Trade union representatives at RTÉ held a “positive” meeting with the incoming director-general of the national broadcaster ahead of his first day in charge on Monday.
It comes as a minister warned that Government patience with RTÉ is running low and that the broadcaster’s new chief must make clear on day one that changes will happen.
Kevin Bakhurst and other senior figures at the organisation met representatives of the RTE Trade Union Group (TUG). Unions Siptu and the NUJ were represented in the discussions.
RTE has been reeling since revelations last month that it under-reported the salary paid to star presenter Ryan Tubridy and failed to disclose €345,000 of additional payments to him between 2017 and 2022.
The furore has since widened amid further disclosures about RTE’s internal financial, accounting and governance practices and its expenditure on corporate hospitality for advertising clients.
Mr Bakhurst, an experienced media executive, has pledged to “restore trust” in the organisation and intends to publicly outline his plans on Monday.
He has already signalled an intent to reconstitute the current executive board.
After Friday’s meeting, the TUG welcomed assurances it said Mr Bakhurst had offered.
“The meeting, while generally positive, was frank and robust,” the group said in a statement.
“The TUG outlined in clear and certain terms the concerns and anger of staff.
“The TUG welcomes the director-general’s commitment to meeting with staff and their unions in the coming weeks, in light of the absence of engagement of RTE senior management since the crisis began.
“The TUG further welcomed the DG’s assurances on working to rebuild the trust with staff and with the public and towards creating a more open, equal and transparent organisation.”
TUG chairman Stuart Masterson said the group also pointed out other shortcomings within the broadcaster including “the disparity between the haves and have-nots”.
Referencing the request from parliamentarians for RTÉ to publish the salaries of the 50 lowest-paid employees along with the top 100, Mr Masterson said: “It is now being seen by the public how there is a disconnect between the staff who are here day in, day out putting stuff to air and the people behind it all at the higher end of things.”
Mr Masterson told RTÉ’s News at One that it was hoped the new director-general will engage with staff in several smaller meetings “in the near future” rather than one larger event with all staff.
“He said he also plans to be walking the corridors more and just seeing what people have to say.”
The Government has already announced two separate external reviews of RTÉ and also moved to send in a forensic auditor to examine the broadcaster’s accounts.
Two parliamentary committees in Dublin are conducting their own examinations of the situation.
RTÉ executives have faced claims of “drip-feeding” information to parliamentarians in the fortnight since the scandal broke.
Tubridy and his agent Noel Kelly are to appear before the two parliamentary committees probing the scandal on Tuesday.
Prior to the meeting, higher education minister Simon Harris said he was “flabbergasted” that current executives had not engaged with staff in the two weeks from the start of the crisis engulfing the national broadcaster.
“We’re getting pretty low on patience at this stage being truthful,” Mr Harris told RTÉ Radio One.
“The drip feed is doing extraordinary damage. We need RTÉ to get back to commissioning drama, not being the drama. And I think Monday is extraordinarily important. A new director-general will start here, that director-general needs to, from day one, make it very clear that the changes that are required will happen.”
Mr Harris said the appointment of forensic auditors to examine the books was unprecedented.
“We’re going to send in people here next week to get the facts because either the people who’ve gone before the Oireachtas committees either haven’t been able to or haven’t been willing to – it’s for others to judge – share all of the information, and it is not tenable that you continue to have the drip feed.
“So next week, early next week for the first time ever, forensic accountants will be appointed to come in and look at the books.
“They’re going to start with the barter accounts and any other off balance sheet payments that they come across and then any other matters that they believe needs to be investigated.”
Barter accounts are commonplace in the media industry. They allow organisations to exchange advertising airtime that would otherwise go unsold in return for goods and services from companies.
RTE’s use of barter spending has come in for intense scrutiny since it emerged that €150,000 was paid to Tubridy through one such account to effectively top up his salary, and that the payment was not properly declared.
The Irish broadcaster, which is sustained through public funds and commercial revenues, has also faced criticism for using barter transactions to spend hundreds of thousands of euro entertaining commercial clients, including on a trip to the Rugby World Cup in Japan.
A series of further transactions was revealed on Wednesday, including almost €5,000 on 200 pairs of flip flops for a summer party for clients.
In a further development in the controversy on Thursday afternoon, RTE star and sports reporter Marty Morrissey apologised for taking part in an “informal” arrangement where he used a Renault car after MC’ing a dozen events for the car brand.
He said he returned the car “voluntarily” on Friday, June 23rd after reflecting on the controversy at RTÉ and concluding that the “ad hoc” arrangement was “an error of judgment”.
“I have apologised to RTE, my managers and colleagues for any embarrassment or difficulty I have caused them because of this matter,” Mr Morrissey said.
Former RTE director-general Dee Forbes quit last week amid the fallout from the undisclosed payments scandal.
She had originally been due to stand down this month, with Mr Bakhurst having already been announced as her successor.