B&C Mobile
Register   |  Login Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to B&C Magazine
Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

House Committee Cuts CPB Funding

By John Eggerton -- Broadcasting & Cable, 6/7/2006 12:46:00 PM

Suggesting the cuts could threaten the news, local programming or even the survival of 200 TV and radio stations, public broadcasters fired back at the House Appropriations Committee Wednesday, which voted to cut $115 million from the federal appropriation for noncommercial broadcasting, a 23% cut in the 2007 appropriation.

The appropriation is administered by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Included in the cuts is funding for the DTV transition, all the money for the Ready To Learn program, whose funding of Postcards From Buster caught flack last year in a highly public funding fight, as well as the Ready to Teach complementary effort targeted at teachers.

CPB President Patricia Harrison was politic in her comments, but clearly not happy: "While we appreciate the difficult choices confronting the Appropriations Committee," she said in response to the cuts. "We are disappointed with the funding levels contained in the current House Labor-HHS bill. A twenty-plus percent cut, amounting to 104.5 million dollars, will impact all CPB programs, and undermine public broadcasting’s ability to continue to offer essential educational services and provide a backbone for a national emergency alert system.”

Putting a sharper point on his criticism was John Lawson, president of the Association of Public Television Stations: "These cuts are also targeted to inflict maximum damage," he said. "The action by the House Subcommittee today shows a blatant disregard for the millions of Americans who voiced their support of public broadcasting to Congress last year.  The Subcommittee is also ignoring 67 percent of its colleagues in the House who voted last year to reject similarly disastrous funding cuts.  I guess we’ll have to start ringing phones on the Hill again."

The same committee last year proposed cutting $223 million form CPB, including for Ready to Learn and digital transition, but the Senate restored those cuts after protests led by Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) and Senator Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.), among others.
 
“This markup represents significant cuts to public broadcasting that will drastically reduce the programming and services public television and public radio can provide to local communities," said new PBS President Paula Kerger.

"“The impact of today’s decision could resonate in every community in America," added NPR President Kevin Klose.

Anti-media consolidation activist group Free Press saw the cuts as a threat to diversity of news outlets.

"Americans across the political spectrum aren't willing to abandon public broadcasting, or to allow it to turn it into a purely commercial enterprise," said Executive Director Josh Silver. "Congress must restore full funding to public broadcasting or risk losing a source of news and information that Americans say, in poll after poll, is the most trusted in America."

Email
Print
Reprint
Learn RSS

Talkback

We would love your feedback!

Post a comment

» VIEW ALL TALKBACK THREADS

Related Content

Related Content

 

By This Author

PRODUCT WIRE




 
Advertisement

More Content

  • Blogs
  • Podcasts
  • Photos

Blogs

  • John Eggerton
    BC/DC: Eggerton on Washington

    December 29, 2008
    Holiday Wishes from the FCC
    For the last holiday they will all be together on the commission--FCC Commissioner Deborah Taylor Ta...
    More
  • Melissa Grego
    Mel's Diner

    December 17, 2008
    Chuck Lorre's Comedy Ingredients: Corporate Chicken, Deep-Fried Running Shoes and A Dash of Bitterness
    WHO: Chuck Lorre, creator/executive producer/writer, Two and a Half Men and The Big Bang The...
    More
  • » VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS

Podcasts

Photos

  • OnScreen Media Summit 2008
    Images from the first annual Broadcasting & Cable/Multichannel News OnScreen Media Summit, December 2, 2008, at the Edison Ballroom in New York City. Photos by Jason Cruz.
  • Election Night at Fox News
    B&C's Marisa Guthrie goes behind the scenes at Fox News Channel on Election Night 2008 -- Photos by Leslie Jean-Bart
  • B&C Hall of Fame 2008
    Photos from the 2008 Broadcasting and Cable Hall of Fame at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York.
Advertisements





B&C Newsletters

Click on a title below to learn more.

Broadcasting & Cable Today
B&C HD Update
B&C Cable Technology
B&C Local Cable Advertising Sales
B&C Hispanic Television Update
B&C TechTalk
B&C NewsCentral
©2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites