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Federal Act
on Radio and Television
(RTVA)

The Federal Assembly of the Swiss Confederation,

having regard to Articles 71, 92 and 93 of the Federal Constitution (FC)1,
and having regard to the Federal Council Dispatch of 18 December 20022,

decrees:

Title 1 Scope and Definitions

Art. 1 Scope  

1 This Act reg­u­lates the broad­cast­ing, pro­cessing, trans­mis­sion and re­cep­tion of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices. Un­less this Act provides to the con­trary, the trans­mis­sion of pro­gramme ser­vices us­ing tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions tech­niques is based on the Tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions Act of 30 April 19973 (TCA).

2 Pro­gram­ming of minor ed­it­or­i­al im­port­ance does not fall un­der this Act. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the cri­ter­ia.

Art. 2 Definitions  

In this Act:

a.
pro­gramme ser­vice means se­quence of pro­grammes which are offered con­tinu­ously, defined in time and trans­mit­ted us­ing tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions tech­niques and which are in­ten­ded for the pub­lic;
b.
pro­grammemeans part of a pro­gramme ser­vice which is self-con­tained in terms of form and con­tent;
c.
ed­it­or­i­al pro­grammemeans a pro­gramme which is not ad­vert­ising;
cbis.4
ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tionmeans an ed­it­or­i­al pro­gramme in a Swiss broad­caster‘s pro­gramme ser­vice or a con­tri­bu­tion pro­duced by the ed­it­or­i­al staff as part of the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices of the Swiss Broad­cast­ing Cor­por­a­tion (SRG SSR) (Art. 25 para. 3 let. b);
d.
broad­castermeans the nat­ur­al or leg­al per­son bear­ing re­spons­ib­il­ity for the cre­ation of pro­grammes or for the com­pil­a­tion there­of in­to a pro­gramme ser­vice;
e.
Swiss pro­gramme ser­vicemeans a pro­gramme ser­vice which is sub­ject to Swiss sov­er­eignty in ac­cord­ance with the pro­vi­sions of the European Con­ven­tion on Trans­fron­ti­er Tele­vi­sion of 5 May 19895; these pro­vi­sions also ap­ply, mu­tatis mutandis, to ra­dio pro­gramme ser­vices;
f.
trans­mis­sion by means of tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions tech­niquesmeansthe elec­tric­al, mag­net­ic, op­tic­al or oth­er elec­tro­mag­net­ic send­ing or re­ceiv­ing of in­form­a­tion by wire or ra­dio (Art. 3 let. c TCA6);
g.
broad­cast­ingmeans the trans­mis­sion by means of tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions tech­niques and in­ten­ded for the gen­er­al pub­lic;
h.
tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice means the trans­mis­sion of in­form­a­tion for third parties by means of tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions tech­niques (Art. 3 let. b TCA);
i.
coupled ser­vicemeans atele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice which con­sti­tutes a func­tion­al unit with the pro­gramme ser­vice or which is ne­ces­sary for the use of the pro­gramme ser­vice;
j.
pro­cessing means the op­er­a­tion of ser­vices or tech­nic­al pro­ced­ures for the trans­mis­sion, bund­ling, en­cryp­tion or mar­ket­ing of pro­gramme ser­vices or for the se­lec­tion there­of on re­cep­tion equip­ment;
k.
ad­vert­ising means any pub­lic state­ment in the pro­gramme ser­vice, the pur­pose of which is to pro­mote the con­clu­sion of trans­ac­tions con­cern­ing goods or ser­vices, the sup­port of a cause or idea, or the achieve­ment of an­oth­er ef­fect de­sired by the ad­vert­iser or by the broad­caster and which is broad­cast in re­turn for pay­ment or sim­il­ar con­sid­er­a­tion or for self-pro­mo­tion pur­poses;
l.
of­fer for sale means ad­vert­ising which in­vites the pub­lic to dir­ectly con­clude a trans­ac­tion con­cern­ing the presen­ted goods or ser­vices;
m.
tele-shop­ping pro­gramme means a pro­gramme which ex­clus­ively con­tains of­fers for sale and lasts for at least 15 minutes;
n.
tele-shop­ping pro­gramme ser­vice means a pro­gramme ser­vice which con­sists solely of of­fers for sale and oth­er ad­vert­ising;
o.
spon­sor­ship means the par­ti­cip­a­tion of a nat­ur­al or leg­al per­son in the dir­ect or in­dir­ect fin­an­cing of a pro­gramme, with a view to pro­mot­ing their own name, their own trade mark or their own im­age;
p.7
ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee: the fee in terms of Art­icle 68 para­graph 1.

4 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

5 SR 0.784.405

6 SR 784.10

7 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Title 2 Broadcasting of Swiss Programme Services

Chapter 1 General Provisions

Section 1 Obligation to Notify and to Obtain a Licence

Art. 38  

Any per­son wish­ing to broad­cast a Swiss pro­gramme ser­vice must:

a.
no­ti­fy this in ad­vance to the Fed­er­al Of­fice of Com­mu­nic­a­tions (OF­COM); or
b.
hold a li­cence in ac­cord­ance with this Act.

8 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Section 1a Independence from the State9

9 Inserted by No I of the Federal Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 July 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 3a  

Ra­dio and tele­vi­sion are in­de­pend­ent from the state.

Section 2 Content Principles

Art. 4 Minimum requirements for programme service content  

1 All ra­dio or tele­vi­sion pro­grammes must re­spect fun­da­ment­al rights. In par­tic­u­lar, pro­grammes must re­spect hu­man dig­nity, must be neither dis­crim­in­at­ory nor con­trib­ute to ra­cial hatred, nor en­danger pub­lic mor­als nor glor­i­fy or trivi­al­ise vi­ol­ence.

2 Ed­it­or­i­al pro­grammes with in­form­a­tion con­tent must present facts and events fairly, so that the audi­ence can form its own opin­ion. Per­son­al views and com­ment­ar­ies must be iden­ti­fi­able as such.

3 The pro­grammes must not jeop­ard­ise the in­tern­al or ex­tern­al se­cur­ity of the Con­fed­er­a­tion or can­tons, their con­sti­tu­tion­al or­der or the ob­serv­ance of Switzer­land’s ob­lig­a­tions un­der in­ter­na­tion­al law.

4 Li­censed pro­gramme ser­vices must ap­pro­pri­ately ex­press the vari­ety of events and opin­ions in the to­tal­ity of their ed­it­or­i­al pro­grammes. If a cov­er­age area is served by an ad­equate num­ber of pro­gramme ser­vices, the li­cens­ing au­thor­ity may re­lease one or more broad­casters in the li­cence from the vari­ety ob­lig­a­tion.

Art. 5 Programmes unsuitable for young people  

Through the choice of trans­mis­sion time or oth­er meas­ures, broad­casters must en­sure that minors are not con­fron­ted by pro­grammes which jeop­ard­ise their phys­ic­al, men­tal, mor­al or so­cial de­vel­op­ment.

Art. 5a Minimum requirements for other journalistic services from SRG SSR 10  

Con­tri­bu­tions pro­duced by the ed­it­or­i­al staff as part of the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR must com­ply with the pro­gramme ser­vice prin­ciples set out in Art­icles 4 and 5. The vari­ety re­quire­ment (Art. 4 para. 4) ap­plies only to dossiers re­lated to elec­tions and pop­u­lar votes.

10 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 6 Autonomy 11  

1 Un­less fed­er­al law provides oth­er­wise, broad­casters are not bound by the in­struc­tions of fed­er­al, can­ton­al or com­mun­al au­thor­it­ies.

2 In the design of their ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tions and the ad­vert­ising, in par­tic­u­lar in the choice of themes, hand­ling of con­tent and rep­res­ent­a­tion, they are free and shall bear the re­spons­ib­il­ity there­for.12

3 No-one may de­mand that a broad­caster broad­cast spe­cif­ic present­a­tions and in­form­a­tion.

11 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

12 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 7 Other requirements for programme services of television broadcasters 13  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may re­quire tele­vi­sion broad­casters, with­in a frame­work of prac­tic­al feas­ib­il­ity and with ap­pro­pri­ate re­sources:

a.
to re­serve a sub­stan­tial pro­por­tion of the rel­ev­ant broad­cast­ing time for Swiss and oth­er European works;
b.
to re­serve an ap­pro­pri­ate amount of broad­cast­ing time or pro­gramme costs in their tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices for the broad­cast­ing of Swiss and European works by in­de­pend­ent pro­du­cers.

2 The re­quire­ment that tele­vi­sion broad­casters which broad­cast films in their pro­gramme ser­vice spend part of their rev­en­ues on in­de­pend­ent Swiss film pro­duc­tion is gov­erned by the Film Act of 14 Decem­ber 200114.15

3 Tele­vi­sion broad­casters with a na­tion­al or re­gion­al-lan­guage pro­gramme ser­vice must pre­pare an ap­pro­pri­ate pro­por­tion of pro­grammes in a form suit­able for the hard of hear­ing and the visu­ally im­paired.

4 Li­censed re­gion­al tele­vi­sion broad­casters shall sub­title their main in­form­a­tion pro­grammes. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the ex­tent of this ob­lig­a­tion. The cost of pro­cessing pro­grammes for per­sons hard of hear­ing is fun­ded in full from the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee (Art. 68a).16

13 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

14 SR 443.1

15 Amended by No II of the FA of 1 Oct. 2021, in force since 1 Jan. 2024 (AS 2023 531; BBl 2020 3131).

16 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 8 Publication obligations  

1 SRG SSR and the broad­casters with a li­cence un­der Art­icle 38 para­graph 1 let­ter a or Art­icle 43 para­graph 1 let­ter a must:17

a.
in­sert in their pro­gramme ser­vices without delay ur­gent po­lice mes­sages which are in­dis­pens­able to the main­ten­ance of pub­lic or­der and safety or the safety of per­sons, as well as of­fi­cial alerts and in­struc­tions;
b.18
in­form the pub­lic of de­cisions of the Con­fed­er­a­tion which are pub­lished ur­gently un­der Art­icle 7 para­graph 3 of the Pub­lic­a­tions Act of 18 June 200419 (PublA) or by means of ex­traordin­ary pub­lic­a­tion un­der Art­icle 7 para­graph 4 PublA.

2 The au­thor­ity re­quir­ing the broad­casts in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 1 is re­spons­ible for them.

3 When ne­ces­sary, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall ex­tend the ob­lig­a­tions in para­graph 1 let­ter a to tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­viders which broad­cast pro­gramme ser­vices.

4 It shall en­sure that the pop­u­la­tion is as­sured of in­form­a­tion by ra­dio in crisis situ­ations. The li­cens­ing au­thor­it­ies reg­u­late the de­tails in the li­cences of the SRG SSR and of the ra­dio broad­casters men­tioned in Art­icles 38-43.

17 Amended by An­nex No 6 of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Jan. 2016 (AS 2015 3977; BBl 20137057).

18 Amended by An­nex No 6 of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Jan. 2016 (AS 2015 3977; BBl 20137057).

19 SR 170.512

Section 3 Advertising and Sponsorship

Art. 9 Identifiability of advertising  

1 Ad­vert­ising must be clearly sep­ar­ated from the ed­it­or­i­al part of the pro­gramme ser­vice and must be clearly iden­ti­fi­able as such. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may pro­hib­it those forms of ad­vert­ising which jeop­ard­ise sep­ar­a­tion or iden­ti­fi­ab­il­ity or sub­ject these forms to spe­cial pro­vi­sions.

2 The broad­caster’s per­man­ent ed­it­or­i­al em­ploy­ees may not par­ti­cip­ate in its ad­vert­ising pro­grammes. Loc­al and re­gion­al broad­casters with lim­ited fin­an­cial re­sources are ex­cluded from this re­stric­tion.

Art. 10 Bans on advertising  

1 Ad­vert­ising for the fol­low­ing is pro­hib­ited:

a.20
to­bacco products and elec­tron­ic ci­gar­ettes in terms of Art­icle 3 let­ters a and f of the To­bacco Products Act of 1 Oc­to­ber 202121 and art­icles that form a func­tion­al unit with a to­bacco product;
b.22
al­co­hol­ic bever­ages which are sub­ject to the Al­co­hol Act of 21 June 193223; the Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall im­pose fur­ther re­stric­tions for the pro­tec­tion of health and young people;
c.24
...
d.
polit­ic­al parties, per­sons hold­ing polit­ic­al of­fice or can­did­ates for such of­fices and mat­ters which are the sub­ject of a pop­u­lar vote;
e.
re­li­gious be­liefs and the in­sti­tu­tions and per­sons rep­res­ent­ing them.

2 The fol­low­ing are pro­hib­ited:

a.
ad­vert­ising for thera­peut­ic products in ac­cord­ance with the Fed­er­al Act of 15 Decem­ber 200025 on Thera­peut­ic Products;
b.
sales of­fers for thera­peut­ic products and med­ic­al treat­ments.

3 Sur­repti­tious ad­vert­ising and sub­lim­in­al ad­vert­ising are pro­hib­ited.

4 Ad­vert­ising which:

a.
dis­par­ages re­li­gious or polit­ic­al con­vic­tions;
b.
is mis­lead­ing or un­fair;
c.
en­cour­ages be­ha­viour pre­ju­di­cial to health, the en­vir­on­ment or per­son­al safety.

is pro­hib­ited.

5 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may pro­hib­it oth­er ad­vert­ising in or­der to pro­tect health and young people.

20 Amended by An­nex 3 No 1 of the To­bacco Products Act of 1 Oct. 2021, in force since 1 Oct. 2024 (AS 2024 457; BBl 2019 919).

21 SR 818.32

22 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 25 Sept. 2009, in force since 1 Feb. 2010 (AS 2010 371; BBl 20089105).

23 SR 680

24 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 25 Sept. 2009, with ef­fect from 1 Feb. 2010 (AS 2010 371; BBl 20089105).

25 SR 812.21

Art. 11 Insertion and duration of advertising  

1 Ad­vert­ising must as a prin­ciple be in­ser­ted between in­di­vidu­al pro­grammes and must be broad­cast in blocks. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines when de­vi­ations from this prin­ciple are pos­sible. De­vi­ations may not pre­ju­dice the in­teg­rity and the value of the pro­gramme con­cerned.

2 Ad­vert­ising may not in prin­ciple oc­cupy more than 20 per cent of one hour’s trans­mis­sion time. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the ex­cep­tions.26

3 When de­term­in­ing de­vi­ations from the prin­ciples in para­graphs 1 and 2, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall not­ably take in­to ac­count the fol­low­ing cri­ter­ia:

a.
broad­casters’ per­form­ance man­dates;
b.
the eco­nom­ic situ­ation of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion;
c.
trans­fron­ti­er com­pet­i­tion;
d.
in­ter­na­tion­al reg­u­la­tions on ad­vert­ising;
e.
the con­cerns of the audi­ence.

26 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 12 Sponsorship  

1 The con­tent and schedul­ing of sponsored pro­grammes fall with­in the ex­clus­ive re­spons­ib­il­ity of the broad­caster. The lat­ter shall en­sure that the spon­sor does not in­flu­ence the pro­gramme in a man­ner which ad­versely af­fects ed­it­or­i­al in­de­pend­ence.

2 If pro­grammes or se­quences of pro­grammes are sponsored in whole or in part, the spon­sors must be named at the be­gin­ning or end of each pro­gramme.

3 Sponsored pro­grammes may neither en­cour­age the con­clu­sion of trans­ac­tions con­cern­ing goods or ser­vices of the spon­sors or of third parties nor may they con­tain state­ments of an ad­vert­ising nature con­cern­ing goods and ser­vices.

