Broadcasting Standards Authority Explained

Broadcasting Standards Authority
Native Name:Te Mana Whanonga Kaipāho
Preceding6:-->
Superseding6:-->
Agency Type:Crown entity
Jurisdiction:New Zealand Government
Headquarters:Level 2
119 Ghuznee Street
Wellington, New Zealand
Coordinates:-41.2925°N 174.7722°W
Employees:9
Minister1 Name:Hon Paul Goldsmith
Minister1 Pfo:Minister for Media and Communications
Deputyminister8 Name:-->
Chief1 Name:Susie Staley
Chief1 Position:Chairperson
Keydocument1:Broadcasting Act 1989

The Broadcasting Standards Authority | Te Mana Whanonga Kaipāho (BSA) is a New Zealand Crown entity created by the Broadcasting Act 1989 to develop and uphold standards of broadcasting for radio, free-to-air and pay television.

The main functions of the BSA are:

The BSA is made up of a board appointed for a fixed term by the Governor-General on the advice of the Minister of Broadcasting and Media, meaning that practically the Minister (and Cabinet) appoint the board. The chair is always a barrister or solicitor. One member is appointed after consultation with broadcasters and one after consultation with public interest groups.

In June 2021, former Minister of Internal Affairs Jan Tinetti announced a review of New Zealand's content regulatory system, saying the current system is confusing for content providers and consumers, with consumers having no single complaints process, and some content providers being regulated by multiple regimes. The review aims ‘to design a modern, flexible and coherent regulatory framework’ that will better protect New Zealanders from harmful or illegal content.[2]

Standards

The current broadcasting standards codebook was released in July 2022 and applies to all broadcasters and broadcasts except election programming. The codebook contains eight standards:[3]

Complaints

Except for complaints concerning election programming or solely concerning privacy, complaints regarding breaches of broadcasting standards must be raised first with the broadcaster. The complainant has 20 working days after the programme's original broadcast to make a written formal complaint to the broadcaster, stating the programme name, channel, date and time of the broadcast and the standard(s) they feel were breached.[4] [5] The broadcaster has 20 working days to respond to the formal complaint, or 40 working days if the broadcaster requests for an extension. If the complainant is not satisfied with the broadcaster's response, or the broadcaster fails to respond within 20 working days, the complainant can refer the complaint to the BSA.[6]

After assessing the complaint, the BSA may choose to uphold, not uphold, or decline to determine the complaint. The BSA may also order the broadcaster to broadcast a statement, award costs, and in serious cases, prohibit the broadcaster from broadcasting advertisements or forcing the broadcaster off-air for up to 24 hours.[7] [8]

Decisions of the BSA may be appealed to the High Court within one month of the decision's release.[9]

Current members

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What we do .
  2. Web site: Govt acts to protect NZers from harmful content . 2023-03-21 . The Beehive . en.
  3. Web site: The Standards . 2023-10-21 . Broadcasting Standards Authority . en-NZ.
  4. Broadcasting Act 1989, section 6.
  5. Web site: The complaints process . 2023-10-21 . Broadcasting Standards Authority . en-NZ.
  6. Broadcasting Act 1989, section 8.
  7. Broadcasting Act 1989, section 13.
  8. Web site: Outcomes & Remedies . 2023-10-21 . Broadcasting Standards Authority . en-NZ.
  9. Broadcasting Act 1989, section 18.