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FOI win may give more details of MPs’ expenses

Posted by Martin Stabe on 15 June 2007 at 12:35
Tags: Freedom of Information, Sunday Telegraph

The Information Commissioner has ruled that more details of MPs’ expenses must be disclosed under the Freedom of Information Act, in a move that is likely to raise a few eyebrows in Westminster, given the recent failure of David Maclean’s “squalid little bill” to exempt Parliament from FOI.

The decision notice (PDF) states that the total amounts claimed by some MPs under the “additional cost allowance”, which is used to reclaim expenses of running a home closer to Westminster than their constituency, must be disclosed under specific headings including “mortgage costs”, “hotel expenses” and so on.

The decision, made earlier this week, but only released today, followed requests from the various journalists. Ben Leapman of the Sunday Telegraph writes that an appeal by the Commons authorities to the Information Tribunal is likely, however.

Had it passed, the Maclean bill would have blocked precisely this sort or request to the House of Commons.

The Commissioner said that the public has a right to know expenses claimed by MPs in relation to their public duties.

In a press release about the decision, the ICO said: “The Information Commissioner does not believe it is necessary to disclose the full itemised details of expenditure on the running of a MP’s private household. To do so would invade the privacy of MPs and their families.”

Meanwhile, another private members bill is worth keeping an eye on: tabled by Lib Dem MP Tom Brake, the Freedom of Information (Amendment) (No. 2) Bill would actually strengthen the FOI Act. The Campaign for Freedmom of Information’s blog has full details, and Robert Verkaik wrote it up in the Indy this morning.

Update: More context on this decision from Martin Rosenbaum at the BBC

Update 2.10pm: Heather Brooke is not impressed with the ICO’s “regulation by press release” and says the decision resulted from an appeal that she had filed with the ICO. It certainly seems as though she’s been scooped on the decision affecting her own request because of the way it was released — by registered mail to her and by e-mail and RSS to the rest of the media. Martin Rosenbaum has had similar experiences.

2 comments

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Nominees announced for newspaper innovation gong

Posted by Martin Stabe on 21 March 2007 at 13:20
Tags: BBC, Daily Telegraph, Financial Times, Guardian, Guardian Unlimited, MEN Lite, Manchester Evening News, Newbury Weekly News, Newbury today, Pinkun.com, Reading Chronicle, Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk, Times Online, telegraph, thelondonpaper

Reading Chronicle editor Simon Jones has good reason to be boastful: his paper’s Polish edition has been nominated for The Fujifilm Grand Prix Award for the “most significant contribution to future newspaper success” at the 2007 Newspaper Awards.

The Kronika Reading is certainly in good company. Other nominees for the award are the Telegraph’s new newsroom, the Financial Times’ mobile news reader, the Guardian’s afternoon PDF edition G24, and free papers MEN Lite and thelondonpaper.

Meanwhile,
BBC News Oniline
, Guardian Unlimited, the Manchester Evening News, Newbury Today, Pinkun.com, Telegraph.co.uk, and Times Online are nominated for the “Electronic News Site of the Year”, an award described as “The Press Computer Systems Award for all electronic news sites”.

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Beyond the blogwagon: Why the Telegraph blogs

Posted by Martin Stabe on 1 November 2006 at 15:38
Tags: Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Journalism, Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk

Shane Richmond, who oversees the blogs at Telegraph.co.uk has risen to Andrew Grant-Adamson’s implicit challenge for newspapers to justify their experiments with blogging.

At newspapers and elsewhere, Richmond says, blogs are about supplying niche content — not material rejected from the paper, but material too detailed to have the sort of mass-market appeal that a newspaper needs.

“There is only so much space in the print edition each day and competition is strong. The blogs give us an opportunity to focus on stories that the paper hasn’t been able to cover, or to look at an angle on a story that there wasn’t space to develop in print,” Richmond writes, essentially echoing some of the things that the New York Times’ Neil Chase suggested last week.