4 Pro­grammes may not be fin­anced by spon­sors who primar­ily man­u­fac­ture or sell products or of­fer ser­vices for which ad­vert­ising is banned un­der Art­icle 10. Com­pan­ies act­ive in the area of thera­peut­ic products may spon­sor pro­grammes provided no products for which ad­vert­ising is banned are named or shown and no ad­vert­ising ef­fect is cre­ated for these products in some oth­er way.

5 News pro­grammes and pro­grammes on polit­ic­al cur­rent events, as well as pro­grammes and se­quences of pro­grammes which are re­lated to the ex­er­cise of polit­ic­al rights in the Con­fed­er­a­tion, can­tons and com­munes may not be sponsored.

Art. 13 Protection of minors  

1 Ad­vert­ising which is aimed at minors or in which minors ap­pear may neither ex­ploit their lack of life ex­per­i­ence nor harm them in their phys­ic­al or men­tal de­vel­op­ment. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall im­pose cor­res­pond­ing reg­u­la­tions on the form of the ad­vert­ising.

2 Pro­grammes for chil­dren may not be in­ter­rup­ted by ad­vert­ising.

3 Of­fers for sale may not be dir­ec­ted at minors.

4 In or­der to safe­guard the con­cerns men­tioned in para­graph 1, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil ex­cludes spe­cif­ic forms of spon­sor­ship of chil­dren’s pro­grammes.

Art. 14 Special provisions for the SRG SSR  

1 Ad­vert­ising is pro­hib­ited in the ra­dio pro­gramme ser­vices of the SRG SSR. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may provide for ex­cep­tions for self-pro­mo­tion.

2 ...27

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may par­tially or wholly re­strict ad­vert­ising and spon­sor­ship in the SRG SSR’s ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices and in oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices which are ne­ces­sary for the ful­fil­ment of its pro­gramme ser­vice man­date and which are fin­anced by the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees28 (Art. 25 para. 3 let. b).

27 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 25 Sept. 2009, with ef­fect from 1 Feb. 2010 (AS 2010 371; BBl 20089105).

28 Ex­pres­sion in ac­cord­ance with No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975). This amend­ment has been made throughout the text.

Section 4 Notification, Information, Reporting and Recording Obligations

Art. 15 Notification of revenue from advertising and sponsorship  

Li­censed broad­casters of Swiss pro­gramme ser­vices must no­ti­fy OF­COM29 of the gross rev­en­ue from ad­vert­ising and spon­sor­ship.

29 Ex­pres­sion in ac­cord­ance with No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975). This amend­ment has been made throughout the text.

Art. 16 Notification of holdings  

Broad­casters of Swiss pro­gramme ser­vices must no­ti­fy OF­COM of any changes in cap­it­al and in vot­ing rights as well as any sub­stan­tial hold­ings in oth­er un­der­tak­ings.

Art. 17 Obligation to provide information  

1 Broad­casters are ob­liged to provide the li­cens­ing and su­per­vis­ory au­thor­it­ies free of charge with the in­form­a­tion and to pro­duce the doc­u­ments that the au­thor­it­ies re­quire for their su­per­vis­ory activ­ity and for the as­sess­ment of any risks to di­versity of opin­ion and pro­gram­ming (Art. 74 and 75).30

2 The ob­lig­a­tion to provide in­form­a­tion also ap­plies to leg­al and nat­ur­al per­sons:

a.
in which the broad­caster has asub­stan­tial hold­ing or which have a sub­stan­tial hold­ing in the broad­caster and which are act­ive in the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion mar­ket or re­lated mar­kets;
b.
which can­vass for ad­vert­ising or spon­sor­ship for the broad­caster;
c.
which pro­duce a ma­jor part of the pro­gramme ser­vice con­cerned for the broad­caster;
d.
which or­gan­ise a pub­lic event in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 72;
e.
which are act­ive in the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion mar­ket and which oc­cupy a dom­in­ant po­s­i­tion in one or more me­dia-re­lated mar­kets;
f.31
that are act­ive in one or more me­dia-rel­ev­ant mar­kets in terms of Article 74 in which a risk to diversity of opin­ion and pro­gram­ming is as­sessed in­so­far as the in­form­a­tion is re­quired to as­sess a dom­in­ant po­s­i­tion in the mar­ket.

3 The right to re­fuse to provide in­form­a­tion or pro­duce doc­u­ments is gov­erned by Art­icle 16 of the Fed­er­al Act of 20 Decem­ber 196832 on Ad­min­is­trat­ive Pro­ced­ure (APA).

30 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

31 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

32 SR 172.021

Art. 18 Annual report and annual accounts  

1 Broad­casters of Swiss pro­gramme ser­vices must sub­mit an an­nu­al re­port and an­nu­al ac­counts to the Fed­er­al Of­fice. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil ex­empts cer­tain cat­egor­ies of broad­casters from these ob­lig­a­tions.

2 The Fed­er­al Of­fice may pub­lish in­form­a­tion from broad­casters’ an­nu­al re­ports.

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines what the an­nu­al re­port and an­nu­al ac­counts must con­tain and which in­form­a­tion OF­COM may pub­lish.

Art. 19 Statistical information  

1 OF­COM pro­duces stat­ist­ics in co­oper­a­tion with the Fed­er­al Stat­ist­ic­al Of­fice. These con­tain the in­form­a­tion which the com­pet­ent au­thor­it­ies re­quire:

a.
for le­gis­la­tion and the ap­plic­a­tion of the law;
b.
in or­der to ac­quire an over­view of the mar­ket.

2 Broad­casters of Swiss pro­gramme ser­vices must sub­mit the ne­ces­sary in­form­a­tion to OF­COM reg­u­larly.

3 OF­COM may make stat­ist­ic­al res­ults avail­able to the pub­lic.

4 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil reg­u­lates the de­tails; in par­tic­u­lar, it lays down the prin­ciples re­gard­ing data col­lec­tion, in­di­vidu­al sur­veys, the use of the col­lec­ted data and the pub­lic­a­tion of stat­ist­ic­al res­ults.

Art. 20 Recording and retention of programmes and contributions as part of the other journalistic services from SRG SSR 33  

1 Broad­casters of Swiss pro­gramme ser­vices must re­cord all pro­grammes and keep the re­cord­ings and the rel­ev­ant ma­ter­i­al and doc­u­ment­a­tion for at least four months. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may ex­empt cer­tain cat­egor­ies of broad­casters from this ob­lig­a­tion.

2 Con­tri­bu­tions as part of the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR must also be re­cor­ded and re­tained with the rel­ev­ant ma­ter­i­al and doc­u­ment­a­tion. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall reg­u­late the dur­a­tion and ex­tent of the re­cord­ing and re­ten­tion ob­lig­a­tion, tak­ing ac­count of tech­nic­al feas­ib­il­ity and what can reas­on­ably be ex­pec­ted of SRG SSR.

3 If a com­plaint is sub­mit­ted to the Om­buds­man Ser­vice with­in the re­ten­tion peri­od or an ob­jec­tion is raised with the In­de­pend­ent Com­plaints Au­thor­ity for Ra­dio and Tele­vi­sion or an of­fi­cial su­per­vis­ory pro­ced­ure is opened, the re­cord­ings, ma­ter­i­als and doc­u­ment­a­tion must be re­tained un­til the com­ple­tion of the pro­ceed­ings.

33 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 21 Conservation of programme services  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may re­quire Swiss broad­casters to keep re­cord­ings of their pro­gramme ser­vices avail­able so that these re­main per­man­ently con­served for the pub­lic. Broad­casters may be fin­an­cially com­pensated for the res­ult­ing costs.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines which pro­gramme ser­vices must be con­served and reg­u­lates the com­pens­a­tion of broad­casters as well as the de­liv­ery, archiv­ing and avail­ab­il­ity of re­cord­ings. In par­tic­u­lar, it may is­sue tech­nic­al reg­u­la­tions con­cern­ing the nature and format of the data me­dia and des­ig­nate the bod­ies which co­ordin­ate the ne­ces­sary work and se­lect the pro­gramme ser­vices to be con­served.

3 Where the rev­en­ue from the charge for ac­cess­ing the re­cor­ded pro­gramme ser­vices and for their con­tin­ued use is not suf­fi­cient, the ex­pendit­ure of the bod­ies un­der para­graph 2 and the com­pens­a­tion for broad­casters in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 1 is fin­anced from the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee.34

4 In or­der to as­sure the long-term use of the archives, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil may take sup­port meas­ures for the con­ser­va­tion of the cor­res­pond­ing play­back equip­ment.

34 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Section 5 Licence Fee

Art. 22  

1 Li­censed broad­casters of Swiss pro­gramme ser­vices pay an an­nu­al fee for their li­cence. The rev­en­ue from the li­cence fee is used primar­ily to pro­mote re­search pro­jects in the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion sec­tor (Art. 77), and sec­ond­ar­ily for new broad­cast­ing tech­no­lo­gies (Art. 58).35

2 The fee amounts to a max­im­um of 1 per cent of the gross rev­en­ue from ad­vert­ising and spon­sor­ship. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines the amount of the fee and an ex­emp­tion amount.

35 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Chapter 2 Swiss Broadcasting Corporation (SRG SSR)

Section 1 Programme Service Mandate and Licence

Art. 23 Principle  

The SRG SSR provides a ser­vice for the com­munity. In so do­ing, it does not at­tempt to make a profit.

Art. 24 Programme service mandate  

1 The SRG SSR ful­fils the con­sti­tu­tion­al man­date in the area of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion (the pro­gramme ser­vice man­date). In par­tic­u­lar:

a.
it sup­plies the en­tire pop­u­la­tion com­pre­hens­ively in terms of con­tent with equi­val­ent ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices in the three of­fi­cial lan­guages;
b.
it pro­motes un­der­stand­ing, co­he­sion and ex­change between the parts of the coun­try, lin­guist­ic com­munit­ies, cul­tures and so­cial group­ings and takes ac­count of the par­tic­u­lar­it­ies of the coun­try and the needs of the can­tons;
c.
it pro­motes closer links between Swiss cit­izens liv­ing abroad and their home coun­try and it pro­motes Switzer­land and the un­der­stand­ing of its con­cerns abroad.

2 The SRG SSR broad­casts at least one ra­dio pro­gramme ser­vice for Ro­man­sh-speak­ing Switzer­land. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil also lays down the prin­ciples in ac­cord­ance with which the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion needs of this lin­guist­ic re­gion must ad­di­tion­ally be taken in­to con­sid­er­a­tion.

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil lays down the prin­ciples in ac­cord­ance with which the needs of people with sens­ory dis­ab­il­it­ies must be taken in­to con­sid­er­a­tion. In par­tic­u­lar, it de­term­ines the ex­tent to which spe­cial pro­grammes must be provided in sign lan­guage for the deaf.

4 The SRG SSR con­trib­utes to:

a.
free pub­lic opin­ion-form­ing through com­pre­hens­ive, di­verse and ac­cur­ate in­form­a­tion es­pe­cially re­gard­ing polit­ic­al, eco­nom­ic and so­cial mat­ters;
b.
cul­tur­al di­versity and the re­in­force­ment of the coun­try’s cul­tur­al val­ues as well as the pro­mo­tion of Swiss cul­ture, with par­tic­u­lar em­phas­is on Swiss lit­er­at­ure and Swiss mu­sic and film, es­pe­cially by broad­cast­ing Swiss pro­duc­tions and pro­grammes it has pro­duced it­self;
c.
edu­ca­tion of the pub­lic, es­pe­cially through the reg­u­lar broad­cast­ing of pro­grammes with edu­ca­tion­al con­tent;
d.
en­ter­tain­ment.

5 The stand­ard lan­guage is gen­er­ally to be used in im­port­ant in­form­a­tion broad­casts which are of in­terest bey­ond the lin­guist­ic and na­tion­al bor­ders.

Art. 25 Licence  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil awards the SRG SSR a li­cence.

2 A pub­lic con­sulta­tion is held be­fore the award of the li­cence or be­fore changes to the li­cence with con­sequences for me­dia policy.

3 The li­cence de­term­ines in par­tic­u­lar:

a.
the num­ber and nature of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices;
b.
the scope of the fur­ther ed­it­or­i­al pro­gram­ming which is ne­ces­sary to ful­fil the pro­gramme ser­vice man­date at the level of the lin­guist­ic re­gion, as well as at na­tion­al and in­ter­na­tion­al level and which is fin­anced from ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees;
c.
the de­tails of the in­clu­sion of Swiss lit­er­at­ure, mu­sic and film in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 24 para­graph 4 let­ter b; it may set down cor­res­pond­ing min­im­um quotas.

4 The SRG SSR may of­fer cer­tain pro­gramme ser­vices in co­oper­a­tion with oth­er broad­casters. The co­oper­a­tion is reg­u­lated in agree­ments which re­quire the con­sent of the Fed­er­al De­part­ment of the En­vir­on­ment, Trans­port, En­ergy and Com­mu­nic­a­tions (DE­TEC).36

5 DE­TEC37 may amend in­di­vidu­al pro­vi­sions of the li­cence be­fore its term ex­pires if the ac­tu­al or leg­al con­di­tions have changed and the amend­ment is ne­ces­sary to safe­guard im­port­ant in­terests. The SRG SSR will be paid ap­pro­pri­ate com­pens­a­tion.

6 DE­TEC may re­strict the SRG SSR’s li­cence or par­tially sus­pend it if:

a.
the su­per­vis­ory au­thor­ity has made an ap­plic­a­tion in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 89;
b.
the SRG SSR has re­peatedly or ser­i­ously vi­ol­ated its ob­lig­a­tions re­gard­ing fin­an­cial man­age­ment and ac­count­ing (Art. 35 and 36).

36 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

37 Ex­pres­sion in ac­cord­ance with No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975). This amend­ment has been made throughout the text.

Section 2 Editorial Programming

Art. 26 Restrictions on regional programming  

1 The SRG SSR is pro­hib­ited from broad­cast­ing re­gion­al pro­gramme ser­vices.

2 The SRG SSR may with the ap­prov­al of DE­TEC in­sert time-lim­ited re­gion­al win­dows in its ra­dio pro­gramme ser­vices. Spon­sor­ship is pro­hib­ited in such win­dows. These re­gion­al win­dows must be lim­ited to a max­im­um of one hour per day.38

38 Sen­tence in­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 27 Programme production  

The SRG SSR’s pro­gramme ser­vices shall be pro­duced pre­dom­in­antly in the lan­guage re­gions for which they are in­ten­ded.

Art. 28 Editorial programming for foreign countries  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall peri­od­ic­ally agree with the SRG SSR the scope of ed­it­or­i­al pro­gram­ming for for­eign coun­tries in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 24 para­graph 1 let­ter c and the cor­res­pond­ing costs.

2 In crisis situ­ations, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil may agree with the SRG SSR spe­cial short-term per­form­ance man­dates for pur­poses of in­ter­na­tion­al un­der­stand­ing.

3 At least half the costs for ser­vices in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 1 will be re­im­bursed to the SRG SSR by the Con­fed­er­a­tion; the costs for ser­vices in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 2 will be re­im­bursed in full.

Section 3 Unlicensed Activities

Art. 29  

1 The SRG SSR and un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it must re­port in ad­vance to OF­COM activ­it­ies which are not laid down in the li­cence and which may ad­versely af­fect the po­s­i­tion and mis­sion of oth­er Swiss me­dia un­der­tak­ings.

2 If such activ­ity ad­versely af­fects the ful­fil­ment of the pro­gramme ser­vice man­date or sub­stan­tially lim­its the de­vel­op­ment po­ten­tial of oth­er me­dia un­der­tak­ings, DE­TEC may im­pose con­di­tions on com­mer­cial activ­ity, fin­an­cing, sep­ar­a­tion of ac­count­ing and or­gan­isa­tion­al sep­ar­a­tion or pro­hib­it the activ­ity.

