1.1
The Bill seeks to amend the Broadcasting Services Act 1992 to
make possible the establishment of a Regional and Small Publishers Innovation
Fund, to be administered by the ACMA on behalf of the Commonwealth, for the
purposes of providing grants as financial assistance to publishers of
newspapers, magazines or other periodical, or to a content service provider.
1.2
The explanatory memorandum makes clear that the intention is to assist
regional and small publishers in contributing to Australian civic journalism.
1.3
The Australian Greens support this intention. This particular effort to
support it through legislation is, however, flawed.
1.4
The Australian Greens believe that the eligibility criteria for grants
should be crafted to best support regional and small publishers, and to promote
civic journalism, and that the eligibility criteria currently proposed do not
do so consistently.
1.5
The 'control test' is an unnecessary inclusion to the Fund's eligibility
criteria and should be withdrawn without delay.
1.6
The Australian Greens recognise that the intention of the Fund is to
support Australian media organisations and assist public interest journalism.
The Australian Greens believe that to achieve this outcome, the Fund should
support Australian journalists and support Australian jobs for the benefit of
Australian readers on issues relevant to Australian consumers. This is the best
way to support Australian media; 'control tests' are a weak and poorly designed
proxy.
1.7
Nowhere is it stated explicitly why one grant applicant, seeking to
either:
-
purchase a particular piece of technology or equipment;
-
support a program or an initiative that is intended to promote
civic journalism;
-
develop an application for the delivery of news, and other media
related content services;
-
train and upskill staff; and/or
-
make efforts to increase revenue and readership;
should be assessed as eligible or
ineligible based on whether it is majority controlled by Australian residents.
1.8
The purpose of the Fund is to support civic journalism as its providers
transition into a new and disrupted media environment. Insisting on a review of
where an outlet's majority control is located does nothing to support civic
journalism.
1.9
Instead, it creates unnecessary and ideologically driven carve-outs and
exceptions that do nothing but limit eligibility to the grant scheme to those
the Government believes are ideologically 'friendly'. This defies the intent of
the Bill, and makes clear why civic journalism is so necessary.
1.10
Support cannot be offered only to those with whom the Government sees
like‑minds.
1.11
The use of taxpayer money to aid one's perceived allies in the fourth
estate while withholding support from one's perceived opponents is an
embarrassing and shameless partisan intervention into what should be an
all-of-industry support mechanism.
1.12
The 'control test' does not aid the public interest and should not be
included. Indeed, its inclusion weakens the effectiveness of the Fund to assist
civic journalism and actively undermines the effectiveness of this Fund in
doing what Australians need it to do.
1.13
The Australian Greens strongly recommend that the Bill be amended as a
matter of urgency to prevent a control test from being introduced.
Senator Janet Rice Senator
Sarah Hanson-Young
Deputy Chair Senator for South
Australia
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