OFCOM currently has many other responsibilities that are matters of public policy, in areas that should be part of a national debate, for example the future of regional news or Channel 4. These should not be determined by an unaccountable bureaucracy, but by minsters accountable to Parliament.
So with a Conservative Government, OFCOM as we know it will cease to exist. Its remit will be restricted to its narrow technical and enforcement roles. It will no longer play a role in making policy. And the policy-making functions it has today will be transferred back fully to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.