Section 4 Broadcasting of SRG SSR Programme Services

Art. 30  

1 The ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices of the SRG SSR shall be broad­cast at least over the en­tire lin­guist­ic re­gion con­cerned. At least one SRG SSR ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vice shall be broad­cast throughout Switzer­land in Ger­man, French and Itali­an. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may provide for ex­cep­tions. It also takes in­to con­sid­er­a­tion the needs of the Ro­man­sh-speak­ing pop­u­la­tion in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 24 para­graph 2. In do­ing so, it en­sures that fre­quen­cies and chan­nels are made avail­able to the oth­er broad­casters for each means of broad­cast­ing.

2 For each pro­gramme ser­vice, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines the cov­er­age area and tech­nic­al means of broad­cast­ing.

Section 5 Organisation and Finance

Art. 31 Organisation of the SRG SSR  

1 The SRG SSR shall or­gan­ise it­self so that:

a.
its autonomy and in­de­pend­ence from the state and from so­cial, eco­nom­ic and polit­ic­al group­ings is guar­an­teed;
b.
it is man­aged eco­nom­ic­ally and the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees are used for the pur­pose for which they were in­ten­ded;
c.
the con­cerns of the lin­guist­ic re­gions are taken in­to con­sid­er­a­tion and na­tion­al lead­er­ship and co­ordin­a­tion is as­sured;
d.
the pub­lic is rep­res­en­ted in the or­gan­isa­tion;
e.
ed­it­or­i­al activ­ity is sep­ar­ate from eco­nom­ic activ­it­ies;
f.
it can be man­aged, su­per­vised and in­spec­ted in ac­cord­ance with the prin­ciples of the law on com­pan­ies lim­ited by shares.

2 Its art­icles of as­so­ci­ation must be ap­proved by DE­TEC.

Art. 32 Management bodies  

1 The man­dat­ory man­age­ment bod­ies are the Gen­er­al As­sembly, the Board of Dir­ect­ors, the aud­it­or and the Ex­ec­ut­ive Board.

2 Un­less this Act provides oth­er­wise, the pro­vi­sions of the law on com­pan­ies lim­ited by shares ap­ply mu­tatis mutandis to the pro­vi­sions of the art­icles of as­so­ci­ation on the rights, ob­lig­a­tions and re­spons­ib­il­it­ies of the SRG SSR man­age­ment bod­ies.

Art. 33 Board of Directors  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may nom­in­ate up to a quarter of the mem­bers of the Board of Dir­ect­ors.

2 The Board of Dir­ect­ors does not is­sue in­di­vidu­al dir­ect­ives in mat­ters re­lated to cur­rent pro­gramme ser­vices.

3 The mem­bers of the Board of Dir­ect­ors must not be em­ployed by the SRG SSR or any of the un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it. They are not bound by in­struc­tions.

Art. 34 Finance  

The SRG SSR is mainly fin­anced by ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees. Oth­er sources of fin­ance are avail­able to it, un­less this is re­stric­ted by this Act, the Or­din­ance, the li­cence or rel­ev­ant in­ter­na­tion­al law.

Art. 35 Use of financial resources  

1 The SRG SSR and the un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it shall con­duct their fin­an­cial ac­count­ing in ac­cord­ance with the re­cog­nised prin­ciples of best prac­tice. They shall con­duct them­selves cost-ef­fect­ively, use their re­sources in ac­cord­ance with the pro­vi­sions and en­sure the long-term main­ten­ance of their as­sets with re­gard to the ful­fil­ment of their man­date.

2 The SRG SSR shall use the share of fees39 al­loc­ated to it solely to cov­er the costs res­ult­ing from the broad­cast­ing of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices and the costs of the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices (Art. 25 para. 3 let. b).

3 If it ceases to carry out an activ­ity that was a ma­jor ele­ment when the fees were set, DE­TEC may re­quire SRG SSR to build up re­serves in the amount of the cor­res­pond­ing sum, which will be taken in­to ac­count dur­ing the sub­sequent fee ad­just­ment.40

4 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall en­sure that the pro­vi­sions of Art­icle 6a para­graphs 1–5 of the Fed­er­al Per­son­nel Act of 24 March 200041 are ap­plied ac­cord­ingly in the SRG SSR and in the un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it for the mem­bers of the man­aging bod­ies, mem­bers of man­age­ment staff and oth­er per­son­nel who are re­mu­ner­ated in a sim­il­ar way.

39 Ex­pres­sion in ac­cord­ance with No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975). This amend­ment has been made throughout the text.

40 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

41 SR 172.220.1

Art. 36 Financial supervision  

1 The SRG SSR and the un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it shall main­tain their books in ac­cord­ance with the reg­u­la­tions which ap­ply to com­pan­ies lim­ited by shares and in ac­cord­ance with the ac­count­ing stand­ards re­cog­nised by the Swiss stock ex­changes.

2 It shall main­tain sep­ar­ate ac­counts for the activ­it­ies in­volved in car­ry­ing out their man­date un­der the terms of the li­cence and for their oth­er activ­it­ies.

3 The Board of Dir­ect­ors of the SRG SSR shall com­mu­nic­ate the fol­low­ing to DE­TEC yearly:

a.
the group ac­counts;
b.
the an­nu­al ac­counts, the pre­lim­in­ary es­tim­ate, the fin­an­cial plan and the an­nu­al re­port of the SRG SSR and of the un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it.

4 DE­TEC shall audit the SRG SSR’s fin­an­cial ac­count­ing on the basis of the re­ports from the Board of Dir­ect­ors. It may de­mand ad­di­tion­al in­form­a­tion. In par­tic­u­lar, DE­TEC may de­mand of the SRG SSR’s Board of Dir­ect­ors or of the seni­or man­age­ment bod­ies of con­trolled un­der­tak­ings in­form­a­tion on how they have dis­charged their re­spons­ib­il­ity.

5 DE­TEC may carry out audits on the premises of the SRG SSR and the un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it if:

a.
re­port­ing is in­ad­equate and the SRG SSR does not provide ad­equate in­form­a­tion with­in the re­quired time des­pite a re­quest by DE­TEC; or
b.
there are well-foun­ded sus­pi­cions that the SRG SSR or one of the un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it has not ful­filled the ob­lig­a­tions stated in Art­icle 35 para­graph 1.

6 Sub­ject to the re­quire­ments of para­graph 5, DE­TEC may en­trust the Fed­er­al Audit Of­fice or oth­er ex­perts with the fin­an­cial audit. The Fed­er­al Audit Of­fice Act of 28 June 196742 is not ap­plic­able.

7 Audits on grounds of pure ex­pedi­ency are not per­mit­ted.

Art. 37 Holdings in other broadcasting companies  

SRG SSR hold­ings in oth­er broad­casters are sub­ject to the ap­prov­al of DE­TEC.

Chapter 3 Other Broadcasters with a Mandate

Section 1 Licences with a Performance Mandate and a Share of Fees

Art. 38 Principle  

1 Li­cences with a per­form­ance man­date and a share of fees (fee-shar­ing li­cences) may be awar­ded to broad­casters of loc­al-re­gion­al pro­gramme ser­vices which:

a.
provide to an area that has no ad­equate fund­ing op­tions ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices which take ac­count of loc­al or re­gion­al par­tic­u­lar­it­ies by provid­ing com­pre­hens­ive in­form­a­tion, par­tic­u­larly on polit­ic­al, eco­nom­ic and so­cial mat­ters and which con­trib­ute to the de­vel­op­ment of cul­tur­al life in the cov­er­age area;
b.
con­trib­ute to the ful­fil­ment of the man­date un­der the Fed­er­al Con­sti­tu­tion in urb­an areas by means of com­ple­ment­ary, non-profit-ori­ent­ated ra­dio pro­gramme ser­vices.

2 Fee-shar­ing li­cences give an en­ti­tle­ment to broad­cast the pro­gramme ser­vice with­in a spe­cif­ic cov­er­age area (right of ac­cess) and to a pro­por­tion of the rev­en­ue from ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees.

3 One fee-shar­ing li­cence is awar­ded for each cov­er­age area.

4 The li­cence spe­cifies as a min­im­um:

a.
the cov­er­age area and the tech­nic­al means of broad­cast­ing;
b.
the re­quired pro­gramme ser­vices and the op­er­a­tion­al and or­gan­isa­tion­al re­quire­ments ne­ces­sary for these;
c.
oth­er re­quire­ments and con­di­tions which the li­censee must ful­fil.

5 ...43

43 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, with ef­fect from 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 39 Coverage areas  

1 After con­sulta­tion with the Fed­er­al Com­mu­nic­a­tions Com­mis­sion, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines the num­ber and ex­tent of the cov­er­age in which fee-shar­ing li­cences are awar­ded, as well as the tech­nic­al means of broad­cast­ing in the cov­er­age area con­cerned. When it does so, it dis­tin­guishes between cov­er­age areas for ra­dio and for tele­vi­sion.

2 Cov­er­age areas in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 38 para­graph 1 let­ter a must be defined so that:

a.
they con­sti­tute a polit­ic­al and geo­graph­ic­al unit or are marked by es­pe­cially close cul­tur­al or eco­nom­ic con­tacts; and
b.
their ex­ist­ing fund­ing op­tions to­geth­er with an ap­pro­pri­ate pro­por­tion of the rev­en­ue from ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees al­low the broad­caster to ful­fil its per­form­ance man­date.

3 Ex­cep­tions may be made for re­gion­al pro­gramme ser­vices which are broad­cast in at least two na­tion­al lan­guages in a mul­ti­lin­gual area.

4 The num­ber and ex­tent of the cov­er­age areas are ex­amined by the Fed­er­al Coun­cil peri­od­ic­ally but after ten years at the latest. DE­TEC may make minor ad­just­ments to the ex­tent.

5 Be­fore de­fin­ing the cov­er­age areas and be­fore sig­ni­fic­ant changes, the can­tons and the li­censed broad­casters dir­ectly con­cerned shall be con­sul­ted.

Art. 40 Share of fees  

1 The share of fees for broad­casters re­ceiv­ing a share of fees in terms of Art­icle 68a para­graph 1 let­ter b amounts to 4 to 6 per cent of the rev­en­ue from ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees. The Federal Council decides:

a.
when fix­ing the amount of the fee, on the re­spect­ive shares al­loc­ated to ra­dio and tele­vi­sion, tak­ing ac­count of the need to ful­fil the per­form­ance man­dates in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 38 para­graph 1;
b.
the max­im­um per­cent­age which the share of fees may make to the op­er­at­ing costs of the in­di­vidu­al broad­caster.44

2 DE­TEC lays down each li­censee’s share of the rev­en­ue from ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees for a spe­cif­ic peri­od. It takes in­to con­sid­er­a­tion the size and eco­nom­ic po­ten­tial of the cov­er­age area as well as the ex­pendit­ure which the li­censee must in­cur to ful­fil the per­form­ance man­date in­clud­ing trans­mis­sion costs.

3 The pro­vi­sions of the Sub­sidies Act of 5 Oc­to­ber 199045 ap­ply.

44 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

45 SR 616.1

Art. 41 Obligations of broadcasters with fee-sharing licences  

1 Broad­casters which hold a fee-shar­ing li­cence must ful­fil the per­form­ance man­date defined in the li­cence. In or­der to en­sure the ful­fil­ment of the per­form­ance man­date and of in­de­pend­ent pro­gramme pro­duc­tion, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil may im­pose oth­er ob­lig­a­tions. In par­tic­u­lar, it may ob­lige the broad­casters to pro­duce a mis­sion state­ment and ed­it­or­i­al stat­utes.

2 Broad­casters with a fee-shar­ing li­cence must use the fin­an­cial re­sources eco­nom­ic­ally and in ac­cord­ance with the reg­u­la­tions. Dis­tri­bu­tion of profits is not per­mit­ted. Broad­cast­ing of the fee-sup­por­ted pro­gramme ser­vice must be sep­ar­ated in the ac­counts from any oth­er eco­nom­ic activ­it­ies car­ried out by the li­censee. If an un­der­tak­ing which is eco­nom­ic­ally con­trolled by the li­censee car­ries out activ­it­ies in con­nec­tion with the pro­gramme ser­vice, the li­censee shall en­sure that these activ­it­ies are kept sep­ar­ate in the ac­counts from oth­er activ­it­ies.46

3 Co­oper­a­tion with oth­er broad­casters must not jeop­ard­ise the ful­fil­ment of the per­form­ance man­date or the in­de­pend­ence of pro­gramme pro­duc­tion.

46 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 42 Financial supervision  

1 The li­censee shall sub­mit the ac­counts to OF­COM on an an­nu­al basis. The lat­ter shall ex­am­ine wheth­er the fin­an­cial re­sources have been used eco­nom­ic­ally and in ac­cord­ance with the reg­u­la­tions. If not, it may re­duce or re­claim the share of fees from a li­censee.

2 OF­COM may also re­quest in­form­a­tion from the li­censee and from those ob­liged to provide in­form­a­tion in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 17 para­graph 2 let­ter a–c and carry out on-the-spot fin­an­cial audits.

3 Audits on grounds of pure ex­pedi­ency are not per­mit­ted.

Section 2 Licence with Performance Mandate but without a Share of Fees

Art. 43  

1 DE­TEC may award oth­er broad­casters a li­cence for wire­less ter­restri­al broad­cast­ing of a pro­gramme ser­vice if this pro­gramme ser­vice:

a.
takes ac­count of loc­al or re­gion­al par­tic­u­lar­it­ies in an area by means of com­pre­hens­ive in­form­a­tion, par­tic­u­larly con­cern­ing polit­ic­al, eco­nom­ic and so­cial mat­ters and con­trib­utes to the de­vel­op­ment of cul­tur­al life in the cov­er­age area;
b.
con­trib­utes to a sig­ni­fic­ant ex­tent in a lin­guist­ic re­gion to the ful­fil­ment of the per­form­ance man­date provided for by the Con­sti­tu­tion.

2 The li­cence defines the scope of ac­cess to tech­nic­al means of broad­cast­ing and the per­form­ance man­date with re­gard to pro­gramme ser­vices. DE­TEC may im­pose oth­er ob­lig­a­tions in or­der to en­sure the ful­fil­ment of the per­form­ance man­date and the in­de­pend­ence of pro­gramme pro­duc­tion.

Section 3 Licensing Regulations

Art. 44 General licence requirements  

1 A li­cence may be awar­ded if the can­did­ate:

a.
is able to ful­fil the per­form­ance man­date;
b.
cred­ibly demon­strates that it can fin­ance the ne­ces­sary in­vest­ments and op­er­a­tion;
c.
demon­strates to the li­cens­ing au­thor­ity the iden­tity of the ma­jor­ity hold­er of its cap­it­al and who makes sub­stan­tial fin­an­cial re­sources avail­able to it;
d.
guar­an­tees that it com­plies with the em­ploy­ment law reg­u­la­tions and the work­ing con­di­tions of the in­dustry, the ap­plic­able law and in par­tic­u­lar the ob­lig­a­tions and con­di­tions as­so­ci­ated with the li­cence;
e.
sep­ar­ates ed­it­or­i­al activ­ity from eco­nom­ic activ­it­ies;
f.
is a nat­ur­al per­son with res­id­ence in Switzer­land or a leg­al per­son dom­i­ciled in Switzer­land;
g.47
...

2 In the ab­sence of any in­ter­na­tion­al ob­lig­a­tions to the con­trary, a leg­al per­son con­trolled from abroad, a do­mest­ic leg­al per­son with for­eign par­ti­cip­a­tion or a nat­ur­al per­son without Swiss cit­izen­ship may be re­fused the li­cence if the cor­res­pond­ing for­eign state does not guar­an­tee re­cip­roc­al rights to a sim­il­ar ex­tent.

