Franchise award Westcountry Television was one of two rival consortia bidding against the incumbent
TSW when the ITV franchises were put to tender early in 1991. Two of Westcountry's original shareholders were
Brittany Ferries and
South West Water; the latter investor attracted criticism as only three years earlier it had been responsible for one of the worst water pollution incidents in the United Kingdom and which had occurred within the franchise area at
Camelford. On 16 October 1991, Westcountry was announced as the winner, bidding £7 million a year against TSW's bid of £16 million a year. Several local MPs were concerned that South West Water's involvement would lead to partiality in news items concerning the local water firm. TSW launched a legal challenge to the franchise award, and after initially being refused permission to do so in the
High Court, and while it could now finally sign the franchise agreement, its original programme plans were hit by the delay. Following discussions with the
Independent Television Commission, Westcountry announced on 1 April 1992 it had abandoned the plans to build new studios on the Plymouth waterfront, opting instead to convert an industrial unit at Langage Science Park, Plymouth. It also reduced its planned staffing levels – already far fewer than those of TSW – leading to an expression of disappointment by TSW's managing director Harry Turner. Of the 297 TSW employees, only 16 found work at Westcountry at the start of the franchise. Around 112 staff were employed by Westcountry at the time of the station's launch.
Launch Westcountry replaced
TSW at midnight on 1 January 1993 after
ITN's
Into The New Year bulletin featuring the
Westminster clock tower chimes. Technicians switched from the TSW microwave link to Westcountry Television, launching into a two-minute trail voiced by
Bruce Hammal and
Trish Bertram welcoming viewers to Westcountry, proudly announcing its forthcoming regional programmes. The promo was followed by the
Eddie Murphy and
Dudley Moore film
Best Defense. The new station promised an increase to 11 hours a week of regional programming of mixed genres. Six months after the launch, the company joined up with
Meridian Broadcasting,
HTV,
Channel Television and
S4C to create a joint advertising sales operation. During the summer of 1996, Westcountry prepared to float the company on the stock market, which resulted in
HTV, United News & Media,
Carlton Communications and
Canwest bidding to buy out Westcountry. In October 1996, GWR (the radio group) made a bid of £70m for Westcountry TV, outbidding both HTV and Carlton, but within a few weeks, United News & Media increased its offer and was expected to acquire the company. But Westcountry owners had become increasingly frustrated at the slow progress of talks and criticised United boss
Lord Hollick's "nickel and dime" tactics over negotiations, opting instead to sell to
Carlton Communications for £10m higher than United's offer of around £75m, around 25 November 1996. Hollick was described as "disappointed but far from livid" at the outcome. Subsequently, Westcountry was re-branded as Carlton Westcountry on 6 September 1999, although only referred on screen as
Carlton. On 27 October 2002, Carlton Westcountry lost its regional identity, and became known as
ITV1 Carlton prior to regional programmes only, while being known as ITV1 at all other times. The franchise briefly became
ITV1 for the Westcountry on 1 December 2003, before being renamed onscreen as
ITV1 Westcountry upon the
ITV plc merger of 2004, Rumours suggested that, while a newsroom (and separate regional identity) would be retained in the south west, the main
Westcountry Live programme would move to a studio alongside
The West Tonight at ITV West in
Bristol (akin to the
Meridian and
Thames Valley news services at Whiteley). On 12 September 2007, ITV issued a statement to the
City of London, saying that it wished to reduce the number of news studios from 17 to just nine. This included merging ITV West with ITV Westcountry to form a non-franchise region, ITV West and Westcountry, from February 2009. Shortly after the broadcasting regulator
OFCOM gave final approval to the changes, the regional news service was phased out with the final broadcast from Plymouth aired on Sunday 15 February 2009. A new programme entitled
The West Country Tonight replaced the
Westcountry Live on Monday 16 February 2009 but included separate opt-out news bulletins (some of which were pre-recorded depending on the day's news) and weather forecasts for the Westcountry region during the main 6pm programme and in the weekday late bulletin after
News at Ten. Separate daytime bulletins for the region were reintroduced in September 2011. On 14 January 2013, the region became known as
ITV West Country. In September 2013, the south west opt-out within the main 6pm news programme
ITV News West Country was extended to at least 20 minutes. Separate weekend bulletins were also reintroduced, effectively restoring a full regional news service for the former Westcountry region. ==Studios==