Content quotas should bind streaming platforms, not be abolished for commercial networks, says union

Content quotas for children’s content and local drama should be expanded to bind Netflix, Stan, Disney+ and other streaming platforms, not scrapped in response to commercial networks’ threats of protest, says the union representing performers and screen workers.

Last week, Seven West Media signalled it would be prepared to breach its obligation under the Broadcasting Services Act to air 260 hours of children’s programs, 130 hours of preschool programs and 250 points of first-release Australian drama. These quotas should be scrapped by the Morrison government, CEO James Warburton argued, because they stifle commercial networks while not applying to streaming platforms.

“We’ve been clear for a long time that the children’s content quota was not a sustainable one for us and the wider commercial television industry in Australia,” Warburton told The Sydney Morning Herald. Seven would fulfil its 2020 obligations, but could fail to comply from as early as next year by halting the production of its children’s content and staying away from new Australian dramas, Warburton told Communications Minister Paul Fletcher in a letter advising of his network’s decision.

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