Latest news with #publicbroadcaster


SBS Australia
2 days ago
- Health
- SBS Australia
Happy half century anniversary SBS.
The national public broadcaster had its start in 1975, initially as three-month experiment to provide information on Medibank, the new national health care scheme, to Australians from non-English speaking backgrounds. It operated out of Sydney via 2EA in seven foreign languages; and in Melbourne via 3EA in eight languages other than English. Today, SBS broadcasts in 63 languages across radio, podcasting, online and social media. From 2012, SBS also became home to N-I-T-V [[National Indigenous Television]] - a channel made by, for and about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. Managing Director of SBS James Taylor says there is a lot to celebrate. "We've got the highest volumes of multilingual content than ever before in our history. And in 60 languages. We're also being acknowledged across a number of other fronts. We've got the Australian streaming platform through SBS On Demand, and we are the podcaster of the year, three years in a row. These are all things to really be celebrated. We're a public good, we are in part funded by the public, and it's really important for us to be delivering more and more value each year to Australians."


Globe and Mail
14-05-2025
- Business
- Globe and Mail
CBC to stop paying individual bonuses after controversy
The CBC's board of directors says the Crown corporation will no longer pay individual bonuses to employees. The board says in a statement it will discontinue what CBC refers to as 'performance pay' and adjust salaries of affected staff to compensate them. The move comes after the public broadcaster was criticized for paying out millions in bonuses after eliminating hundreds of jobs. The statement follows the release of an independent review by Mercer Canada of the broadcaster's compensation for non-unionized employees, including senior executives. That review says while the CBC is generally aligned with other companies and private sector organizations the bonuses have 'faced scrutiny.' It says if CBC decides to get rid of its performance-based incentive program, the broadcaster should take steps to ensure compensation stays in the 'midpoint of the market.'