Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
David Young & Ferghal Blaney

Incoming RTE boss Kevin Bakhurst says pay controversy is 'painful to watch' and admits 'huge challenge' ahead

RTE's incoming director general has said he faces a huge challenge to restore trust in Ireland's national broadcaster.

Kevin Bakhurst, who takes charge of the crisis-hit organisation on Monday, was commenting after meeting Irish Media Minister Catherine Martin in Dublin.

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 euro of additional payments to him between 2017 and 2022.

READ MORE: 'As Ryan Tubridy goes from applauding Vespas to appalling vistas, there's no happy ending for RTE'

The furore has since widened amid further disclosures about RTE's internal financial, accounting and governance practices. Mr Bakhurst had already signalled an intent to reconstitute the executive board at RTE. On Thursday he said that process would begin on Monday.

Emerging from the meeting with Ms Martin, an encounter he described as "frank and very useful", Mr Bakhurst told waiting reporters: "My job is to restore trust, clearly that's been severely damaged.

"Again, I apologise for that. But that's my job, to restore trust in this organisation. That's what I'll try to do. And I'll be setting out a lot more detail on Monday about how we intend to do that."

Tubridy and his agent Noel Kelly have expressed a willingness to co-operate with two parliamentary committee probes into the payments and governance scandal at RTE.

A solicitor representing the men has written to both the Media Committee and Public Accounts Committee indicating a desire to clarify a number of matters and provide "important information".

They are expected to give evidence to the committees next week. Asked if he had confidence in the current RTE executive board, Mr Bakhurst said he would be making a more detailed statement on Monday. He said there were individuals involved and he needed to speak to them first.

"There are individuals involved here, I need to talk to them and also want to talk to staff before I come out and say something publicly and, for me, restoring the trust of the audience and of staff and of politicians in RTE is absolutely key to what we're trying to do here," he said.

He said trust in RTE had been "severely diminished" It's been a highly damaging two weeks for RTE and it's been painful to watch," he said. "But I'm looking forward to starting the job and trying to repair that."

Mr Bakhurst also said he was concerned about the finances of RTE. Commenting on the job he was walking into, he said: "It's a huge challenge, it wasn't quite the challenge that I thought I was taking on when I took on this job but it's a challenge that I'll do my absolute best to deliver it with the right team around me."

Asked what his message was to licence fee payers who were contemplating not paying as a result of the scandal, Mr Bakhurst urged them to look at the actions and "what we're trying to do to restore trust".

He also praised how the news and current affairs arm of RTE had covered the story about its own organisation. Chairwoman of RTE's oversight board Siun Ni Raghallaigh also attended Thursday's meeting with Ms Martin, as did interim deputy director general Adrian Lynch.

Commenting on staff sentiment at RTE, Mr Bakhurst said: "I fully recognise the morale is on the floor and my priority next week is to get around the organisation, my top priority is to go around the organisation and talk to staff and hear their concerns.

"Adrian (Lynch) and I have already been talking about trying to meet the unions possibly tomorrow, if they're available. So we want to start this. I don't start 'til Monday, this is the most work I've done for no payment so far in my life in the last few weeks. But I'm happy to do it."

Asked when his planned reconstitution of the executive board would commence, he replied: "It will start on Monday."
He declined to comment on the revelation that a staff member at RTE had a car loaned to them for five years without approval - and only returned it this week.

He said there may be a "process" initiated around that issue. "If necessary there will be one, and I can't talk about that any further at the moment, I'm sorry," he said.

Mr Bakhurst said his job had "changed hugely" from the one he believed he was taking on when he was selected as the next director general.

He said the task of restoring trust now had to take precedence in the first instance over his wider vision to create a "forward-looking, digital-first, public service media organisation".

"There's no doubt my job has changed hugely, right," he said. Asked about RTE's use of a commercial barter account, Mr Bakhurst said he was aware of a barter account that traded airtime from his previous stint at RTE.

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 euro was paid to Tubridy through one such account, and that the payment was not properly declared.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.