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    Home » BBC plans to cut 2,000 jobs to reduce costs by about 10% over next 2 years

    BBC plans to cut 2,000 jobs to reduce costs by about 10% over next 2 years

    By SHOOTWednesday, April 15, 2026No Comments0 Views     In 2 day(s) login required to view this post. REGISTER HERE for FREE UNLIMITED ACCESS.
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    The BBC logo is displayed outside the company's headquarters in London, Nov. 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung, File)

    By Brian Melley

    LONDON (AP) --

    The BBC said Wednesday that it plans to cut up to 2,000 jobs to save 10% of its annual budget — 500 million pounds ($677 million) — over the next two years.

    The layoffs announced during a call with staff are the biggest in more than a decade at the U.K. national broadcaster.

    “I know this creates real uncertainty, but we wanted to be open about the challenge,” interim Director-General Rhodri Talfan Davies said in a staff email.

    Davies said that the reductions were driven by inflation, pressures to license fee and commercial income and a turbulent global economy.

    The BBC said earlier this year that it faced “substantial financial pressures” and wanted to cut about a tenth of its budget by 2029. The bulk of the cuts are to be made in the next fiscal year beginning April 1, 2027.

    The cuts come as former Google executive Matt Brittin is scheduled to take over as director-general next month.

    He will fill the vacancy left after Tim Davie, and head of news Deborah Turness resigned over a misleading edit in a documentary about U.S. President Donald Trump’s speech on Jan. 6, 2021, before his followers stormed the U.S. Capitol.

    Trump is suing the BBC for $10 billion for defamation.

    The BBC is both a beloved and oft-criticized cultural institution funded by an annual license fee, which recently rose to 180 pounds ($244), paid by all U.K. households who watch live television or any BBC content.

    Opponents of the fee, including rival commercial broadcasters, have grown louder in an era of digital streaming, when many people no longer have television sets or follow traditional television schedules.

    The center-left Labour government has vowed to ensure that the BBC has “sustainable and fair” funding, but hasn’t ruled out replacing the license fee with another funding model.

    The BBC was founded in 1922 as a radio service to “inform, educate and entertain.” It now operates 15 U.K. national and regional television channels, several international channels, 10 national radio stations, dozens of local radio stations, the globe-spanning World Service radio and extensive digital output, including the iPlayer streaming service.

    You have limited-time access to this page, (Access is valid until: 2026-04-17)
    News Categories:News Briefs
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    Tags:BBClayoffsRhodri Talfan Davies



    “Mormon Wives” star Taylor Frankie Paul will not face new domestic violence charges

    Wednesday, April 15, 2026
    Attorney Eric Swinyard speaks during a hearing on a protective order sought by a former partner against Taylor Frankie Paul, in 3rd District Court in Salt Lake City, Tuesday, April 7, 2026. (Rick Egan/The Salt Lake Tribune via AP, Pool)

    Taylor Frankie Paul, a star of "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives " and a recently scrubbed season of "The Bachelorette," will not be charged in recent fights with her former partner, the Salt Lake County District Attorney's Office said Tuesday.

    Police in the Salt Lake City suburbs of Draper City and West Jordan have been investigating claims of domestic violence in 2024 and this February from Paul's ex-partner Dakota Mortensen, the father of her 2-year-old son. Paul has also made allegations against Mortensen, but those were not addressed in the documents.

    Any new charges against Paul would have violated her probation, which stemmed from a 2023 assault on Mortensen.

    The pair has filed dueling petitions for protective orders against one another that will be the subject of an upcoming hearing.

    "Several incidents that were submitted do not rise to the level of criminal offenses. The remaining incidents lack sufficient evidence to support filing criminal charges," Breanne Miller, a lawyer in the district attorney's Family Protection Unit, wrote in a memo explaining that Paul would not be charged.

    She noted that some reported incidents occurred more than three years ago and fell outside the legal time frame for review.

    The decline in charges does not have a direct effect on Mortensen's protective order against Paul, which has been temporarily granted and could become long-term at an April 30 hearing. But the lack of prosecution could help Paul and her lawyers make her case to a court commissioner who at an earlier hearing ordered that she could have visits with her son only if they were supervised.

    Eric Swinyard, a lawyer for Paul, argued at an April 7 hearing that Mortensen was the aggressor in a February fight that the... Read More

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