3 A broad­caster or the un­der­tak­ing to which it be­longs may ac­quire a max­im­um of two tele­vi­sion li­cences and two ra­dio li­cences. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may per­mit ex­cep­tions for the in­tro­duc­tion of new broad­cast­ing tech­no­lo­gies.48

47 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, with ef­fect from 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

48 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 45 Licensing procedure  

1 Li­cences are awar­ded by DE­TEC. As a rule, OF­COM puts the li­cences out to tender; it may con­sult in­ter­ested parties.

1bisLi­cences may be ex­ten­ded with a pub­lic ten­der­ing pro­cess, in par­tic­u­lar where the situ­ation in the cov­er­age areas or tech­no­lo­gic­al changes pose sig­ni­fic­ant chal­lenges to broad­casters. In reach­ing a de­cision, ac­count is taken of pre­vi­ous ful­fil­ment of the per­form­ance man­date.49

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may provide for a spe­cial pro­ced­ure for the award of short-term li­cences.

3 If there are sev­er­al can­did­ates for one li­cence, pref­er­ence is giv­en to the can­did­ate that is best able to ful­fil the per­form­ance man­date. If sev­er­al can­did­ates are es­sen­tially equi­val­ent from this view­point, pref­er­ence is giv­en to the can­did­ate which best en­hances to the di­versity of opin­ion and the di­versity of pro­gram­ming.

4 Li­cences for wire­less ter­restri­al trans­mis­sion of pro­gramme ser­vices are as a rule awar­ded be­fore the in­vit­a­tion to tender for the cor­res­pond­ing ra­diocom­mu­nic­a­tion li­cences in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 22a TCA50.51

49 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

50 SR 784.10

51 Amended by An­nex No 6 of the FA of 22 March 2019, in force since 1 Jan. 2021 (AS 2020 6159; BBl 2017 6559).

Art. 46 Term and expiry of licences  

1 Each li­cence is awar­ded for a spe­cif­ic term. As a rule, com­par­able li­cences are lim­ited to the same term.

2 A li­cence ex­pires in the case of re­lin­quish­ment by the broad­caster, on with­draw­al and on ex­piry of its term.

Art. 47 Fulfilment of the performance mandate  

1 OF­COM ex­am­ines wheth­er the li­censed pro­gramme ser­vice ful­fils the per­form­ance man­date. For pur­poses of cla­ri­fic­a­tion, it may call in ex­tern­al ex­pert­ise or ex­perts.

2 If it finds sub­stan­tial short­com­ings, it takes meas­ures. It may not­ably re­duce the claim to shares of fees by up to half un­til the short­com­ings are remedied.

Art. 48 Transfer of the licence  

1 A trans­fer of the li­cence must be no­ti­fied to DE­TEC be­fore it takes place and must be ap­proved by the lat­ter.

2 DE­TEC ex­am­ines wheth­er the li­cence re­quire­ments are also met after the trans­fer. It may re­fuse ap­prov­al with­in three months of re­ceipt of no­ti­fic­a­tion; in par­tic­u­lar cases the peri­od may be ex­ten­ded.

3 Eco­nom­ic trans­fer of the li­cence is also deemed to be a trans­fer. Such a case ap­plies if more than 20 per cent of the share cap­it­al, nom­in­al cap­it­al or re­gistered cap­it­al or where ap­plic­able the par­ti­cip­at­ing cap­it­al or vot­ing rights are trans­ferred.

Art. 49 Amendment of the licence  

1 DE­TEC may amend in­di­vidu­al pro­vi­sions of the li­cence be­fore its term ex­pires if the ac­tu­al or leg­al con­di­tions have changed and the amend­ment is ne­ces­sary to safe­guard im­port­ant pub­lic in­terests.

2 The li­censee is ap­pro­pri­ately com­pensated if the amend­ment sub­stan­tially re­stricts the rights gran­ted with the li­cence. It re­ceives no com­pens­a­tion if the amend­ment is based on im­port­ant na­tion­al in­terests or on a change in in­ter­na­tion­al ob­lig­a­tions.

3 At the re­quest of the broad­caster, DE­TEC may amend in­di­vidu­al con­di­tions if the amend­ment ap­plied for cor­res­ponds to the re­quire­ments for the award of the li­cence.

Art. 50 Restriction, suspension and withdrawal of the licence  

1 DE­TEC may re­strict, sus­pend or with­draw the li­cence if:

a.
the li­censee has ac­quired it as a res­ult of in­com­plete or in­cor­rect in­form­a­tion;
b.
the li­censee ser­i­ously vi­ol­ates this Act or its im­ple­ment­ing pro­vi­sions;
c.
the li­censee con­tinu­ously fails to meet its ob­lig­a­tions laid down in the li­cence des­pite meas­ures un­der Art­icle 47 para­graph 2;
d.
the li­censee ser­i­ously ex­ploits the li­cence for un­law­ful pur­poses;
e.
im­port­ant na­tion­al in­terests so re­quire.

2 DE­TEC shall with­draw the li­cence if es­sen­tial con­di­tions re­lat­ing to the award there­of are no longer ap­plic­able.

3 The li­censee has a claim to com­pens­a­tion if DE­TEC:

a.
with­draws the li­cence be­cause es­sen­tial con­di­tions re­lat­ing to the award there­of cease to ex­ist and the Con­fed­er­a­tion is re­spons­ible for this;
b.
sus­pends or with­draws the li­cence be­cause im­port­ant na­tion­al in­terests so re­quire.

Title 3 Transmission and Technical Processing of Programme Services

Chapter 1 General Rules

Art. 51 Principle  

1 Broad­casters may broad­cast their pro­gramme ser­vices them­selves on the basis of the pro­vi­sions of tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions law or com­mis­sion a tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider to broad­cast the pro­gramme ser­vices.

2 The broad­cast­ing ser­vices are provided on fair, reas­on­able and non-dis­crim­in­at­ory terms.

3 Art­icle 47 TCA52 con­cern­ing com­mu­nic­a­tion in ex­traordin­ary situ­ations is ap­plic­able to broad­casters which trans­mit their pro­gramme ser­vices them­selves.

Art. 52 Restrictions  

1 OF­COM may re­strict or pro­hib­it the trans­mis­sion of a pro­gramme ser­vice us­ing tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions tech­niques if the pro­gramme ser­vice:

a.
in­fringes in­ter­na­tion­al tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions law which is bind­ing on Switzer­land;
b.
ser­i­ously and con­tinu­ously vi­ol­ates the in­ter­na­tion­al reg­u­la­tions which are bind­ing on Switzer­land re­gard­ing pro­gramme con­tent, ad­vert­ising or spon­sor­ship; or
c.
is the sub­ject of a ban on broad­cast­ing in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 89 para­graph 2.

2 Both the broad­caster of the pro­gramme ser­vice in ques­tion and the tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider which broad­casts the pro­gramme ser­vice or feeds the sig­nal for broad­cast­ing may ob­ject to the de­cision of OF­COM.

3 ...53

53 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, with ef­fect from 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Chapter 2 Wireless Terrestrial Broadcasting of Programme Services

Art. 53 Access-entitled programme services  

The fol­low­ing are ac­cess-en­titled for wire­less ter­restri­al broad­cast­ing with­in the frame­work of the li­cence:

a.
the pro­gramme ser­vices of the SRG SSR;
b.
the pro­gramme ser­vices of broad­casters which hold a li­cence with a per­form­ance man­date.
Art. 54 Frequencies for programme services 54  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall en­sure that suf­fi­cient fre­quen­cies are made avail­able to ful­fil the con­sti­tu­tion­al per­form­ance man­date of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion (Art. 93 para. 2 FC). In par­tic­u­lar, it shall en­sure that ac­cess-en­titled pro­gramme ser­vices can be trans­mit­ted us­ing wire­less ter­restri­al tech­no­logy in the in­ten­ded cov­er­age area and shall spe­cify the rel­ev­ant prin­ciples.

2 For fre­quen­cies or fre­quency blocks which are used in ac­cord­ance with the na­tion­al fre­quency al­loc­a­tion plan (Art. 25 TCA55) for the broad­cast­ing of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices, it de­term­ines:

a.
the broad­cast­ing area;
b.
the num­ber of ra­dio or tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices which are to be broad­cast, or the trans­mis­sion ca­pa­cit­ies which are to be re­served for the broad­cast­ing of pro­gramme ser­vices.

3 In ac­cord­ance with the re­quire­ments spe­cified by the Fed­er­al Coun­cil, DE­TEC shall en­sure that suf­fi­cient broad­cast­ing of pro­gramme ser­vices can be as­sured to serve the pop­u­la­tion in ex­traordin­ary situ­ations.

54 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

55 SR 784.10

Art. 55 Broadcasting obligation and broadcasting conditions  

1 Any per­son ac­quir­ing a ra­diocom­mu­nic­a­tion li­cence for the util­isa­tion of a fre­quency which is in­ten­ded for the broad­cast­ing of an ac­cess-en­titled pro­gramme ser­vice must broad­cast the lat­ter in ad­equate qual­ity and re­spect the pro­vi­sions of the li­cence with re­gard to pro­gramme ser­vices and of the ra­diocom­mu­nic­a­tion li­cence with re­gard to tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions law.

2 Broad­casters pay the own­er of a ra­diocom­mu­nic­a­tion li­cence cost-based com­pens­a­tion for the broad­cast­ing of ac­cess-en­titled pro­gramme ser­vices. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines the chargeable costs. If the ra­diocom­mu­nic­a­tion li­cence is awar­ded in a bid­ding pro­ced­ure, the award price as men­tioned in Art­icle 39 para­graph 4 TCA56 is not in­cluded in the chargeable costs.

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may ex­tend the trans­mis­sion ob­lig­a­tion to ser­vices which are coupled with ac­cess-en­titled pro­gramme ser­vices.

Art. 56 Procedures for agreement and decision making  

1 If the parties can­not agree on the broad­cast­ing ob­lig­a­tion and broad­cast­ing con­di­tions with­in three months, OF­COM ad­ju­dic­ates.

2 For the de­cision, it refers to com­par­able do­mest­ic or for­eign ref­er­ence val­ues in so far as the parties do not pro­duce evid­ence which jus­ti­fies de­vi­ation there­from.

3 For the peri­od from the sub­mis­sion of the ap­plic­a­tion to the leg­ally-en­force­able de­cision, it may or­der trans­mis­sion on an in­ter­im basis and fix the fin­an­cial con­di­tions.

4 The pro­ced­ure and the ob­lig­a­tion to provide in­form­a­tion are based, mu­tatis mutandis, on the pro­vi­sions of the TCA on the grant­ing of ac­cess by dom­in­ant pro­viders (Art. 11, 11a and 11b TCA57).58

57 SR 784.10

58 See also Art. 106 No 1 be­low.

Art. 57 Support for the broadcasting of radio programme services  

1 In ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 38 para­graph 1 let­ter a, OF­COM provides a con­tri­bu­tion to a broad­caster with a fee-shar­ing li­cence which in­curs ad­di­tion­al ex­pense for the wire­less ter­restri­al broad­cast­ing of its ra­dio pro­gramme ser­vice in a moun­tain re­gion.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall reg­u­late the con­di­tions and cal­cu­la­tion cri­ter­ia by which OF­COM pays the con­tri­bu­tions.

Art. 58 Promoting new broadcasting technologies 59  

1 OF­COM may for a lim­ited peri­od sub­sid­ise the in­tro­duc­tion of new tech­no­lo­gies for broad­cast­ing pro­gramme ser­vices by con­trib­ut­ing to the cost of con­struct­ing and op­er­at­ing trans­mit­ter net­works, provided that in­suf­fi­cient fund­ing op­tions are avail­able in the cor­res­pond­ing cov­er­age area.

2 It may provide the pub­lic with in­form­a­tion on new tech­no­lo­gies, in par­tic­u­lar the tech­nic­al re­quire­ments and pos­sible ap­plic­a­tions, and work with third parties to do so.

3 The sub­sidies in terms of para­graphs 1 and 2 shall be paid for from the rev­en­ue from the li­cence fee (Art. 22) and, if this is not suf­fi­cient, from the rev­en­ue from the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee.

4 When de­term­in­ing the amount of the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee (Art. 70), the Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the pro­por­tion which is avail­able for sub­sidies. This is shall amount to no more than one per cent of the total rev­en­ue from the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee.

5 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines who is en­titled to sup­port and the re­quire­ments for re­ceiv­ing sub­sidies.

59 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Chapter 3 Broadcasting by Wire

Art. 59 Access-entitled and foreign programme services  

1 In their cov­er­age area, the fol­low­ing must be broad­cast by wire:

a.
pro­gramme ser­vices of the SRG SSR with­in the frame­work of the li­cence;
b.
pro­gramme ser­vices based on a li­cence with a per­form­ance man­date.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may also spe­cify pro­gramme ser­vices of for­eign broad­casters which are to be trans­mit­ted by wire be­cause of their spe­cial con­tri­bu­tion to edu­ca­tion, cul­tur­al de­vel­op­ment or free opin­ion-form­ing.

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines the max­im­um num­ber of ac­cess-en­titled pro­gramme ser­vices in ac­cord­ance with para­graphs 1 and 2 with­in the frame­work of the tech­nic­al cap­ab­il­it­ies of tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­viders. The pro­gramme ser­vices are to be trans­mit­ted free of charge and in ad­equate qual­ity.

4 The tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider which already broad­casts pro­gramme ser­vices in the cov­er­age area and reaches the most house­holds is primar­ily sub­ject to the broad­cast­ing ob­lig­a­tion. With­in the same cov­er­age area, OF­COM may re­quire more than one tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider if this is ne­ces­sary to en­sure that a pro­gramme ser­vice can be re­ceived by the gen­er­al pub­lic. In the event of re­fus­al, OF­COM may ar­range im­me­di­ate broad­cast­ing by way of pre­cau­tion.

5 If com­pli­ance with this ob­lig­a­tion leads to an un­reas­on­able eco­nom­ic bur­den on the tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider, OF­COM shall re­quire the ac­cess-en­titled broad­caster to pay ap­pro­pri­ate com­pens­a­tion.

6 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may ex­tend the trans­mis­sion ob­lig­a­tion to ser­vices which are coupled with ac­cess-en­titled pro­gramme ser­vices.

Art. 60 Other broadcasting obligations  

1 On ap­plic­a­tion by a broad­caster, OF­COM shall re­quire a tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider for a spe­cif­ic peri­od to provide broad­cast­ing by wire of a pro­gramme ser­vice with­in a spe­cif­ic area, if:

a.
the pro­gramme ser­vice con­trib­utes to a sig­ni­fic­ant ex­tent to the ful­fil­ment of the man­date un­der the Con­sti­tu­tion; and
b.
broad­cast­ing can reas­on­ably be ex­pec­ted from the tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider tak­ing ac­count of the avail­able trans­mis­sion ca­pa­cit­ies and its eco­nom­ic ca­pa­city.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines the max­im­um num­ber of pro­gramme ser­vices.

3 OF­COM may with­draw the right pri­or to ex­piry of the de­creed term if the broad­caster no longer provides the ser­vices stated in the de­cision.

4The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may ex­tend the trans­mis­sion ob­lig­a­tion to ser­vices which are coupled with ac­cess-en­titled pro­gramme ser­vices.

