ITV Border Border Television's regional news service began on 1 September 1961 from studios at Harraby,
Carlisle. Initially producing short evening bulletins and a topical magazine programme called
Focus,
Lookaround would become the station's flagship daily programme later on in the decade. Shorter bulletins were known as
Border News. Meanwhile, Tyne Tees Television had
its own wholly separate news services.
Lookaround is also known locally in
Cumbrian dialect as "Border Crack an' Deekabout" In 1989, Border began providing a sub-regional news service for viewers served by the
Selkirk transmitter, consisting of a short opt-out during
Lookaround each weeknight. In April 1999, the opt-out was extended to cover
Dumfries and Galloway and a dedicated Scottish news bulletin was introduced on weekday lunchtimes. Border also opened an Edinburgh bureau to provide coverage of the
Scottish Parliament.
ITV Tyne Tees & Border Proposed merger In September 2007,
ITV plc announced that ITV Border news operations would be merged with ITV Tyne Tees, subject to the approval from the regulator
Ofcom. On 24 April 2008, a campaign to save the ITV Border news operation arrived in London with a petition of 9000 signed by viewers. This was ahead of MPs meeting with industry regulator
Ofcom.
Ofcom authorises ITV's plans On 26 September 2008, Ofcom authorised ITV's plans to save £40m a year by making regional programming cutbacks. These include axing mid-morning bulletins on weekdays and lunchtime bulletins at weekends, plus merging a number of regions and halving the number of non-news regional programmes. On 30 September 2008, it was announced the number of ITV Border employees would be slashed from 64 to 13. Following a survey of
Isle of Man viewers in autumn 2008, coverage of the Isle of Man was transferred from ITV Border to
ITV Granada in July 2009.
Lookaround begins transmitting from Gateshead Lookaround retains an office in
Carlisle where the news editor, planning and online teams are based along with correspondents, but as of February 2009, the programme is transmitted from ITV Tyne Tees' studios at The Watermark,
Gateshead. The lead presenters were announced as the then
North East Tonight South edition presenters
Ian Payne and
Pam Royle. Then
Lookaround presenters
Tim Backshall and
Helen Carnell were redeployed as a news reporter and early presenter respectively. As part of the merger, six district reporters were appointed – working from home unless based in Carlisle or
Edinburgh. The district reporters announced were Victoria Hoe in
Kendal, Hannah Lomas in
Carlisle, Lee Madan in
Selkirk, Stuart Pollitt in
Whitehaven, Olivia Richwald in
Dumfries and Kathryn Samson in
Edinburgh. The then remaining sub-regional elements were: • The opening 15 minutes of the main 6pm programme. • Full late night bulletins on weeknights, following
ITV News at Ten. • Localised weather forecasts. On 14 January 2013, the news service was relaunched and rebranded as
ITV News Lookaround.
Southern Scotland coverage reviewed On 23 May 2012, ITV announced proposals for further changes on its regional news programming, with "some content replaced with aggregate of news from several regions" and an expansion in sub-regional coverage. In November, upon the renewal of ITV's licences for a further ten years, Culture Secretary Maria Millar asked Ofcom to look into proposals for the Border region which would leave Southern Scotland viewers without "the same level of Scottish programming as viewers elsewhere in the country", covered by
STV. In a consultation document, Ofcom set out two potential options, with any changes coming into effect in 2015 at the latest. ITV proposed re-introducing a full news service exclusively for the Border region, including the return of half-hour editions of
Lookaround and short news bulletins, as well as introducing a weekly current affairs programme for the region. The second option was to enforce ITV Border to broadcast 90 minutes a week of non-news programming, including programming from STV. Press reports indicated a political split in opinion on the issue. In April, the Borders Chamber and members of the local authority at
Newton and the Scottish Borders Chamber of Commerce publicly supported the second option – with the Chamber calling for a national ITV service for the whole of Scotland. Two members of the UK Government – Scottish Secretary of State
Michael Moore and deputy
David Mundell (both MPs in the Border region) – backed ITV's proposal for a Border current affairs programme while the Scottish Government called for STV programming (including
Scotland Tonight) to be simulcast. On 16 May 2013, the first televised Scottish independence debate was broadcast on
STV's
Scotland Tonight across northern and central Scotland, however viewers in the south of the country were unable to see it as
ITV Border took the decision not to broadcast it, leading to further criticism from politicians in the region. Michael Jermey, ITV Director of News and Current Affairs, pledged some programming from STV would air on ITV Border. On 23 July 2013, OFCOM announced it had approved the second option of Scottish non-news programming. The regulator also ordered ITV to reopen the former Border Scotland service previously utilized for split news bulletins and simulcasts of select STV programming. The opt-out service was launched on Freeview in January 2014 and consists of a thrice-weekly political programme,
Representing Border, and a weekly feature series,
Border Life. The bespoke local programming is not seen in Cumbria, where network programming continues to air.
Lookaround fully restored On 14 June 2013, it was reported
Lookaround would be restored to a full 30-minute programme along with ITV recruiting journalists for an Autumn launch. A month later, Ofcom approved ITV's plans to restore Border's news service. All short bulletins – including daytime and weekend updates – are now exclusive to the Border region, however with the minutage decreased. The changes came into effect on 16 September 2013.
2020 - present From March 2020, due to the
COVID-19 pandemic,
ITV Tyne Tees & Border services were impacted. Running times of all short bulletins were reduced. The main 6pm programme was now fronted by a single presenter instead of two. On 23 November 2020, it was announced the main 6pm programme would return to two presenters from that night, with a slightly modified studio to allow for social distancing. On 28 March 2021, ITV Tyne Tees & Border announced that Amy Lea would be the new co-presenter of the main weekday news programme alongside Ian Payne as of 29 March 2021, taking over from Pam Royle who left ITV on 26 March 2021. ==References==