Richmond says the Telegraph’s 34 bloggers got 357,000 page views in September, or 10,500 hits per blogger.

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Additional links for Tuesday

Posted by Martin Stabe on 10 October 2006 at 19:57
Tags: 18 Doughty Street, Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Digg, E-paper, IPTV, Journalism, Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk, Wikis

  • Virtual Economics: Exploding the myth of the read/write web
    Seamus McCauly looks at the latest evidence of “participation inequality” — the fact that a tiny number of heavy users produce most of the material on user-generated and interactive web sites
  • Shane Richmond: News from nowhere (part I and part II)
    Telegraph.co.uk’s news editor looks at the problems that the newspaper faces in the age of e-paper and unbundled content in the first part of a must-read essay. Part II has some recommended solutions.
  • Dan Gillmor frets that “most won’t listen” to Doc Searls’ list of 10 suggestions for online newspapers. Maybe in America — but isn’t most of what Searls suggested rapidly becoming the conventional wisdom in (most) British newsrooms? Besides, the most radical idea about what the web can do for journalism— Adrian Holovaty’s “news as structured data” theory — was missing from the list(s) of suggestions.
  • Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Susan D. Moeller and Moisés Naím remind everyone what really matters while all eyes are on Google and YouTube: “The fascination with the transformational effect of all this makes it easy to forget what is essential to the information process: traditional ‘old media’ messengers such as Anna Politkovskaya.”
  • 18 Doughty Street launches tonight at 8pm.

1 comment

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Good While it Lasted

Posted by Julie Tomlin on 17 May 2006 at 11:24
Tags: Blogs, Journalism, Sunday Telegraph

Patience Wheatcroft’s campaign to eradicate all the innovations of her predecessor Sarah Sands appears to have claimed a victim in celebrated blogger Belle de Jour. The London call girl’s 15 May post says she has been stripped of her column in the Sunday Telegraph magazine:

In Memoriam,
My Column in the Sunday Telegraph

So. Farewell then
Regular column
Axed by new editress, Patience Wheatcroft.

It would seem that
I am not suitable for
Your esteemed organ.

As the old saying goes

‘Don’t like the Torygraph head?
Not to worry
Wait six months and it’ll change.

Update: Going rate for an ex-call-girl-blogger-columnist at a Sunday newspaper? £24,000, apparently. As BdJ today points out, that’s a grand short of the baseline income for a happy life, according to Wheatcroft herself.

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Transparency for thee but not for me?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 24 April 2006 at 14:54
Tags: BBC, Guardian, Journalism, Sunday Telegraph

Sunday Telegraph Mandrake diarist Tim Walker has called on Polly Toynbee to  disclose her salary after the Guardian columnist responded to the the recent furores over NHS GPs’ and BBC presenters’ pay with a column calling for the UK to follow the Scandinavian practice of making individuals’ tax returns public records.

She has, so far, refused. Westminster blogger Guido Fawkes, however, believes Toynbee trousers £140,000 from the Graun.

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Editorial Intelligence: ‘a disgusting idea’?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 3 April 2006 at 09:42
Tags: BBC, Daily Mail, Ethics, Journalism, Spectator, Sunday Telegraph, Sunday Times

The Sunday Times yesterday reported on a row — sorry, “catfight”, among leading media figures over whether journalists and PRs should hobnob in a forum sponsored by big organisations.Some journalists, it seems, are not impressed by Editorial Intelligence, PR guru Julia Hobsbawm’s “information and networking club” which seeks to bring together spinmeisters and leading columnists.

The Sunday Times story appears to have been provoked by a Guardian column in which Christina Odone  described EI as “PR meets journalism in Caribbean freebies, shameless backscratching and undeclared interests”. Institutionalising the “already rather dubious relationship” between hacks, flacks and the organsiations the latter represent, Odone wrote, “is just bad news.”

