Minister of Housing (Hon Murray McCully) and TV3 Network Services Ltd - 1997-153
Members
- S R Maling (Chair)
- J Withers
- L M Loates
- R McLeod
Dated
Complainant
- Minister of Housing (Hon Murray McCully)
Number
1997-153
Programme
3 Network NewsBroadcaster
TV3 Network Services LtdChannel/Station
TV3
Summary
The end to a six month freeze on state rental housing was the subject of an item on 3
Network News broadcast at 6.00pm on 30 June 1997. The item focussed on a protest
rally complaining about rent increases due to come into force the next day. In the
item, both the Minister of Housing, Hon. Murray McCully, and the leader of the
Opposition, Helen Clark MP, were given an opportunity to comment.
Mr McCully complained to the broadcaster, TV3 Network Services Ltd, that the item
failed to deal justly and fairly with him by not offering him an opportunity to balance
comments made on the item by a tenant named "Tina". Further he alleged that the
item was unbalanced in presenting only "Tina's" side.
TV3 considered that the item succeeded in providing a balanced story in the time
allotted to it. It did not believe that it was necessary to allow the Minister or any
other person the opportunity to provide a rebuttal on every detail of a story –
provided the overall story was balanced and fair. It declined to uphold the complaint.
Dissatisfied with TV3's response, the Minister referred his complaint to the
Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
For the reasons below, the Authority declines to uphold the complaint.
Decision
The members of the Authority have viewed the item complained about and have read
the correspondence (summarised in the Appendix). In this instance, the Authority
determines the complaint without a formal hearing.
The removal of a six month rent freeze on state houses was the subject of an item on 3
National News. Footage of a protest was shown, and comments from the Minister,
the Leader of the Opposition, and Deputy Leader of the Alliance were broadcast. The
item concluded with comments from a state house tenant identified as "Tina" who
expressed her concern at the extra expense which would be involved for her.
The Minister complained that the item was unfair to him, was unbalanced, and failed
to present adequately the government's side of the case as to the removal of the rent
freeze. Specifically, he pointed out that he was not given the opportunity to respond
to "Tina". In addition, he said the "crucial defect" in the item was focussing on Tina's
affordability claims without dealing with the income support which she would have
been receiving. A reference to the accommodation supplement, he wrote, was
essential to achieve balance.
TV3 assessed the complaint under the standards nominated by the Minister. The first
two require broadcasters:
G4 To deal justly and fairly with any person taking part or referred to in any
programme.
G6 To show balance, impartiality and fairness in dealing with political
matters, current affairs and all questions of a controversial nature.
The third one reads:
G20 No set formula can be advanced for the allocation of time to interestedparties on controversial public issues. Broadcasters should aim to present
all sides in as fair a way as possible, and this can be done only by judging
every case on its merits.
TV3 maintained that the item was balanced. The introduction had included the
following:
Opposition MPs claim increases (in state house rentals) will force some familieson to the streets. But an angry Housing Minister disagrees. Murray McCully
says the true picture is being distorted.
Later the reporter commented:
But the Housing Minister accuses political opponents of outrageous
misrepresentation. He says only 10,000 of the 280,000 New Zealanders getting
an accommodation supplement will be worse off.
These comments, TV3 maintained, effectively called into question the claims made by
the government's opponents. Moreover, the Minister's statement addressed housing
policy when he said:
I think it's unfortunate that some people need some help, they've actually been
treated as a political football, but what they really need is some help from the
Government.
TV3 said that most of the opponents spoke in general terms and none of the speakers'
comments, including those of the Minister or Ms Clark, were linked to "Tina's"
specific remarks.
When he referred his complaint to the Authority, the Minister repeated his concerns
expressed earlier, and focussed on the aspect that "Tina" was not asked about the
accommodation supplement. Subsequent work by his staff suggested that her
entitlement could well have increased by at least $25 per week. Without a privacy
waiver, the Minister considered that he had been unable to deal with the issue in a
way which complied with the standards. Journalists were required to ensure that an
item was fair and balanced and thus, he argued, obtaining a Privacy Act waiver was
not unreasonable.
The Authority refers to a recent decision (No: 1997-125, 25 September 1997) where it
declined to uphold a complaint from the Minister of Housing about an item on One
Network News. He claimed that the item on that occasion did not treat him fairly and
was unbalanced as he had not been given the opportunity to comment on the specifics
of the case used in the item. The case had been used to illustrate problems faced by
one elderly couple who were concerned at the effects on them of the reintroduction by
Housing New Zealand of market rents.
That item included comment from the elderly couple, comment by the Labour Party
spokesperson on Housing, and comment from the Minister as the general issues. It
was accepted that the Minister did not address the concerns of the particular couple
who were at the centre of the item. The Authority wrote in its determination of that
complaint:
The Authority sees the essence of the complaint as being whether it was fair to
Mr McCully that he was not given an opportunity to confront the personal
testimony of the aggrieved Housing Corporation tenants. It deals first with the
complaint that standard G4, the standard relating to dealing fairly and justly
with a person, was breached. It concludes that notwithstanding his claimed
inability to comment specifically on the couple's situation, he was in a position
to make a general statement clarifying policy as it might impact on people in
such a position. He did not do so. Mr McCully also contends that he was not
told the couple would be included in the item. But even if the situation was as
Mr McCully claimed, the Authority would not be persuaded the standard had
been breached.
With respect to the complaints under G6 and G20, the standards relating to
balance, the Authority acknowledges that some effort was made to obtain
balancing comments from the Minister, despite an apparent misunderstanding in
the information conveyed to him. It observes also that the general information
at the end of the item, relating to increased funds for helping the needy, and for
accommodation supplements, addressed the need for balance in general terms,
albeit less specifically than would have been desirable. Accordingly, it does not
uphold those aspects of the complaint.