Art. 61 Transmission by wire of other programme services  

In the case of the broad­cast­ing of pro­gramme ser­vices not reg­u­lated by Art­icles 59 and 60, the tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider de­cides on the basis of its ca­pa­cit­ies for trans­mit­ting pro­gramme ser­vices. In par­tic­u­lar, the eco­nom­ic be­ne­fit of the broad­cast­ing ser­vice to the broad­caster may be taken in­to ac­count in the pay­ment of the broad­cast­ing costs.

Art. 61a Time-delayed television viewing 60  

1 Time-delayed tele­vi­sion view­ing is defined as the tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vice of a broad­caster that is trans­mit­ted and re­cor­ded by a tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider and which the tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider makes avail­able to its end cus­tom­ers for view­ing in its en­tirety for a lim­ited peri­od of time in com­pli­ance with the pro­vi­sions on copy­right.

2 Tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­viders that of­fer time-delayed tele­vi­sion view­ing may not make any modi­fic­a­tions to the lin­ear tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices that they trans­mit and re­cord without the con­sent of the broad­caster. The rules on ad­vert­ising and spon­sor­ship ap­ply by ana­logy to time-delayed tele­vi­sion view­ing.

3 In or­der to guar­an­tee the pro­tec­tion of young people, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil may is­sue pro­vi­sions on the ac­cess­ib­il­ity of tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices by means of time-delayed tele­vi­sion view­ing. In do­ing so, it shall take ac­count of the age rat­ing sys­tems re­cog­nised in Switzer­land.

60 In­ser­ted by An­nex No 6 of the FA of 22 March 2019, in force since 1 Jan. 2021 (AS 2020 6159; BBl 2017 6559).

Art. 62 Channel occupancy  

The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may de­cree that tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­viders broad­cast the pro­gramme to be trans­mit­ted in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 59 para­graphs 1 and 2 on pre­ferred chan­nels.

Chapter 4 Technical Processing of Programme Services

Art. 63 Principles  

1 Ac­cess to tech­nic­al pro­cessing must be guar­an­teed to broad­casters on fair, reas­on­able and non-dis­crim­in­at­ory terms. If pro­cessing us­ing the tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vice pro­vider’s equip­ment es­sen­tially cor­res­ponds to the state of the art, the broad­caster is not en­titled to use its own equip­ment for pro­cessing.

2 Any per­son provid­ing ser­vices as a high­er-level user in­ter­face which con­trol pro­gramme ser­vice se­lec­tion must use the state of the art to en­sure that ref­er­ence is clearly made in the first stage of use to ac­cess-en­titled pro­gramme ser­vices.

3 Op­er­at­ors and pro­viders of pro­cessing ser­vices or equip­ment must:

a.
provide third parties with a jus­ti­fied in­terest with all in­form­a­tion and dis­close all doc­u­ment­a­tion, the know­ledge of which is ne­ces­sary to en­force the rights in para­graph 1;
b.
provide OF­COM on its re­quest with all in­form­a­tion and sub­mit all doc­u­ment­a­tion which is ne­ces­sary to veri­fy wheth­er the ob­lig­a­tions in the pro­vi­sions on tech­nic­al pro­cessing are be­ing com­plied with.

4 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may ex­tend the pro­vi­sions on tech­nic­al pro­cessing to coupled ser­vices.

5 If no reg­u­la­tions ex­ist for spe­cif­ic cir­cum­stances, OF­COM shall in in­di­vidu­al cases take the de­cisions re­quired to safe­guard di­versity of opin­ion and di­versity of pro­gram­ming.

Art. 64 Open interfaces and technical configuration  

In so far as is ne­ces­sary to safe­guard di­versity of opin­ion, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil may, after con­sulta­tion with the parties con­cerned, stip­u­late open in­ter­faces or de­cree oth­er pro­vi­sions con­cern­ing their tech­nic­al con­fig­ur­a­tion for equip­ment or ser­vices which are used for pro­cessing of pro­gramme ser­vices. In so do­ing, it takes ac­count of the equip­ment or ser­vices already on the mar­ket and al­lows ap­pro­pri­ate trans­ition­al peri­ods.

Art. 65 Unbundling  

1 Any per­son of­fer­ing pro­gramme ser­vices as bundled pack­ages or provid­ing ser­vices which are used for the pro­cessing of pro­gramme ser­vices must ful­fil the tech­nic­al re­quire­ments that en­able third parties to broad­cast these pro­gramme ser­vices in­di­vidu­ally un­der cost-ef­fect­ive con­di­tions and use the equip­ment or ser­vices in­di­vidu­ally.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may de­cree reg­u­la­tions re­lat­ing to un­bund­ling in so far as this is ne­ces­sary to safe­guard di­versity of opin­ion.

Title 4 Reception of Programme Services

Chapter 1 Freedom of Reception

Art. 66 Free programme service reception  

Every­one is free to re­ceive pro­gramme ser­vices broad­cast with­in Switzer­land and from abroad if they are in­ten­ded for a gen­er­al audi­ence.

Art. 67 Cantonal bans on antennas  

1 The can­tons may in spe­cif­ic areas pro­hib­it the erec­tion of out­door an­ten­nas if:

a.
this is ne­ces­sary for the pro­tec­tion of sig­ni­fic­ant loc­al and na­tion­al land­scapes, his­tor­ic­al sites or nat­ur­al and art monu­ments; and
b.
re­cep­tion of the cus­tom­ary pro­gramme ser­vices in the re­gion re­mains guar­an­teed un­der ac­cept­able con­di­tions.

2 The erec­tion of an out­door an­tenna for the re­cep­tion of ad­di­tion­al pro­gramme ser­vices must be ap­proved by way of ex­cep­tion if the in­terest in re­ceiv­ing the pro­gramme ser­vices over­rides the in­terest in pro­tect­ing the loc­al and na­tion­al land­scape.

Chapter 2 Radio and Television Fee61

61 Amended by No I of the Federal Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 July 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Section 1 General

Art. 68 Principle  

1 The Con­fed­er­a­tion charges a fee to fin­ance the per­form­ance man­date for ra­dio and tele­vi­sion in terms of the Fed­er­al Con­sti­tu­tion (Art. 93 para. 2 FC).

2 The fee is charged for each house­hold and each un­der­tak­ing.

3 The rev­en­ue from and the ap­plic­a­tion of the fee, with the ex­cep­tion of the pay­ments due to the Con­fed­er­a­tion, are not shown in the fed­er­al fin­an­cial state­ments.

Art. 68a Amount of the fee and allocation key  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the amount of the fee for house­holds and for un­der­tak­ings. The de­cis­ive factors are the need:

a.
to fin­ance SRG SSR pro­gramme ser­vices and oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR that are re­quired to ful­fil the pro­gramme ser­vice man­date (Art. 25 para. 3 let. b);
b.
to sup­port pro­gramme ser­vices from fee-shar­ing li­censees (Art. 38–42);
c.
to sup­port the Found­a­tion for Audi­ence Re­search (Art. 81);
d.
to sub­sid­ise the con­struc­tion of trans­mit­ter net­works in or­der to in­tro­duce new broad­cast­ing tech­no­lo­gies (Art. 58);
e.
to fin­ance the pro­cessing of pro­grammes in li­censed re­gion­al tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices for per­sons hard of hear­ing (Art. 7 para. 4);
f.
for the tasks of the col­lec­tion agency, the Fed­er­al Tax Ad­min­is­tra­tion (FTA), OF­COM and the can­tons and com­munes in con­nec­tion with col­lect­ing the fee and en­for­cing the ob­lig­a­tion to pay (Art. 69d–69g and 70–70d);
g.
to fin­ance the main­ten­ance of pro­gramme ser­vices (Art. 21).

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine how the rev­en­ue from the fee is al­loc­ated for the uses in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 1. In do­ing so, it may de­term­ine the shares al­loc­ated for the ra­dio pro­gramme ser­vices, tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices and oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR sep­ar­ately.

3 In de­cid­ing on the amount of the fee, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall take ac­count of the Price Su­per­visor’s re­com­mend­a­tion. Any di­ver­gence from the re­com­mend­a­tions must be pub­licly jus­ti­fied.

Section 2 Household Fee

Art. 69 General Provisions  

1 House­hold mem­bers’ ob­lig­a­tion to pay be­gins on the first day of the month fol­low­ing the es­tab­lish­ment of the house­hold and ends on the last day of the month in which the house­hold is dis­solved.

2 The make-up of the house­hold as re­gistered in the can­ton­al or com­mun­al re­gister of res­id­ents is de­cis­ive when col­lect­ing the fee.

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall reg­u­late the fre­quency, due date and the pre­script­ive peri­od for the fee.

Art. 69a Private households: obligation to pay  

1 Each private house­hold must pay the same fee.

2 The defin­i­tion of a private house­hold is gov­erned by the le­gis­la­tion on the har­mon­isa­tion of re­gisters.

3 The fol­low­ing per­sons are jointly and sev­er­ally li­able for pay­ment of the house­hold fee:

a.
adults for whom the house­hold is their main res­id­ence, in ana­log­ous terms to the defin­i­tion of the com­mune of res­id­ence in Art­icle 3 let­ter b of the Re­gister Har­mon­isa­tion Act of 23 June 200662 (RHA); or
b.
adults who have no main res­id­ence in Switzer­land and for whom the house­hold is their sec­ond­ary res­id­ence, in ana­log­ous terms to the defin­i­tion of the com­mune of res­id­ence in Art­icle 3 let­ter c RHA.

4 Each per­son’s li­ab­il­ity ex­tends to the amount due from the fee peri­ods at the start of which the per­son is a mem­ber of the house­hold.

5 If all the adults who be­longed to a house­hold at the start of a month leave that house­hold with­in that month, the house­hold is deemed to be dis­solved as of the last day of that month.

Art. 69b Private households: exemption from the obligation to pay  

1 The fol­low­ing per­sons are ex­emp­ted from the ob­lig­a­tion to pay the fee:

a.
on ap­plic­a­tion, per­sons who re­ceive an­nu­al be­ne­fits un­der Art­icle 3 para­graph 1 let­ter a of the Fed­er­al Act of 6 Oc­to­ber 200663 on Be­ne­fits sup­ple­ment­ary to the Old Age, Sur­viv­ors' and In­valid­ity In­sur­ance; the ex­emp­tion ap­plies ret­ro­spect­ively from the date on which sup­ple­ment­ary be­ne­fits were first claimed, but at the earli­est from a date five years pri­or to re­ceipt of the ap­plic­a­tion by the col­lec­tion agency;
b.
per­sons en­titled to priv­ileges, im­munit­ies and fa­cil­it­ies un­der Art­icle 2 para­graph 2 of the Host State Act of 22 June 200764 (HSA) and who en­joy dip­lo­mat­ic status, provided they do not hold Swiss cit­izen­ship; the Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall reg­u­late the ex­emp­tion of oth­er per­sons en­joy­ing priv­ileges, im­munit­ies and fa­cil­it­ies and the mem­bers of staff of in­sti­tu­tion­al be­ne­fi­ciar­ies un­der Art­icle 2 para­graph 1 let­ters d, e and f HSA, provided they do not hold Swiss cit­izen­ship.

2 Where one mem­ber of a private house­hold meets the re­quire­ments for an ex­emp­tion un­der para­graph 1, all mem­bers of the house­hold con­cerned are ex­emp­ted from the ob­lig­a­tion to pay.

Art. 69c Collective households  

1 Each col­lect­ive house­hold must pay the same fee.

2 The defin­i­tion of a col­lect­ive house­hold is gov­erned by the le­gis­la­tion on the har­mon­isa­tion of re­gisters.

3 The fee is owed by the private or pub­lic en­tity re­spons­ible for the col­lect­ive house­hold.

Art. 69d Collection of the household fee  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may del­eg­ate the col­lec­tion of the fee per house­hold and re­lated du­ties to a col­lec­tion agency out­side the fed­er­al ad­min­is­tra­tion. The le­gis­la­tion on pub­lic pro­cure­ment ap­plies.

2 OF­COM su­per­vises the col­lec­tion agency.

Art. 69e Duties and powers of the collection agency  

1 The col­lec­tion agency may is­sue ad­min­is­trat­ive rul­ings:

a.
to fee pay­ers: on the ob­lig­a­tion to pay;
b.
to the can­tons and com­munes: on the pay­ments made un­der Art­icle 69g para­graph 4.

2 The col­lec­tion agency acts as an au­thor­ity as defined in Art­icle 1 para­graph 2 let­ter e APA65. It may dis­miss an ob­jec­tion in debt en­force­ment pro­ceed­ings in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 79 of the Fed­er­al Act of 11 April 188966 on Debt En­force­ment and Bank­ruptcy (DEBA) and is deemed to be an ad­min­is­trat­ive au­thor­ity in terms of Art­icle 80 para­graph 2 num­ber 2 DEBA.

3 It may not pur­sue any eco­nom­ic activ­ity oth­er than that del­eg­ated to it un­der this Act.

4 Each year it shall pub­lish a re­port on its activ­it­ies and its an­nu­al ac­counts.

Art. 69f Data processing by the collection agency  

1 In or­der to as­sess eli­gib­il­ity for an ex­emp­tion from the fee un­der Art­icle 69b para­graph 1 let­ter, the col­lec­tion agency may pro­cess data that al­lows con­clu­sions to be drawn as to a per­son’s health or so­cial as­sist­ance claims. The data pro­cessing is gov­erned by pro­vi­sions of the Data Pro­tec­tion Act of 25 Septem­ber 202067 (FADP) that ap­ply to fed­er­al bod­ies.68

2 The col­lec­tion agency shall take the or­gan­isa­tion­al and tech­nic­al meas­ures re­quired to se­cure the data against un­au­thor­ised pro­cessing. It may only pro­cess data that it ob­tained in con­nec­tion with its activ­it­ies un­der this Act for the pur­pose of col­lect­ing and en­for­cing pay­ment of the fee and may only pass on the data to third parties for these pur­poses.

3 Data that al­low con­clu­sions to be drawn with re­gard to a per­son’s health or so­cial in­sur­ance claims may not be dis­closed to third parties. Such data may be stored by third parties in en­cryp­ted form (con­tent en­cryp­tion). Data may only be de­cryp­ted by the col­lec­tion agency. Per­sons en­trus­ted with ser­vi­cing, main­ten­ance or pro­gram­ming tasks may pro­cess such data with­in the in­form­a­tion sys­tem if this is re­quired in or­der to carry out their tasks and data se­cur­ity is guar­an­teed. In do­ing so, the con­tent of the data may not be mod­i­fied.

4 The col­lec­tion agency must pass on the data re­quired for col­lect­ing and en­for­cing pay­ment to any suc­cessor agency in good time and free of charge. Once the data has been passed on, it must per­man­ently de­lete the data that it no longer re­quires.

67 SR 235.1

68 Second sen­tence amended by An­nex 1 No II 69 of the Data Pro­tec­tion Act of 25 Sept. 2020, in force since 1 Sept. 2023 (AS 2022 491; BBl 2017 6941).

Art. 69g Obtaining data on households  

1 The col­lec­tion agency shall ob­tain the data on house­holds and their mem­bers re­quired for col­lect­ing the fee from the fol­low­ing re­gisters:

a.
the re­gister of res­id­ents (Art. 2 para. 2 let. a RHA69);
b.
the Or­dipro in­form­a­tion sys­tem of the Fed­er­al De­part­ment of For­eign Af­fairs (Art. 2 para. 1 let. c RHA).

2 It shall ob­tain the data via the Fed­er­al In­form­a­tion and Com­mu­nic­a­tion Plat­form in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 10 para­graph 3 RHA.

3 Can­tons and com­munes shall provide the col­lec­tion agency with the data from their re­gisters of res­id­ents in the re­quired format and with the re­quired reg­u­lar­ity for de­liv­ery via the Fed­er­al In­form­a­tion and Com­mu­nic­a­tion Plat­form in en­cryp­ted form.

