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Information Policy & Compliance
bbc.co.uk/foi
bbc.co.uk/privacy
Mr Aidan Hanna
Via email:
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx.xxx 5 July, 2013
Dear Mr Hanna
Freedom of Information request – RFI20130968 Thank you for your request to the BBC of 04 July, 2013 seeking the following information
under the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (“the Act”):
Please provide information on all financial payments made to guests on the Stephen Nolan
show on radio ulster and BBC Northern Ireland in the last 5 years
The information that you have requested is excluded from the Act because it is held for the
purposes of “journalism, art or literature.” The BBC is therefore not obliged to provide this
information to you and will not be doing so on this occasion. Part VI of Schedule 1 to the
Act provides that information held by the BBC and the other public service broadcasters is
only covered by the Act if it is held for “purposes
other than those of journalism, art or
literature.” The BBC is not required to supply information held for the purposes of creating
the BBC’s output or information that supports and is closely associated with these creative
activities.1
The BBC makes a wide range of information available about our programmes and content
on
www.bbc.co.uk. We also proactively publish information covered by the Act on our
publication scheme and regularly handle requests for information under the Act.
Appeal Rights
1 For more information about how the Act applies to the BBC please see the enclosure which follows this
letter. Please note that this guidance is not intended to be a comprehensive legal interpretation of how the Act
applies to the BBC.
The BBC does not offer an internal review when the information requested is not covered
by the Act. If you disagree with our decision you can appeal to the Information
Commissioner. Contact details are: Information Commissioner's Office, Wycliffe House,
Water Lane, Wilmslow, Cheshire, SK9 5AF; telephone 01625 545 700 or visit
http://www.ico.gov.uk
Please note that should the Information Commissioner’s Office decide that the Act does
cover this information, exemptions under the Act might then apply.
Yours sincerely
Mark Adair
Head of Corporate & Community Affairs – BBCNI
Freedom of Information
From January 2005 the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act 2000 gives a general right of access to all
types of recorded information held by public authorities. The Act also sets out exemptions from that
right and places a number of obligations on public authorities. The term “public authority” is defined
in the Act; it includes all public bodies and government departments in the UK. The BBC, Channel 4
and S4C are the only broadcasters covered by the Act.
Application to the BBC
The BBC has a long tradition of making information available and accessible. It seeks to be open and
accountable and already provides the public with a great deal of information about its activities. BBC
Information operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week handling telephone and written comments
and queries, and the BBC’s website bbc.co.uk provides an extensive online information resource.
It is important to bear this in mind when considering the Freedom of Information Act and how it
applies to the BBC. The Act does not apply to the BBC in the way it does to most public authorities
in one significant respect. It recognises the different position of the BBC (as well as Channel 4 and
S4C) by saying that it covers information “held for purposes other than those of journalism, art or
literature”. This means the Act does not apply to information held for the purposes of creating the
BBC’s output (TV, radio, online etc), or information that supports and is closely associated with
these creative activities.
A great deal of information within this category is currently available from the BBC and will continue
to be so. If this is the type of information you are looking for, you can check whether it is available
on the BBC’s webs
ite bbc.co.uk or contact
BBC Audience Services.
The Act does apply to all of the other information we hold about the management and running of
the BBC.
The BBC
The BBC's aim is to enrich people's lives with great programmes and services that inform, educate
and entertain. It broadcasts radio and television programmes on analogue and digital services in the
UK. It delivers interactive services across the web, television and mobile devices. The BBC's online
service is Europe's most widely visited content site. Across the world, the BBC broadcasts radio
programmes in 33 languages on the BBC World Service and the 24 hour television service, BBC
World.
The BBC's remit as a public service broadcaster is defined in the BBC Charter and Agreement. It is
the responsibility of the BBC Trust to ensure that the organisation delivers against this remit by
setting key objectives, approving strategy and policy, and monitoring and assessing performance. The
Trustees also safeguard the BBC's independence and ensure the Corporation is accountable to its
audiences and to Parliament. The Trust is supported by a network of advisory bodies across the UK.
Day-to-day operations are run by the Director-General and his senior management team, the
Executive Board. The BBC is funded by an annual Licence Fee. This is determined and regularly
reviewed by Parliament. Each year, the BBC publishes an Annual Report & Accounts, and reports to
Parliament on how it has delivered against its public service remit.