On this occasion, the Minister again was unable to comment specifically on "Tina's"
situation, but he did make a general statement about the widespread use of the
accommodation supplement. In the Authority's opinion, and in contrast to the earlier
decision, the statement was made in reasonably specific terms in that it referred, as did
"Tina", to the reintroduction of market rentals.
Indeed, the Authority notes, the reintroduction of market rentals was the issue
addressed in the item. There were comments both in support and in opposition to the
policy from a range of speakers. Some of the concerns felt by a specific tenant,
"Tina", were used to illustrate the broad issues. As the item dealt with the broad
issue in a general way, the Authority does not accept that standards G6 and G20 were
breached. Moreover, the Authority does not consider that the fairness standard, in
the circumstances of this case, required that the Minister be given an opportunity to
reply specifically to the tenant. Her case was advanced as an example of the concern
felt by some tenants, not as a central point in the debate, it concludes. Accordingly,
the Authority decides that the fairness requirement in standard G4 was not
contravened.
For the reasons above, the Authority declines to uphold the complaint.
Signed for and on behalf of the Authority
Sam Maling
Chairperson
27 November 1997
Appendix
The Minister of Housing's Complaint to TV3 Network Services Ltd - 24 July 1997
Hon Murray McCully, Minister of Housing, complained to TV3 Network Services
Ltd about an item on 3 National News broadcast on 30 June 1997 at 6.00pm.
The Minister believed that TV3 had breached standards G4, G6, and G20 of the
Television Code of Broadcasting Practice. His complaint was based on the following:
_ As a person representing one of the sides in the news item, he was not given an
opportunity to provide balancing comment on the financial circumstances of
"Tina", a state house tenant interviewed, and therefore TV3 failed to deal justly
and fairly with him.
_ Standards of balance, fairness and impartiality were breached by TV3 allowing only
one side of the story on "Tina", in not allowing him to comment on "Tina", and in
broadcasting comments by Hon Helen Clark MP about "Tina" without any
opportunity for him to respond.
_ All significant sides in the story were not presented, as "Tina's" case was used to
convey the impression of hardship caused by Housing New Zealand rent reviews,
without a balancing examination of how the tenants' income support entitlements
might alter the picture.
TV3's Response to the Formal Complaint - 7 August 1997
TV3 considered the complaint under the standards nominated by the Minister. It
advised:
... the item succeeded in providing a balanced story in the limited time allotted
to it. In the introduction by the studio presenter it contained the words "...
opposition MP's claim increases (in state rentals) will force some families on
to the streets. But an angry Housing Minister disagrees. Murray McCully
says the true picture is being distorted."
Later in the item the reporter stated, "But the Housing Minister accuses
political opponents of outrageous misrepresentation. He says only 10,000 of
the 280,000 New Zealanders getting an accommodation supplement will be
worse off".
TV3 considered that these remarks in the item called into question the claims made by
political opponents of the Government about the tough conditions faced by some
state house tenants. TV3 also referred to the Minister's comment on the programme
which it considered presented the Government as caring and taking its responsibilities
seriously.
In TV3's view, it was unnecessary for the Minister or anyone else to provide rebuttal
on every detail of a story - provided the overall story was balanced and fair. It did not
consider that detailed response by the Minister to "Tina's" case was practical given
time constraints on the programme. Further, TV3 did not accept that critical
comments made by Helen Clark were specifically related to "Tina".
It declined to uphold the complaint.
The Minister's Referral to the Broadcasting Standards Authority - 3
September 1997
Dissatisfied with TV3's response, the Minister referred his complaint to the
Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
The Minister reiterated the points he had made to TV3, and explored in some depth
the reasons why he considered it was necessary in every case, when a person who
was interviewed disclosed some personal financial information, for TV3 to obtain a
waiver of privacy in respect of other financial information. The points related to his
inability to obtain or make known information without a person's consent. He stated:
It is the task of journalists to ensure a story is fair and balanced, so they must
be prepared to do what is necessary to obtain all and not just some of the
necessary facts. In my view, having a person sign a Privacy waiver is not an
unreasonable step.
The Minister also stated that while he had considered that the item may have had
adequate balance prior to the introduction of "Tina", if TV3 considered Helen Clark's
comment as separate from the "Tina" argument then he considered the whole item to
be unbalanced.
TV3's Response to the Authority - 18 September 1997
TV3 advised that it had nothing further to add, except in relation to Mr McCully's
assertion that he was not asked for his comments on "Tina", when it wrote:
The Minister's remark suggests that TV3 had an ulterior motive for the way in
which the interview with him was conducted. The TV3 Standards Committee
is confident that was not the case. At worst there was a lack of
communication between the two reporters working on the story - one in
Auckland interviewing Tina, another in Wellington speaking to the Minister.
The Minister's Final Comment to The Authority - 25 September 1997
The Minister asked the Authority to note the following points:
_ By deciding to include "Tina" in the news item, TV3 immediately incurred an
obligation to balance her affordability concerns with details of the Government
income support assistance available to her.
_ He considered that there were cases where further research was needed by
reporters before an item could be aired, to meet the Television Code of
Broadcasting Practice standards of fairness and balance.
_ TV3's refusal to provide an analysis of "Tina's" true financial situation meant that
the details about her were inaccurate, being based on income support models.
_ TV3 deliberately chose to make assertions about "Tina" entitlements, which
required balancing comment. An opportunity to provide that comment was denied
to him.