4 The col­lec­tion agency shall pay con­tri­bu­tions from the fee rev­en­ue to com­munes and can­tons to­wards the in­vest­ments spe­cific­ally re­quired in or­der to trans­mit data to the col­lec­tion agency.

5 The col­lec­tion agency may sys­tem­at­ic­ally use the OASI num­ber70 in terms of Art­icle 50c of the Fed­er­al Act of 20 Decem­ber 194671 on Old-Age and Sur­viv­ors’ In­sur­ance (OASIA):

a.
to ful­fil its tasks in con­nec­tion with col­lect­ing the fee;
b.
in the case of quer­ies to com­munes and can­tons re­lated to trans­mit­ted data.

6 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the data that the col­lec­tion agency may ob­tain in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 1. It shall reg­u­late the de­tails with re­gard to volume and format of the data, the reg­u­lar­ity of data de­liv­er­ies and the con­tri­bu­tions to can­tons and com­munes in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 4.

69 SR 431.02

70 Term in ac­cord­ance with An­nex No 16 of the FA of 18 Dec. 2020 (Sys­tem­at­ic Use of the OASI Num­ber by Au­thor­it­ies), in force since 1 Jan. 2022 (AS 2021 758; BBl 20197359).

71 SR 831.10

Section 3 Corporate Fee

Art. 70 Undertaking’s obligation to pay  

1 A cor­por­ate un­der­tak­ing is re­quired to pay the fee if it reached the min­im­um turnover fixed by the Fed­er­al Coun­cil in the tax peri­od that ended in the pre­vi­ous cal­en­dar year in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 34 of the Value Ad­ded Tax Act of 12 June 200972 (VATA).

2 An un­der­tak­ing is any en­tity entered in the FTA re­gister of per­sons li­able to pay VAT and which has its re­gistered of­fice, dom­i­cile or per­man­ent es­tab­lish­ment in Switzer­land. A simple part­ner­ship un­der Art­icle 530 of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions73 is not deemed to be an un­der­tak­ing.74

3 Turnover in terms of para­graph 1 is defined as the total turnover ex­clud­ing VAT achieved by an un­der­tak­ing that must be de­clared in ac­cord­ance with the VATA, ir­re­spect­ive of wheth­er it qual­i­fies for VAT li­ab­il­ity. Where group tax­a­tion ap­plies, the total turnover of the VAT group is de­cis­ive.

4 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall spe­cify the min­im­um turnover at a level that en­sures that small un­der­tak­ings are ex­empt from the fee.

5 The amount of the fee is de­term­ined by the turnover. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall spe­cify sev­er­al turnover levels with a sep­ar­ate tar­iff for each level (tar­iff cat­egor­ies).

72 SR 641.20

73 SR 220

74 Amended by No I of the FA of 18 Dec. 2020 (Un­der­tak­ing’s ob­lig­a­tion to pay), in force since 1 Jan. 2021 (AS 2021 239; BBl 2020 4485).

Art. 70a Collecting the corporate fee  

1 The FTA col­lects the fee.

2 Each year, when as­sess­ing the li­ab­il­ity to pay VAT, the FTA shall al­loc­ate each un­der­tak­ing li­able to pay the fee to a tar­iff cat­egory and in­voice it for the fee.

3 If an un­der­tak­ing has made no VAT re­turns or its re­turns are clearly in­ad­equate, the FTA shall use its dis­cre­tion to al­loc­ate the un­der­tak­ing to a tar­iff cat­egory.

4 If al­loc­a­tion to a tar­iff cat­egory for the tax peri­od end­ing in the pre­vi­ous cal­en­dar year is tem­por­ar­ily im­possible, the FTA shall in­voice the fee when the tar­iff cat­egory has been de­term­ined.

Art. 70b Due date and enforcement  

1 The fee be­comes due for pay­ment 60 days after it is in­voiced and the debt pre­scribes five years after the due date. In the event of late pay­ment, de­fault in­terest of 5 per cent per an­num be­comes due without pri­or no­tice.

2 If a per­son li­able to pay the fee files an ob­jec­tion in debt en­force­ment pro­ceed­ings, the FTA shall is­sue a rul­ing on the amount of the fee due and at the same time dis­miss the ob­jec­tion in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 79 DEBA75.

3 In the event of any dis­pute, the rank­ing of cred­it­ors is post­poned un­til an en­force­able rul­ing has been is­sued.

4 Any fees that are due or have been in­voiced may be off­set against re­funds of VAT.

5 Se­cur­ity for the fee is gov­erned by Art­icles 93–95 VATA76. Joint li­ab­il­ity and suc­ces­sion to li­ab­il­ity are gov­erned by Art­icles 15 and 16 VATA.

6 The pro­ced­ure is gov­erned by the APA77.

Art. 70c Reporting by the FTA  

1 The FTA must keep its activ­it­ies in col­lect­ing the fee sep­ar­ate from its oth­er activ­it­ies in its ac­counts.

2 It shall pub­lish its an­nu­al ac­counts each year, to­geth­er with an an­nu­al re­port on the col­lec­tion of the fee.

Art. 70d Confidentiality and data processing  

1 The FTA shall pro­cess data re­quired to carry out its activ­it­ies in ac­cord­ance with this Act. The pro­vi­sions of the VATA78 on data pro­cessing ap­ply.

2 The duty of con­fid­en­ti­al­ity and its ex­cep­tions un­der Art­icle 74 VATA also ap­ply to col­lect­ing and en­for­cing pay­ment of the fee.

Chapter 3 Fees for Wireless Terrestrial Reception 79

79 Inserted by No I of the Federal Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 July 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 71 ... 80  

The can­tons may provide for fees for the re­cep­tion of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices which are trans­mit­ted us­ing wire­less ter­restri­al tech­no­logy on the basis of a pub­lic sup­ply con­tract.

80 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, with ef­fect from 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Title 5 Measures to Safeguard Diversity and promote Programme Service Quality

Chapter 1 Ensuring Access to Public Events

Art. 72 Short reporting right with regard to public events  

1 If the re­port­ing of a pub­lic event in Switzer­land is re­stric­ted by ex­clus­ive agree­ments, any in­ter­ested broad­caster has the right to short, up-to-date, me­dia-com­pat­ible re­port­ing of this event.

2 The or­gan­iser of a pub­lic event and the broad­caster be­ne­fit­ing from first ex­ploit­a­tion or ex­clus­ive rights are ob­liged to provide any in­ter­ested broad­caster with the pos­sib­il­ity of short re­port­ing.

3 They shall give in­ter­ested broad­casters:

a.
ac­cess to the event, in so far as tech­nic­al and spa­tial cir­cum­stances per­mit; and
b.
the de­sired parts of the trans­mis­sion sig­nal un­der ap­pro­pri­ate con­di­tions.

4 With ref­er­ence to Art­icle 90, OF­COM may or­der or­gan­isers of a pub­lic event and broad­casters with first or ex­clus­ive rights to take ap­pro­pri­ate meas­ures to en­sure ex­er­cise of the right of short re­port­ing.

Art. 73 Free access to events of major importance to society  

1 Re­port­ing of events of ma­jor im­port­ance to so­ci­ety must be made freely ac­cess­ible to a sub­stan­tial pro­por­tion of the gen­er­al pub­lic.

2 DE­TEC drafts a list of in­ter­na­tion­al and na­tion­al events of ma­jor im­port­ance to so­ci­ety and up­dates it reg­u­larly.

3 For broad­casters of Swiss tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices, the lists draf­ted by the mem­ber states of the European Con­ven­tion on Trans­fron­ti­er Tele­vi­sion of 5 May 198981 are bind­ing in the state con­cerned with re­gard to free ac­cess.

Chapter 2 Measures to prevent Risks to the Diversity of Opinion and Programming 82

82 Amended by No I of the Federal Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 July 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 74 Risks to diversity of opinion and programming  

1 A risk to di­versity of opin­ion and pro­gram­ming ex­ists if:

a.
a broad­caster ab­uses its dom­in­ant po­s­i­tion in the rel­ev­ant mar­ket;
b.
a broad­caster or an­oth­er un­der­tak­ing act­ive in the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion mar­ket ab­uses its dom­in­ant po­s­i­tion in one or more me­dia-re­lated mar­kets.

2 DE­TEC shall con­sult the Com­pet­i­tion Com­mis­sion to as­sess the dom­in­ant po­s­i­tion as defined in Art­icle 4 para­graph 2 of the Car­tel Act of 6 Oc­to­ber 199583. The Com­pet­i­tion Com­mis­sion shall ap­ply the prin­ciples of com­pet­i­tion law and may pub­lish its com­ments.84

83 SR 251

84 Sen­tence amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 75 Measures  

1 If, after ob­tain­ing the Com­pet­i­tion Com­mis­sion’s re­port, DE­TEC as­cer­tains that a broad­caster or an­oth­er un­der­tak­ing act­ive in the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion mar­ket has jeop­ard­ised di­versity of opin­ion and pro­gram­ming as a res­ult of its ab­use of its dom­in­ant po­s­i­tion, it may take meas­ures in the area of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion. As a rule, it takes a de­cision with­in three months of re­ceipt of the re­port.

2 It may de­mand that the broad­caster or the un­der­tak­ing con­cerned:

a.
en­sures di­versity by meas­ures such as grant­ing broad­cast­ing time for third parties or co­oper­at­ing with oth­er par­ti­cipants in the mar­ket;
b.
takes meas­ures against cor­por­ate journ­al­ism, such as is­su­ing ed­it­or­i­al stat­utes to en­sure ed­it­or­i­al free­dom;
c.
should such meas­ures prove to be clearly in­ad­equate, ad­apts the busi­ness and or­gan­isa­tion­al struc­ture of the un­der­tak­ing.

Chapter 3 Basic and Continuing Education and Training of Programme Services Producers 85

85 The amendment in accordance with the Federal Act of 20 June 2014 on Continuing Education and Training, in force since 1 Jan. 2017 relates only to the Italian text (AS 2016 689; BBl 20133729).

Art. 76  

The Con­fed­er­a­tion may sup­port the ba­sic and con­tinu­ing edu­ca­tion and train­ing of pro­gramme pro­du­cers, in par­tic­u­lar through con­tri­bu­tions to in­sti­tu­tions for ba­sic and con­tinu­ing edu­ca­tion and train­ing. OF­COM reg­u­lates the award cri­ter­ia and de­cides on the con­tri­bu­tions.

Chapter 4 Research

Section 1 Media Research

Art. 77  

The Fed­er­al Coun­cil reg­u­lates the re­quire­ments and cal­cu­la­tion cri­ter­ia in ac­cord­ance with which re­search pro­jects in the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion sec­tor are sup­por­ted from the li­cence fee (Art. 22).

Section 2 Foundation for Audience Research

Art. 78 Function  

1 The Found­a­tion for Audi­ence Re­search is re­spons­ible for col­lect­ing sci­entif­ic data on the use of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion in Switzer­land. In do­ing so, it must ap­ply sci­entif­ic meth­od­o­logy and is in­de­pend­ent of the SRG SSR, oth­er broad­casters and the ad­vert­ising in­dustry. It may trans­fer the activ­it­ies in whole or in part to sub­si­di­ary un­der­tak­ings con­trolled by it and bring in in­de­pend­ent ex­perts with re­gard to data col­lec­tion. The Found­a­tion is sub­ject to su­per­vi­sion by DE­TEC.

2 The Found­a­tion en­sures that Swiss broad­casters and sci­entif­ic re­search have suf­fi­cient data avail­able on the use of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion.Li­censed broad­casters in moun­tain and peri­pher­al re­gions mustbe able to ob­tain data with a qual­ity com­par­able to that provided to oth­er broad­casters.

Art. 79 Data reporting and delivery  

1 The Found­a­tion pub­lishes the most im­port­ant res­ults of its sur­veys at least once a year.

2 It makes the ba­sic data on use avail­able to third parties at prices which cov­er the costs. The data is provided to uni­versity re­search­ers and OF­COM free of charge.

Art. 80 Organisation  

1 The Found­a­tion reg­u­lates its or­gan­isa­tion and its activ­it­ies by means of reg­u­la­tions which must be ap­proved by DE­TEC.

2 The board of the Found­a­tion com­prises the same num­ber of rep­res­ent­at­ives from the SRG SSR as from oth­er Swiss broad­casters. In ad­di­tion, oth­er per­sons are ap­poin­ted to the Found­a­tion board. Ac­count is taken of the need for lan­guage re­gions and sexes to be rep­res­en­ted fairly.86

3 DE­TEC se­lects the found­a­tion board. In do­ing so, it takes ac­count of the pro­pos­als of those con­cerned.

86 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 81 Finance contribution  

1 The Found­a­tion re­ceives an an­nu­al con­tri­bu­tion from the rev­en­ue from ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees for the de­vel­op­ment and ac­quis­i­tion of sur­vey meth­ods and sys­tems.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines the amount of the con­tri­bu­tion when de­term­in­ing the amount of the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees.

3 The Sub­sidies Actof 5 Oc­to­ber 199087 ap­plies. Activ­it­ies in ac­cord­ance with Art­icles 78 and 79 shall be sep­ar­ated from any oth­er activ­it­ies in the ac­counts of the found­a­tion and of any sub­si­di­ary com­pan­ies.

Title 6 Independent Complaints Authority for Radio and Television

Art. 82 Composition  

1 The In­de­pend­ent Com­plaints Au­thor­ity for Ra­dio and Tele­vi­sion (the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity) com­prises nine part-time mem­bers.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil elects the mem­bers of the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity and ap­points the pres­id­ent.

3 The fol­low­ing may not be­long to the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity:

a.
mem­bers of the Fed­er­al As­sembly;
b.
per­sons in the ser­vice of the Con­fed­er­a­tion;
c.
mem­bers of the man­age­ment and em­ploy­ees of Swiss broad­casters.

4 If there is an in­com­pat­ib­il­ity, the per­son con­cerned shall de­clare which of the two of­fices he or she opts for. If he or she opts for an of­fice in para­graph 3, he or she shall resign from the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity four months at the latest from the oc­cur­rence of the in­com­pat­ib­il­ity.

Art. 83 Functions  

1 The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity is com­pet­ent for:

a.88
deal­ing with com­plaints about the con­tent of ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tions and the re­fus­al of ac­cess to the pro­gramme ser­vice or oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR (Art. 94);
b.
the se­lec­tion and su­per­vi­sion of the om­buds­man ser­vices (Art. 91).

2 It pro­duces an activ­ity re­port an­nu­ally for the Fed­er­al Coun­cil.

88 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 84 Independence  

The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity is in­de­pend­ent and is not bound by any dir­ect­ives from the Fed­er­al As­sembly, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil and the fed­er­al ad­min­is­tra­tion. The right of in­struc­tion based on Art­icle 104 para­graph 2 is re­served.

Art. 85 Organisation  

1 Un­less the Fed­er­al Coun­cil provides to the con­trary, the Com­mit­tees Or­din­ance of 3 June 199689 ap­plies.

2 The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity or­gan­ises it­self. It shall draw up reg­u­la­tions on its or­gan­isa­tion and man­age­ment. The reg­u­la­tions are sub­ject to the ap­prov­al of the Fed­er­al Coun­cil.

3 The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity has its own sec­ret­ari­at. It reg­u­lates the du­ties in the reg­u­la­tions in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 2. The con­di­tions of ser­vice of the sec­ret­ari­at per­son­nel are gov­erned by the le­gis­la­tion ap­plic­able to fed­er­al gov­ern­ment em­ploy­ees.

