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BSA Decision 2015-051
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BSA | |
W Under The Broadcastin Act 1989 | |
BROADCASTING STANDARDS Aumqmrv Between PETER GREEN | |
TE MANA WHANONGA KAIPAHO | |
Complainant | |
And MEDIAWORKS TV LTD | |
Broadcaster | |
Before | |
Peter Radich, Chair | |
Leigh Pearson | |
Te Raumawhitu Kupenga | |
Paula Rose | |
Decision of the Broadcasting Standards Authority | |
10 November 2015 | |
Summary | |
[This summary does not form part of the decision. | |
An item on 3 News discussed a leaked internal report which reviewed the Labour | |
Party’s election strategy. Towards the conclusion of the item the reporter briefly | |
referred to the recent installation of security doors between the Labour and National | |
Party offices at a cost of $30,000. The Authority did not uphold a complaint that the | |
item lacked balance on this point. The brief reference to the installation of the doors | |
did not amount to a discussion of a controversial issue of public importance in the | |
context of this item, which focused on the leaked Labour Party report - so the | |
requirement to present alternative views was not triggered. | |
Not Upheld: Controversial Issues | |
POBox 9213, Wellington, New Zealand www.bsa.govt.nz | |
http://www.newocr.com/ | |
introduction | |
[1] An item on 3 News reported on a leaked internal report which reviewed the | |
Labour Party's election strategy. The report, among other things, stated that | |
Labour suffered from a lack of financial resources. The 3 News political | |
reporter analysed the report and towards the conclusion of the item he | |
briefly mentioned that Labour had recently installed security doors between | |
their offices and the National Party offices, at a cost of $30,000. | |
[2] Peter Green complained that the item lacked balance as it failed to | |
acknowledge, as other news sources had, that the doors were proposed by | |
the National Party. | |
[3] The issue is whether the broadcast breached the controversial issues | |
standard as set out in the Free-to-Air Television Code of Broadcasting | |
Practice. | |
[4] The item was broadcast on TV3 on 3 June 2015. The members of the | |
Authority have viewed a recording of the broadcast complained about and | |
have read the correspondence listed in the Appendix. | |
Did the item discuss a controversial issue of public importance which | |
required the presentation of alternative viewpoints? | |
[5] The balance standard (Standard 4) states that when controversial issues of | |
public importance are discussed in news, current affairs and factual | |
programmes. broadcasters should make reasonable efforts, or give | |
reasonable opportunities, to present significant points of View either in the | |
same programme or in other programmes within the period of current | |
interest. The standard exists to ensure that competing arguments are | |
presented to enable a viewer to arrive at an informed and reasoned | |
opinion.1 | |
[6] Mr Green considered the item discussed a controversial issue of public | |
importance, saying, ‘If use of taxpayer money on parliamentary doors was | |
not a matter of concern to members of the New Zealand public, why would 3 | |
News make a point of including it in their broadcast?’ He argued the item | |
was one-sided, as it ignored other news reports which claimed the doors | |
were proposed by National. Mr Green noted that most members of the | |
public are not watching every channel's news and reading every newspaper | |
Commerce Commission and TVWorks Ltd, Decision No. 2008-014 | |
Decision No. 2015-051 2 | |
http://www.newocr.com/ | |
therefore they should have some expectation that a 6pm news bulletin is | |
presenting issues impartially. | |
[7] MediaWorks argued that the political reporter’s reference .to the cost to | |
Parliamentary Services of installing doors between the Labour Party and | |
National Party offices was peripheral to the main story, which focused on the | |
leaked report and the reporter’s analysis that it was a waste of time and | |
money, so the balance standard did not apply. | |
[8] A number of criteria must be satisfied before the requirement to present | |
significant alternative viewpoints is triggered. The standard applies only to | |
news, current affairs and factual programmes which discuss a controversial | |
issue of public importance. The subject matter must be an issue ‘of public | |
importance', it must be ‘controversial’, and it must be ‘discussed’.2 | |
[9] The Authority has typically defined an issue of public importance as | |
something that would have a ‘significant potential impact on, or be of | |
concern to, members of the New Zealand public’.3 A controversial issue is | |
one which has topical currency and excites conflicting opinion or about | |
which there has been ongoing public debate.4 | |
[10] We accept that, generally, the expenditure of taXpayer dollars - particularly | |
where the spending is perceived to be unnecessary or unjustified -~ will | |
amount to a controversial issue of public importance, as it is clearly of | |
concern to the New Zealand public and commonly incites debate. | |
[11] However, the cost of the parliamentary doors was not the issue under | |
discussion in this item. The item’s focus was the leaked internal report on | |
Labour Party’s election strategy, and comprised the political reporter's | |
analysis of that report. Towards the end of the item he briefly referred to the | |
installation of the doors as an example of what was, in his opinion, unwise | |
expenditure, given that one of the findings of the report was that Labour | |
suffered from a lack of financial resources. The mention of the doors clearly | |
formed part of the reporter's political analysis and was incidental to the main | |
issue discussed. in this context reasonable viewers would not have | |
2 For further discussion of these concepts see Practice Note: Controversial Issues~ | |
Viewgolnts (Balance) as a Broadcasting Standard In Television (Broadcasting Standards | |
Authority, June 2010) and Practice Note: Controversial lssues- Viewgoints (Balance) as a | |
Broadcasting Standard in Radio (Broadcasting Standards Authority, June 2009) | |
3 Powell and CanWest TVWorks Ltd, Decision No. 2005-125 | |
4 See, for example, Dewe and TVWorks Ltd, Decision No. 2008-076 | |
http://www.newocr.com/ | |
expected to be presented with a balanced presentation of significant | |
vieWpoints about the installation of the doors or what they cost. | |
[12] In any case, as the complainant notes, other news stories which did focus | |
on the cost of the doors reported the information he believed should have | |
been included here - that the doors were proposed by the National Party | |
so that information was readily available elsewhere. | |
[13] For these reasons we decline to uphold the complaint under Standard 4. | |
For the above reasons the Authority declines to uphold the complaint. | |
Signed for and on behalf of the Authority | |
Peter Radish | |
Chair | |
10 November 2015 | |
Decision No. 2015051 4 | |
http://www.newocr.com/ | |
Appendix | |
The correspondence listed below was received and considered by the Authority | |
when it determined this complaint: | |
1 Peter Green’s formal complaint - 3 June 2015 | |
2 MediaWorks’ response to the complaint - 1 July 2015 | |
3 Mr Green’s referral to the Authority - 25 July 2015 | |
4 MediaWorks’ response to the Authority - 24 August 2015 | |
5 Mr Green’s final comments - 7 September 2015 | |
http://www.newocr.com/ |
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