Odode is not alone, it seems. The Sunday Times reports that BBC has forced Barney Jones and Kirsty Lang to quit the Editorial Intelligence advisory board, after learning that they would be paid £1,000 to hold the position and £200 to attend its seminars.
Melanie Phillips has refused to get involved and saying “I don’t think that journalists and PRs should be in a jolly boat together.” Rod Liddle described the project as “a disgusting idea which suggests journalists might be up for hire.”  John Lloyd also resigned, following his appointment to head the Reuters journalism institute at Oxford — but Matthew d’Ancona is less concerned about his membership.

Editorial Intelligence sells its corporate subscribers access to an online directory of profiles of  and columnists, along with its quarterly magazine and access to networking events to bring PRs and journalists together.

Are Odone, Liddle and Phillips right — is this something journalists should not get involved with?

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Inside this week’s Press Gazette

Posted by Martin Stabe on 30 March 2006 at 13:23
Tags: ABC, BBC, Citizen journalism, Daily Telegraph, Economist, Guardian, Journalism, Mirror, Mobile Phones, NUJ, New Media, News of the World, Online, Regionals, Spectator, Sunday Telegraph, Times, War reporting

Some highlights from tomorrow’s Press Gazette:

The owners of the Daily Telegraph, the Barclay Brothers, have discovered that their ploy bringing libel cases under French criminal law — a tactic most recently deployed against the Times — cuts both ways. The Sunday Telegraph has paid out to the estranged father of comedian Jimmy Carr after his lawyers threatened drag the paper before a French tribunbal.

George Galloway has threatened to publish pictures of Mazher Mahmood after the News of the World’s “fake sheikh” attempted one of his famous sting operations on the controvertial Respect MP. (The Guardian’s Duncan Campbell today has more on the foiled “sheikh-down”.)

A former Times fashion journalist, Emily Davies, is at the heart of a plagiarism row after an American publisher gave her a £515,000 advance on a book. In a statement to us, Davies admits “genuinely accidental misattribution” of parts of the book proposal — but says there is “a dirty tricks campaign” to discredit her. Lawyers have stopped us from publishing Davies’s publicity photograph.

Regular Dog readers already know this, but the Guardian’s web site will make £1 million profit this year. This emerged at the MediaGuardian Changing Media Summit, where Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow enthused about citizen journalism.

Roy Greenslade told a Newspaper Society conference that regional newspapers need to challenge to the online competition from the BBC. His most recent Daily Telegraph column is adapted from the speech. We hear that Greenslade, who recently resigned from the Telegraph, has some super-secret online project for the Guardian up his sleeve.

Multichannel television on mobile phones set to be launched by mobile network O2 within a fortnight, and if the results of a recent pilot of the service in Oxford is anything to go by, news is set to be one of the most popular offerings.

New Economist editor John Micklethwait says he wants to double the magazine’s circulation to 2 million readers worldwide over the next 10 years. Speaking of new magazine editors, we also have an interview with Matthew D’Ancona of the Spectator — he’s into punk rock, apparently.

The National Union of Journalists is backing Richard Gizbert, a London-based correspondent for ABC News, who was sacked after he refused to go to Iraq. The American television network is appealing against an Employment Tribunal ruling that Gizbert was unfairly dismissed.

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Weekend news roundup

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 March 2006 at 10:41
Tags: Aberdeen Press & Journal, Economist, Guardian, Independent on Sunday, International, Ireland, Johnston Press, Journalism, New Statesman, Northcliffe, Observer, Sportsman, Sunday Telegraph, TakeSport

We trawl the weekend papers and web sites so you don’t have to:

The Business identifies Andy Stewart, a founder of brokers Collins Stewart Tullets, as the final investor in the Sportsman. Spencer is thought to have invested £1m for less than a 10 per cent stake. The other shareholders in the sports and betting daily that is launching on 22 March include Michael Spencer, Ben and Zac Goldsmith, Ben Arbib and Max Aitken. Staff on the new paper will own a 10 percent share.