89 [AS 19961651; 20001157; 20085949No II. AS 2009 6137No II 1]. See now: Art. 8a ff. of the Gov­ern­ment and Ad­min­is­tra­tion Or­gan­isa­tion Or­din­ance of 25 Novem­ber 1998 (SR 172.010.1).

Title 7 Supervision and Legal Remedies

Chapter 1 General Supervision

Section 1 Procedures

Art. 86 Principles  

1 OF­COM shall en­sure that this Act and its im­ple­ment­ing pro­vi­sions, the li­cence and rel­ev­ant in­ter­na­tion­al agree­ments are com­plied with. The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity is re­spons­ible for deal­ing with com­plaints about the con­tent of ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tions and re­fus­al of ac­cess to the pro­gramme ser­vice or oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR (Art. 83 para. 1 let. a and Art. 94–98).90

2 Su­per­vis­ory meas­ures re­lat­ing to the pro­duc­tion and pre­par­a­tion of pro­gramme ser­vices and the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR and on the grounds of simple ex­pedi­ency are not per­mit­ted.91

3 The pro­vi­sions of the APA92 ap­ply to the su­per­vis­ory pro­ced­ure un­less this Act provides oth­er­wise.

4 No pro­vi­sion­al meas­ures are per­mit­ted in the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity’s su­per­vi­sion pro­ced­ure (Art. 91–98).93

5 The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity only eval­u­ates com­plaints against pub­lished ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tions and com­plaints about re­fus­al of ac­cess to the pro­gramme ser­vice or to oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR. It does not act ex of­fi­cio.94

90 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

91 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

92 SR 172.021

93 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

94 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 87 Information for the public  

1 The su­per­vis­ory au­thor­it­ies shall in­form the pub­lic of their activ­it­ies. In par­tic­u­lar, they may pub­lish the de­cisions on ad­min­is­trat­ive and crim­in­al mat­ters and make them ac­cess­ible on­line.

2 They shall not di­vulge any com­mer­cial secrets.

Art. 88 Data protection  

1 The su­per­vis­ory au­thor­it­ies may pro­cess sens­it­ive per­son­al data if this is ne­ces­sary for the per­form­ance of the du­ties im­posed by this Act.

2 Data pro­cessing is gov­erned by the pro­vi­sions of the FADP95 which ap­ply to fed­er­al bod­ies.96

95 SR 235.1

96 Amended by An­nex 1 No II 69 of the Data Pro­tec­tion Act of 25 Sept. 2020, in force since 1 Sept. 2023 (AS 2022 491; BBl 2017 6941).

Section 2 Measures in the event of Infringements

Art. 89 General  

1 If the su­per­vis­ory au­thor­ity es­tab­lishes an in­fringe­ment of the law, it may:

a.
re­quire the nat­ur­al or leg­al per­son re­spons­ible for the in­fringe­ment:
1.
to rem­edy the de­fi­ciency and take meas­ures to en­sure that that the in­fringe­ment does not re­cur,
2.
to in­form the au­thor­ity of the pre­cau­tions taken,
3.
to sur­render to the Con­fed­er­a­tion the rev­en­ue achieved as a res­ult of the in­fringe­ment;
b.
re­quest DE­TEC to make the li­cence sub­ject to con­di­tions, or to re­strict, sus­pend or with­draw the li­cence.

2 At the re­quest of the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity (Art. 97 para. 4), DE­TEC may ban the pro­gramme ser­vice or al­low it only un­der cer­tain con­di­tions.97

97 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 90 Administrative penalties  

1 The su­per­vis­ory au­thor­ity may im­pose a pen­alty not ex­ceed­ing 10 per cent of its av­er­age turnover achieved in Switzer­land in the pre­vi­ous three busi­ness years on any per­son who:

a.
vi­ol­ates a leg­ally-bind­ing de­cision of the su­per­vis­ory au­thor­ity or a leg­ally-bind­ing de­cision of the ap­peals au­thor­ity;
b.
ser­i­ously in­fringes con­di­tions of the li­cence;
c.
vi­ol­ates reg­u­la­tions con­cern­ing ad­vert­ising and spon­sor­ship which are con­tained in this Act (Art. 4, 5 and 9-14), its im­ple­ment­ing pro­vi­sions, the li­cence or the rel­ev­ant in­ter­na­tion­al agree­ments;
d.
vi­ol­ates the reg­u­la­tions con­cern­ing the trans­mis­sion ob­lig­a­tion (Art. 55);
e.
fails to com­ply with the ob­lig­a­tion to guar­an­tee the right of short re­port­ing of pub­lic events (Art. 72);
f.
fails to guar­an­tee free ac­cess to events of ma­jor im­port­ance to so­ci­ety (Art. 73);
g.
vi­ol­ates meas­ures as defined in Art­icle 75 (me­dia con­cen­tra­tion);
h.98
...

2 Any per­son who fails to com­ply with, or be­lated or in­com­pletely com­plies with one of the fol­low­ing ob­lig­a­tions or who provides false in­form­a­tion may be re­quired to pay an amount not ex­ceed­ing CHF 10 000:

a.
ob­lig­a­tion to no­ti­fy (Art. 3);
b.
pub­lic­a­tion ob­lig­a­tions (Art. 8);
c.
ob­lig­a­tion to no­ti­fy rev­en­ue from ad­vert­ising and spon­sor­ship (Art. 15);
d.
ob­lig­a­tion to no­ti­fy hold­ings (Art. 16);
e.
ob­lig­a­tion to provide in­form­a­tion (Art. 17);
f.
re­port­ing ob­lig­a­tion (Art. 18);
g.
ob­lig­a­tion to sub­mit stat­ist­ic­al in­form­a­tion (Art. 19);
h.
ob­lig­a­tion to re­cord and re­tain pro­grammes (Art. 20) or to per­man­ently con­serve pro­grammes (Art. 21);
i.
ob­lig­a­tions of the SRG SSR (Art. 29);
j.
ob­lig­a­tions for broad­casters with a fee-shar­ing li­cence (Art. 41);
k.
ob­lig­a­tion to no­ti­fy trans­fer of the li­cence (Art. 48);
l.
ob­lig­a­tion to com­ply with the li­cence area des­ig­nated by the Fed­er­al Coun­cil when broad­cast­ing or ar­ran­ging the broad­cast­ing of pro­gramme ser­vices (Art. 52 para. 3);
m.
broad­cast­ing of pre­scribed pro­gramme ser­vices on pre­ferred chan­nels (Art. 62);
n.
ob­lig­a­tion to provide in­form­a­tion and to sub­mit doc­u­ment­a­tion (Art. 63 para. 3).

3 When as­sess­ing the pen­alty, the su­per­vis­ory au­thor­ity shall take par­tic­u­lar ac­count of the ser­i­ous­ness of the in­fringe­ment and the fin­an­cial cir­cum­stances of the pen­al­ised leg­al or nat­ur­al per­son.

98 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, with ef­fect from 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Chapter 2 Supervision by the Complaints Authority 99

99 Amended by No I of the Federal Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 July 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Section 1 Report Procedure of the Ombudsman Service

Art. 91 Ombudsman services  

1 The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity shall des­ig­nate an in­de­pend­ent om­buds­man ser­vice for each re­gion of the three of­fi­cial lan­guages; the om­buds­man ser­vice is at­tached to the Com­plaints Com­mis­sion for ad­min­is­trat­ive pur­poses.

2 The SRG SSR shall provide its own in­de­pend­ent om­buds­man ser­vices.

3 The om­buds­man ser­vice deals with re­ports about:

a.
ed­it­or­i­al pro­grammes that have been broad­cast, where the re­port relates to vi­ol­a­tions of Art­icles 4 and 5 of this Act or of in­ter­na­tion­al law bind­ing on Swiss broad­casters;
abis.100
pub­lished con­tri­bu­tions pro­duced by the ed­it­or­i­al staff as part of the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR where the re­port relates to an in­fringe­ment of Art­icle 5a;
b.101
re­fus­al to grant ac­cess to the pro­gramme ser­vices of Swiss broad­casters or to the part of the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR pro­duced by the ed­it­or­i­al staff.

4 The re­gion­al-lan­guage om­buds­man ser­vices are sub­ject to the su­per­vi­sion of the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity.

100 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

101 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 92 Reports 102  

1 Any per­son may sub­mit a re­port to the com­pet­ent om­buds­man ser­vice:

a.
about ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tions al­leging an in­fringe­ment of Art­icles 4, 5 and 5a of this Act;
b.
al­leging re­fus­al of ac­cess (Art. 91 para. 3 let. b).

2 Re­ports must be sub­mit­ted with­in 20 days of the ap­pear­ance of the pub­lic­a­tion or re­fus­al of a re­quest for ac­cess in terms of Art­icle 91 para­graph 3 let­ter b.

3 If the re­port relates to more than one pro­gramme or con­tri­bu­tion, the peri­od be­gins with the broad­cast­ing or ap­pear­ance of the last pub­lic­a­tion that is the sub­ject of the re­port. However, the first of the pub­lic­a­tions re­por­ted must not be more than three months be­fore the last.

4 A re­port may only con­cern two or more con­tri­bu­tions pro­duced by the ed­it­or­i­al staff as part of the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR if these con­tri­bu­tions are pub­lished in the same elec­tion or vote dossier.

5 The re­port must be sub­mit­ted in writ­ing and, if it relates to oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR, be ac­com­pan­ied by sup­port­ing doc­u­ments. A brief state­ment of grounds must be provided, ex­plain­ing in what way the ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tion is de­fi­cient in terms of con­tent or the re­fus­al to grant ac­cess to the pro­gramme ser­vice or to the part of the oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR pro­duced by the ed­it­or­i­al staff is un­law­ful.

102 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 93 Procedure  

1 The om­buds­man ser­vice ex­am­ines the case and me­di­ates between the parties con­cerned. It may in par­tic­u­lar:

a.
dis­cuss the mat­ter with the broad­caster or in minor cases hand it over to it for dir­ect set­tle­ment;
b.
ar­range a dir­ect en­counter between the parties con­cerned;
c.
is­sue re­com­mend­a­tions to the broad­caster;
d.
in­form those con­cerned about the re­spons­ib­il­it­ies, the ap­plic­able law and leg­al rem­ed­ies.

2 It has no power to make de­cisions or is­sue dir­ect­ives.

3 Forty days at the latest after sub­mis­sion of the re­port, the om­buds­man ser­vice shall in­form the parties in writ­ing of its find­ings and the man­ner in which the re­port is to be settled.

4 By mu­tu­al con­sent, the parties may be in­formed of the set­tle­ment or­ally.

5 The om­buds­man ser­vice bills the broad­caster after the re­port has been dealt with. In the event of a vex­a­tious re­port, at the re­quest of the om­buds­man ser­vice or the broad­caster the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity may award pro­ced­ur­al costs against the per­son sub­mit­ting the re­port.

Section 2 Complaints Procedure of the Complaints Authority 103

103 Amended by No I of the Federal Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 July 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 94 Right to submit a complaint  

1 Com­plaints against an ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tion that has ap­peared or against re­fus­al to grant ac­cess may be sub­mit­ted by any per­son who:104

a.
was in­volved in the re­port pro­ced­ure be­fore the om­buds­man ser­vice; and
b.105
demon­strates a close re­la­tion­ship with the sub­ject of the dis­puted ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tion or whose ap­plic­a­tion for ac­cess (Art. 91 para. 3 let. b) has been re­jec­ted.

2 Nat­ur­al per­sons who do not have a close re­la­tion­ship with the sub­ject of the dis­puted ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tion may also sub­mit a com­plaint if the com­plaint is signed by a min­im­um of 20 per­sons.106

3 Nat­ur­al per­sons who sub­mit a com­plaint in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 2 must be at least 18 years old and hold Swiss cit­izen­ship or hold a per­man­ent or tem­por­ary res­id­ence per­mit.107

4 Com­plaints may also be sub­mit­ted by DE­TEC, in which case the pro­vi­sions of para­graph 1 do not ap­ply.

104 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

105 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

106 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

107 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 95 Time limit and form of the complaint  

1 With­in 30 days of re­ceipt of the re­port in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 93 para­graph 3, a com­plaint may be sub­mit­ted in writ­ing with the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity. The om­buds­man ser­vice’s re­port must be at­tached.

2 DE­TEC sub­mits its com­plaint dir­ectly to the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity with­in 30 days of the trans­mis­sion of the pro­gramme con­cerned.

3 In the com­plaint, a brief state­ment of grounds must be provided ex­plain­ing:

a.
how the ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tion which is the sub­ject of the com­plaint has vi­ol­ated pro­vi­sions con­cern­ing con­tent in Art­icles 4, 5 and 5a of this Act or of in­ter­na­tion­al law bind­ing on Swiss broad­casters; or
b.
why the re­fus­al to grant ac­cess is un­law­ful.108

108 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 96 Consideration of the complaint and correspondence  

1 If there is a pub­lic in­terest in a de­cision, the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity shall also con­sider com­plaints which have been sub­mit­ted with­in the time lim­it but which do not meet all the form­al re­quire­ments. In this case the party lodging the com­plaint does not have party rights.

2 Un­less the com­plaint is clearly in­ad­miss­ible or without mer­it, the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity in­vites the broad­caster to com­ment.

3 The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity may re­fuse or sus­pend the con­sid­er­a­tion of a com­plaint if ju­di­cial rem­ed­ies in civil or crim­in­al law are pending or have not been used or if an ad­min­is­trat­ive pro­ced­ure is be­ing con­duc­ted in the same mat­ter.

Art. 97 Decision  

1 The de­lib­er­a­tions of the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity are pub­lic un­less private in­terests worthy of pro­tec­tion de­mand oth­er­wise.

2 The Com­plaints Au­thor­ity de­term­ines wheth­er:

a.
the con­tested ed­it­or­i­al pub­lic­a­tions have vi­ol­ated pro­vi­sions con­cern­ing con­tent laid down in Art­icles 4, 5 and 5a or rel­ev­ant in­ter­na­tion­al law; or
b.
an un­law­ful re­fus­al to grant ac­cess (Art. 91 para. 3 let. b) has oc­curred.109

3 If it es­tab­lishes that a vi­ol­a­tion has oc­curred, it may take or ap­ply for the meas­ures provided for in Art­icle 89.

4 In the event of re­peated ser­i­ous vi­ol­a­tions of the ob­lig­a­tions in Art­icle 4 para­graphs 1 and 3 and Art­icle 5 in the pro­gramme ser­vice or of the ob­lig­a­tions in re­la­tion to oth­er journ­al­ist­ic ser­vices from SRG SSR (Art. 5a), the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity may ap­ply to DE­TEC for a pro­gramme ban (Art. 89 para. 2).110

109 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

110 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 98 Costs  

1 Pro­ceed­ings of the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity are free of charge.

2 The com­plain­ant may be charged the pro­ced­ur­al costs for vex­a­tious com­plaints. APA111 ap­plies.

Chapter 3 Legal Remedies

Art.99112  

1 Leg­al rem­ed­ies are based on the gen­er­al pro­vi­sions on the ad­min­is­tra­tion of fed­er­al justice.

2 Rul­ings is­sued by the col­lec­tion agency may be con­tested by fil­ing an ap­peal with OF­COM.

3 Ap­peals against de­cisions of the Com­plaints Au­thor­ity may be filed dir­ectly with the Fed­er­al Su­preme Court.

112 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Title 8 Administrative Fees

Art. 100  

1 The com­pet­ent au­thor­ity charges ad­min­is­trat­ive fees, in par­tic­u­lar for:

a.
grant­ing, amend­ing, and re­vok­ing li­cences;
b.
su­per­vis­ory activ­ity;
c.
mak­ing de­cisions;
d.
deal­ing with en­quir­ies.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil de­term­ines the rates of fees. In so do­ing, it shall con­sider the ad­min­is­trat­ive ex­pense and may take ac­count of the lim­ited fin­an­cial re­sources of the nat­ur­al or leg­al per­son who is charged the fee.

