Subtitling Agreement between Economic Development and Channel Television
Background
In June 1996 the States of Jersey and Guernsey joined Channel Television in a tripartite initiative designed to establish and secure a subtitling service for Channel Television’s local programmes. Since the beginning of 1997, on average more than 3 hours of local programmes each week have been subtitled. This represents a wide variety of programming including Channel Report, Channel’s late news transmissions, factual and current affairs documentaries and sports programmes. The service has done much to extend the accessibility and enjoyment of Channel Television’s local programmes to a disadvantaged section of the Channel Islands’ community, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing.
Channel Television’s Licence Obligations
It is a requirement of Channel Television’s Channel 3 Regional Licence that the company provides a set number of hours each week of subtitled programmes. Channel Television satisfies this requirement by contributing to the cost of the joint service provided by all Channel 3 licensees. This service subtitles national programmes across all genres including news, current affairs, documentaries, games shows, soaps and children’s programmes. Channel Television has never used its local programmes service to satisfy its licence obligation. Indeed, Channel Television has no licence requirement to provide subtitling for local programmes.
The Value of Subtitling
By May 2008 the BBC had reached 100% subtitling across its seven main TV channels. Channel 4 voluntarily committed to provide subtitling on all content on Channel 4, More 4, E4, Film4 and +1 channels.
Statistics provided by the Royal National Institute for the Deaf confirm that one in seven of the population in the UK suffer from hearing difficulties. Extrapolating these figures to the Channel Islands, in excess of 20,000 people (population estimate of c. 156,000) are either deaf or hard of hearing.
The Future
The current agreements between Economic Development, the Guernsey Home Department and Channel Television expired on the 31 December 2011. Under those agreements, an annual contribution of £80,000 was made to Channel Television to provide two and a half hours of subtitled local programmes per week averaged over each period of three months. The total contribution of £80,000 per month is split on a 60/40 basis between the two Islands, with Economic Development paying a monthly contribution to Channel Television of £4,000 and the Guernsey Home Department £2,666.67.
CTV applied for an extension to the funding arrangements for the local programmes subtitling service in December 2011. However, funding for subtitling was part of the Comprehensive Spending Review savings for 2011 and thereafter. EDD nevertheless secured States Treasury approval to carry forward £48,000 to cover a grant for a further year. Guernsey has indicated that it would be in a position to support the subtitling service in 2012, subject to the Economic Development Department in Jersey also agreeing to continue with the service.
Recommendation
The Minister is recommended to approve a grant of £48,000 to Channel Television towards the cost of the local programmes subtitling service from 1st January 2012 to 31st December 2012.
Director Strategic Development
17 May 2012