The BBC's governors are set to be replaced after 78 years with two new bodies, the government has proposed.
The governors, whose dual role as regulator and cheerleader of the BBC has been criticised, would be replaced by a BBC Trust and an executive board.
The proposals were announced by Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell with the publication of a Green Paper into the corporation's future.
The licence fee would be kept for at least another 10 years, she said.
The main plans in the Green Paper are:
The governors' current role was "unsustainable" and lacked "clarity and accountability", Ms Jowell told the House of Commons.
Instead, the BBC Trust would be the voice of the licence fee payer, make sure the corporation fulfilled its obligations and have powers to approve or veto budgets and strategies.
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Explaining why she favoured keeping the licence fee, Ms Jowell said it retained "a high degree of public support".
"And although not perfect, we believe it remains the fairest way to fund the BBC," she said.
But rapid changes to technology and viewing habits meant the government would review the system of funding during the next decade.
It would also examine whether public money, including licence fee funds, should be given to other broadcasters for public service activities.
HOW LICENCE FEE IS SPENT
The public will be consulted on the Green Paper, with firmer recommendations set out in a White Paper due to be published in late 2005.
The resulting changes will be brought in with the BBC's next royal charter, setting out the corporation's role, functions and structure, at the start of 2007.
BBC chairman Michael Grade, who will chair the new trust, welcomed the proposals but said it was "regrettable" the BBC's own reforms of the governors had "not had time to prove themselves".
'Cosmetic changes'
"For the first time in the BBC's history, there is now a clear distinction and appropriate separation between governance and management," he said.
"I think the TV licence is a thing of the past"
Shadow culture secretary John Whittingdale told the House of Commons the Green Paper's plans did "not go far enough".
He said they were "largely cosmetic changes to the structure and oversight of the BBC".
A White Paper on the BBC's future will be published later this year.
The BBC's first royal charter came into force in 1927 and is renewed every 10 years. The current charter expires on 31 December 2006.
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