3 The com­pet­ent au­thor­ity may re­quire the party ob­liged to pay the fees to provide ap­pro­pri­ate guar­an­tees.

Title 9 Criminal Provisions

Art. 101 Offences  

1 ...113

2 Any per­son who wil­fully vi­ol­ates a leg­ally en­force­able de­cision of the com­pet­ent su­per­vis­ory au­thor­ity or of the leg­al au­thor­it­ies is li­able to a fine not ex­ceed­ing CHF 100,000.

3 Any per­son who in­flu­ences a li­cens­ing pro­ced­ure or a pro­ced­ure to amend a li­cence in his or her fa­vour by provid­ing false in­form­a­tion is li­able to a fine not ex­ceed­ing CHF 100,000.

4 In minor cases a pen­alty may not be im­posed.

113 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, with ef­fect from 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 102 Jurisdiction and procedures  

1 OF­COM has jur­is­dic­tion to pro­sec­ute and ad­ju­dic­ate on of­fences. The Fed­er­al Act of 22 March 1974114 on Ad­min­is­trat­ive Crim­in­al Law ap­plies.

2 ...115

114 SR 313.0

115 Re­pealed by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, with ef­fect from 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Title 10 Final Provisions

Chapter 1 Implementation, Repeal and Amendment of existing Legislation

Art. 103 Implementation  

The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall im­ple­ment this Act un­less the du­ties here­un­der are as­signed to an­oth­er au­thor­ity. It shall en­act the im­ple­ment­ing pro­vi­sions. It may del­eg­ate the task of is­su­ing ad­min­is­trat­ive and tech­nic­al reg­u­la­tions to DE­TEC.

Art. 104 International agreements 116  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may con­clude agree­ments of re­stric­ted scope un­der in­ter­na­tion­al law which fall with­in the scope of this Act.

2 In the case of in­ter­na­tion­al agree­ments with tech­nic­al or ad­min­is­trat­ive con­tent, it may del­eg­ate this power to DE­TEC or OF­COM.117

116 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

117 Amended by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 105 Repeal and amendment of existing legislation  

The re­peal and amend­ment of ex­ist­ing le­gis­la­tion is reg­u­lated in the An­nex.

Art. 106 Coordination with the Amendment of 24 March 2006 of the Telecommunications Act of 30 April 1997 and with the Amendment of 24 March 2006 of the Federal Supreme Court Act of 17 June 2005 118  

1. Ir­re­spect­ive of wheth­er this Act (RTVA) or the amend­ment of 24 March 2006 to the Tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions Act of 30 April 1997119 comes in­to force first, Art­icle 56 para­graph 4 RTVA120 reads on the entry in­to force of the act which comes in­to force later or on sim­ul­tan­eous entry in­to force of both acts as fol­lows:

...

2. and 3.121

...

118 AS 2007921

119 SR 784.10

120 Text entered above.

121 The amend­ments may be con­sul­ted un­der AS 2007 737.

Chapter 2 Transitional Provisions

Art. 107 Radio and television licences  

1 Li­cences for ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices which have been awar­ded on the basis of the Fed­er­al Act of 21 June 1991122 on Ra­dio and Tele­vi­sion (RTVA 1991) con­tin­ue to be val­id sub­ject to para­graph 2 un­til their ex­piry un­less broad­casters ex­pressly de­clare that they do not wish to make use of them.

2 Fol­low­ing the com­mence­ment this Act, the Fed­er­al Coun­cil may can­cel the li­cences of SRG SSR, swiss­info/SRI, Tele­text AG and of those broad­casters which broad­cast their pro­gramme ser­vices in co­oper­a­tion with the SRG SSR in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 31 para­graph 3 RTVA 1991 at the end of any cal­en­dar year, sub­ject to nine months’ no­tice.

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may ex­tend the li­cences of SRG SSR and of swiss­info/SRI which have been gran­ted on the basis of the RTVA 1991 by a max­im­um of five years from the com­mence­ment of this Act.

4 DE­TEC may ex­tend oth­er li­cences awar­ded on the basis of the RTVA 1991 by a max­im­um of five years from the com­mence­ment of this Act. A right of can­cel­la­tion may be provided for in the ex­ten­ded li­cences.

5 If the li­cences of SRG SSR or of swiss­info/SRI con­tin­ue to ap­ply or if they are ex­ten­ded, Art­icles 22 and 25 para­graphs 5 and 6 ap­ply, mu­tatis mutandis.

6 The pro­vi­sions of Art­icle 22 and Art­icles 44-50 re­gard­ing oth­er li­cences with a per­form­ance man­date which con­tin­ue to be val­id or which have been ex­ten­ded ap­ply mu­tatis mutandis.

122 [AS 1992601; 19933354; 19972187An­nex No 4; 20001891No VIII 2; 20012790An­nex No 2;20021904Art. 36 No 2; 2004 297No I 3, 1633No I 9, 4929Art. 21 No 3; 2006 1039Art. 2]

Art. 108 Transmitter network plan  

The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may ex­tend the dir­ect­ives for trans­mit­ter net­work plan­ning in terms of Art­icle 8 para­graph 1 RTVA 1991123 by a max­im­um of five years from the com­mence­ment of this Act or amend them after con­sulta­tion with the Com­mu­nic­a­tions Com­mis­sion.

123 [AS 1992601; 19933354; 19972187An­nex No 4; 20001891No VIII 2; 20012790An­nex No 2;20021904Art. 36 No 2; 2004 297No I 3, 1633No I 9, 4929Art. 21 No 3; 2006 1039Art. 2]

Art. 109 Contributions from radio and television fees  

1 Broad­casters of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices which at the time of the com­mence­ment of this Act re­ceive a pro­por­tion of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fees in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 17 para­graph 2 RTVA 1991124 may con­tin­ue to claim a share of the fees un­til the ex­piry of their li­cence in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 107. The en­ti­tle­ment to a pro­por­tion of the fees and the cal­cu­la­tion of the pro­por­tion are based on Art­icle 17 para­graph 2 of the RTVA 1991 and on Art­icle 10 of the Or­din­ance of 6 Oc­to­ber 1997125 on Ra­dio and Tele­vi­sion.

2 With­in the frame­work of the con­di­tions in para­graph 1, OF­COM may ar­range a share of fees for broad­casters which have a li­cence in ac­cord­ance with RTVA 1991 and which have com­menced trans­mis­sion op­er­a­tions after the com­mence­ment of this Act.

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil takes the fin­an­cial re­quire­ment in­to ac­count when set­ting the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee (Art. 70).

4 The trans­ition­al ar­range­ments in para­graph 1 end at the time when the fee-shar­ing li­cences in ac­cord­ance with Art­icles 38–42 are awar­ded, but at the latest five years after the com­mence­ment of this Act.

124 [AS 1992601; 19933354; 19972187An­nex No 4; 20001891No VIII 2; 20012790An­nex No 2;20021904Art. 36 No 2; 2004 297No I 3, 1633No I 9, 4929Art. 21 No 3; 2006 1039Art. 2]

125 [AS 19972903; 2004 4531; 2006 4395]

Art. 109a Surpluses from the share of fees 126  

1 Sur­pluses from the share of fees for broad­casters of loc­al or re­gion­al pro­gramme ser­vices (Art. 38) that ex­ist when this pro­vi­sion comes in­to force shall be used for the be­ne­fit of fee-shar­ing broad­casters as fol­lows:

a.
one quarter for the ba­sic and con­tinu­ing edu­ca­tion and train­ing of their em­ploy­ees;
b.
three quar­ters for pro­mot­ing new broad­cast­ing tech­no­lo­gies in terms of Art­icle 58 and di­git­al tele­vi­sion pro­duc­tion tech­niques.

2 Up to 10 per cent of the sur­pluses may be used to provide gen­er­al in­form­a­tion to the pub­lic in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 58 para­graph 2.

3 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the ex­tent of the amount to be used to fund the tasks in ac­cord­ance with para­graphs 1 and 2. In do­ing so, it shall take ac­count of the por­tion to be re­tained as the li­quid­ity re­serve.

4 OF­COM shall grant in­di­vidu­al con­tri­bu­tions in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 1 on ap­plic­a­tion. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall reg­u­late the con­di­tions and cal­cu­la­tion cri­ter­ia by which OF­COM pays the con­tri­bu­tions.

126 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 109b Introduction of the radio and television fee 127  

1 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the date from which the new ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee will be charged.

2 Un­til that date, the re­cep­tion fee for private and com­mer­cial re­cep­tion will be charged in ac­cord­ance with the pre­vi­ous law (Art. 68–70 and Art. 101 para. 1 of the Fed­er­al Act of 24 March 2006128 on Ra­dio and Tele­vi­sion).

3 The use of the rev­en­ue from the re­cep­tion fee is gov­erned by the pro­vi­sions of the new law on the ra­dio and tele­vi­sion fee.

4 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall reg­u­late the trans­ition to the new fee sys­tem. It may in par­tic­u­lar provide that funds avail­able from the re­cep­tion fee are trans­ferred to the new sys­tem, and de­cide which au­thor­it­ies con­tin­ue on­go­ing first in­stance pro­ceed­ings.

5 It may de­cide on an as­sess­ment peri­od for the first peri­od of the cor­por­ate fee that dif­fers from that in Art­icle 70 para­graph 1.

127 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

128 AS 2007 737

Art. 109c Private households with no means of reception 129  

1 Mem­bers of a private house­hold in which no device suit­able for re­ceiv­ing ra­dio or tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices is avail­able or in op­er­a­tion shall be ex­emp­ted from the pay­ing the free for one fee peri­od.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall reg­u­late which cat­egor­ies of device are deemed suit­able for re­ceiv­ing pro­gramme ser­vices.

3 OF­COM may enter the rooms or premises of a house­hold ex­emp­ted un­der para­graph 1 in or­der to veri­fy wheth­er the re­quire­ments for the ex­emp­tion are be­ing met.

4 Any per­son ex­emp­ted from the fee in terms of para­graph 1 who ob­tains or be­gins to op­er­ate a device suit­able for re­ceiv­ing pro­gramme ser­vices in the house­hold be­fore ex­piry of the fee peri­od must no­ti­fy the col­lec­tion agency of this in ad­vance.

5 Any per­son who be­longs to a house­hold ex­emp­ted from the fee in terms of para­graph 1 in which a device suit­able for re­ceiv­ing pro­gramme ser­vices in the house­hold is avail­able or in op­er­a­tion without no­tice there­of be­ing giv­en to the col­lec­tion agency in ad­vance in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 4 shall be li­able to a fine not ex­ceed­ing 5000 francs.

6 The col­lec­tion agency shall provide OF­COM with on­line ac­cess to the per­son­al data re­quired for pro­sec­ut­ing per­sons in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 5. The Fed­er­al Coun­cil may is­sue pro­vi­sions on the ex­tent of this data, ac­cess to the data, au­thor­isa­tion for pro­cessing, re­ten­tion and data se­cur­ity.

7 Ex­emp­tions from the fee ex­pire five years from the date from which the fee is charged in ac­cord­ance Art­icle 109bpara­graph 1.

129 In­ser­ted by No I of the Fed­er­al Act of 26 Sept. 2014, in force since 1 Ju­ly 2016 (AS 2016 2131; BBl 2013 4975).

Art. 110 Licences for retransmission by wire  

1 Ex­ist­ing li­cences for the re­trans­mis­sion by wire of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 39 RTVA 1991130 (wire li­cences) re­tain their valid­ity un­til their own­er ob­tains a tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vices li­cence in ac­cord­ance with Art­icles 4 ff. TCA131, but at the latest up to two years after the com­mence­ment of this Act.

2 Wire li­cences con­tin­ue to be sub­ject to:

a.
Art­icle 42 para­graphs 2–4 RTVA 1991;
b.
Art­icle 47 para­graph 1 RTVA 1991 con­cern­ing the trans­mis­sion of pro­gramme ser­vices of oth­er broad­casters whose li­cence has been ex­ten­ded in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 107 of this Act.

3 The ob­lig­a­tions of a wire li­censee in ac­cord­ance with para­graph 2 end as soon as trans­mis­sion by wire of the pro­gramme ser­vices covered therein (in ac­cord­ance with Art­icles 59 and 60) in their area of op­er­a­tion is cla­ri­fied with leg­al force, but at the latest after five years.

130 [AS 1992601; 19933354; 19972187An­nex No 4; 20001891No VIII 2; 20012790An­nex No 2;20021904Art. 36 No 2; 2004 297No I 3, 1633No I 9, 4929Art. 21 No 3, 2006 1039Art. 2]

131 SR 784.10

Art. 111 Relay licences  

Ex­ist­ing li­cences for the wire­less re­trans­mis­sion of ra­dio and tele­vi­sion pro­gramme ser­vices in ac­cord­ance with Art­icle 43 RTVA 1991132 (re­lay li­cences) re­tain their valid­ity un­til their own­er ob­tains a ra­dio and tele­com­mu­nic­a­tions ser­vices li­cence in ac­cord­ance with Art­icles 4 ff. or Art­icles 22 ff. TCA133 re­spect­ively, but at the latest two years after the com­mence­ment of the act.

132 [AS 1992601; 19933354; 19972187An­nex No 4; 20001891No VIII 2; 20012790An­nex No 2;20021904Art. 36 No 2; 2004 297No I 3, 1633No I 9, 4929Art. 21 No 3; 2006 1039Art. 2]

133 SR 784.10

Art. 112 Organisational structure of the SRG SSR  

The SRG SSR shall im­ple­ment the or­gan­isa­tion­al struc­ture (Art. 31–33) at the time of re­new­al of its li­cence.

Art. 113 Pending supervisory procedures  

1 Pro­ced­ures in ac­cord­ance with Art­icles 56 ff. and 70 ff. of the RTVA 1991134 pending at the time of com­mence­ment of this Act shall be as­sessed by the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity in ac­cord­ance with the new act. The new pro­ced­ur­al law shall be ap­plied.

2If a case re­lat­ing to su­per­vis­ory law has aris­en be­fore the com­mence­ment of this Act and if a pro­ced­ure is pending, RTVA 1991 is ap­plic­able. If a case con­tin­ues after the com­mence­ment of this Act and if a pro­ced­ure is pending, the vi­ol­a­tions which oc­curred be­fore the com­mence­ment of this Act shall be as­sessed on the basis of RTVA 1991. Ap­plic­a­tion of Art­icle 2 para­graph 2 of the Crim­in­al Code135 is re­served.

134 [AS 1992601; 19933354; 19972187An­nex No 4; 20001891No VIII 2; 20012790An­nex No 2;20021904Art. 36 No 2; 2004 297No I 3, 1633No I 9, 4929Art. 21 No 3; 2006 1039Art. 2]

135 SR 311.0

Art. 114 Referendum and commencement  

1 This Act is sub­ject to an op­tion­al ref­er­en­dum.

2 The Fed­er­al Coun­cil shall de­term­ine the com­mence­ment date.

Com­mence­ment date: 1 April 2007136

136 BRB of 9 March 2007.

Annex

(Art. 105)

Repeal and Amendment of Existing Legislation

I

The Federal Act of 21 June 1991137 on Radio and Television (RTVA) is repealed.

II

The following federal acts are amended as follows:

...138

137 [AS 1992601; 19933354; 19972187Annex No 4; 20001891No VIII 2; 20012790Annex No 2;20021904Art. 36 No 2; 2004 297No I 3, 1633No I 9, 4929Art. 21 No 3; 2006 1039Art. 2]

138 The amendments may be consulted under AS 2007 737.

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