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Former BBC chief accused of ‘losing the plot’ with top managers’ pay-offs

Former BBC director general Mark Thompson leaving Parliament on Monday.
Former BBC director general Mark Thompson leaving Parliament on Monday.

BBC bosses were told the corporation’s management structure is “broke” after a committee of MPs heard a “grossly unedifying” list of claims and counter-claims about who knew what about huge pay-outs to senior staff.

Former director-general Mark Thompson, one of seven witnesses called by the Public Accounts Committee, was forced to deny a charge that the BBC had “lost the plot” when it gave a pay-off of almost £1 million to his former deputy, Mark Byford.

MP Margaret Hodge, who chairs the committee, told those present that the meeting was a “grossly unedifying occasion which can only damage the standing and the reputation of the BBC”.

She said: “At best, what we’ve seen is incompetence, lack of central control, a failure to communicate for a broadcaster whose job is communicating.

“At worst, we may have seen people covering their backs by being less than open. That is not good.”

Earlier in the hearing, she asked Mr Thompson why Mr Byford needed an extra payment when he was contractually due around half a million pounds, saying: “Why was £500,000, which is for most people mega bucks, not enough?”

The BBC’s HR boss, Lucy Adams, also came under fire after she said the payment was part of a plan to cut numbers of senior staff without causing too much disruption leading Ms Hodge to tell her: “This attitude that the top cadre of people at the BBC faced greater difficulty when they faced redundancy rather than a receptionist or someone lower down is offensive, just offensive.”

In another heated exchange, Ms Hodge told Ms Adams: “I’m not having any more lies this afternoon.”

The HR boss, who announced last month she was quitting the BBC, told MPs at an earlier hearing she had not seen a note detailing plans for pay-offs to Mr Byford and marketing boss Sharon Baylay but later admitted helping to write it.

Following the suggestion that her evidence should be taken with “a pinch of salt”, Ms Adams said such an inference was “grossly unfair” and she had been confused.

Mr Thompson said the decision for Mr Byford to leave the BBC with a payout of £949,000 was part of a move to axe senior executives to give the BBC annual savings of £19 million and he believed he “had the full support of the BBC Trust” to order it.

Ms Hodge said people were looking at BBC management in “dismay” and asked Mr Thompson if the BBC had, under his management, lost the plot.

He said: “I do not think we lost the plot.”

He said he had inherited a way of doing things at the BBC, telling MPs: “I did not loosen the financial controls in this area.”

In written evidence published ahead of yesterday’s meeting, Mr Thompson accused BBC Trust boss Lord Patten and trustee Anthony Fry of “fundamentally misleading” committee members at a previous hearing when they told MPs that members of the Trust were not always included in decision-making.

Lord Patten said he took the charge of misleading the committee “very strongly”, adding: “I’m in the position in which I’m accused of having misled the committee on something I didn’t know and couldn’t have been expected to know.”

Ms Hodge said the evidence suggested the governance of the BBC was “broke”.

She said: “We all around the table feel it is broke.”