BBC journalists in England are to stage a 24-hour strike from midnight on May 5th to coincide with the reporting of local election results, in a dispute over cuts to local radio.
It will be the second walkout by members of the National Union of Journalists (NUJ) after a strike on Budget day.
The union says BBC management wants local radio stations to share programmes across the network from 2pm on weekdays and at weekends, going from more than 100 hours of local programming on every radio station every week down to 40.
The plans will result in a number of job losses and journalists are having to re-apply for their own jobs, said the NUJ.
#NUJ #BBC journalists in England have announced a second 24-hour strike from midnight on Friday 5 May to coincide with the reporting of local election results, over cuts to local radio.https://t.co/T6AuenbCQM pic.twitter.com/uoOtDn2fha
Advertisement— NUJ (@NUJofficial) March 31, 2023
The strike on Budget day was followed by a work-to-rule which the union says is having a “significant impact”.
The union has approached the arbitration service Acas to see if it can help resolve the row.
Paul Siegert, NUJ national broadcasting organiser, said: “Video didn’t kill off radio and nor will digital. We understand that digital services need to be improved but it shouldn’t come at the expense of local radio which is at the heart of the BBC’s public service remit.
“To go from over 100 hours a week of local programming on every radio station down to just 40 is unacceptable. People want local, relevant news that is accessible and NUJ members are prepared to stand up and fight for that.
“Once local radio stops being local then it is the beginning of the end and BBC bosses don’t have the right to destroy an institution that has existed for over 50 years.”