The Sportsman will face additional competition in the form of a 64-page free weekly sports betting magazine which launched on Friday. Backed by entrepeneur Chris Akers, TakeSport distributed 30,000 copies at rail and Underground stations in London, the Independent reports.

The wonderful blog Regret the Error, which carefully scrutinises the corrections columns, spots an interesting item that ran in the Guardian on Friday. Nothing to do with the “headline of the week” on Press Gazette’s Page 28 the previous day, I’m sure.

In Saturday’s Telegraph, Roy Greenslade speaks to outgoing Economist editor Bill Emmott, and serves up comments by former New Statesman editor Peter Wilby criticising the sober magazine newspaper as “almost stifling in its monotonal certainties and infuriating in the arrogance of its judgments”.

Emmott, on whose watch the Economist has doubled its circulation to upwards of 1 milion, gets his jabs in: “I guess a sniping response would be that if I wanted advice from someone who ran a failing magazine I’d ask for it. More seriously, it is a blinkered interpretation of why people read the magazine.”

Bookmakers Paddy Power consider Ed Carr a “dead cert” to replace Emmott in the editor’s chair, but that doesn’t stop the speculation in the diary columns. The media diary in the Independent on Sunday suggests former deputy Clive Crook, now at the Atlantic Monthly in America but still penning paeans to the Economist, is a leading external candidate at tomorrow’s interviews. “If successful, Crook would be the first person from without the ranks of the Economist to take the top job in its 160-year history,” the Sindy notes. Elsewhere in the paper, though, diarist Christopher Silvester reckons Economist US editor John Mickethwaith turned down the Spectator chair because he had been promised the top job at his own place.

The Sindy also goes after the Sunday Telegraph and the Daily Mail, asking “Have Middle England’s best-loved papers lost the plot?” Sources close to deposed Sunday Telegraph editor Sarah Sands say she’s furious for being “fired for carrying out the brief she had been given”, noting that under her leadership, circulation rose from 666,031 before she arrived last May to 683,741 last month.

As for Daily Mail and General Trust, the Sindy notes that its regional Northcliffe division made £102m on revenues of £520m. That 20 per cent margin compares unfavourably to the 34.5 per cent at regional rival Johnston Press and 35 per cent at Gannett. Plans for staff cuts at Northcliffe are expected to be unveilled this week.

According to the Sunday Times, meanwhile, reports that DMGT is considering selling off the Aberdeen Press & Journal for £120m. The Sunday Times says DGMT is negotiating with Johnston Press and at least one other potential buyer, a sale could happen “within the next few weeks”.

An advert for a highly-paid post as a Department of Health speechwriter that appeared in Press Gazette raised eyebrows at the Times. At £56,000 per annum for the part time post, the paper calculates, the right applicant could expect to trouser more than George W. Bush’s chief wordsmith, the paper calculates. Well, not quite:

However, the department said last night that an error had been made when drawing up the job details. It said that the actual salary would be a pro rata payment, and the speechwriter could expect to earn between £18,000 and £26,000 a year.

“[T]here probably isn’t enough money in the world to pay someone for the thankless task of defending Britain’s monumentally incompetent health system,” notes one former Republican speechwriter, Rodger Morrow. Still, British blogger Tim Worstall has already applied.

The Polski Herald is an eight-page Polish-language suppliment that is included in Dublin’s Evening Herald every Friday. The Observer quotes its news editor, Tom Galvin, urging British news papers to follow his paper’s example of reaching out to immigrant communities: “I would say to fellow journalists in Britain, especially in those areas where there are large new immigrant communities like the Poles, that this is the way to increase and build a new readership. There is a real and very new market out there.”

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New editor at Sunday Telegraph

Posted by Martin Stabe on 7 March 2006 at 12:44
Tags: Journalism, Sunday Telegraph

Sarah Sands is leaving the Sunday Telegraph after just eight months as editor to be replaced by well-established Times business editor Patience Wheatcroft.

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