Suicide prevention: online platforms, print media and broadcasting
Ofcom enforces measures in the Online Safety Act to protect web users from suicide or self-harm content. It also regulates broadcast media, but not the press.
This Commons Library Briefing Paper looks at the Broadcasting (Radio Multiplex Services) Bill 2016-17.
Commons Library Analysis of the Broadcasting (Radio Multiplex Services) Bill 2016-17 (282 KB , PDF)
The Broadcasting (Radio Multiplex Services) Bill 2016-17 is a Private Members’ Bill, introduced by Kevin Foster on 4 July 2016. The Bill had its second reading on 13 January 2017. It was not amended in Public Bill Committee (31 January) and will have its remaining stages on 3 February 2017.
The Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) is supporting the Bill and has prepared Explanatory Notes.
In the UK, Digital Audio Broadcasting (DAB) radio services are broadcast as “multiplexes”. This means that sound signals from a number of individual radio stations are combined together and transmitted as digital data.
At present, up to 400 local commercial and community radio stations are not carried on the DAB digital radio platform. This is the problem that the Bill seeks to address.
Ofcom regulates DAB multiplex services under Part 2 of the Broadcasting Act 1996 (as amended by the Communications Act 2003).
The Bill, which has one substantive clause, would give the Secretary of State the power to amend the conditions for DAB multiplex licensing in order to “create a new, lighter touch regulatory framework appropriate for the licensing of small scale (DAB) radio multiplexes”.
The Bill would extend to England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
Commons Library Analysis of the Broadcasting (Radio Multiplex Services) Bill 2016-17 (282 KB , PDF)
Ofcom enforces measures in the Online Safety Act to protect web users from suicide or self-harm content. It also regulates broadcast media, but not the press.
Changes in TV viewing habits since the licence fee was established, such as the rise of on-demand streaming, have led some to challenge the BBC's funding model.
The government launched a review into the BBC's funding model in 2023. Its findings will inform the review of the BBC's Royal Charter, which expires in 2027.