Coming PBS, NPR cuts already hurting many stations

Coming PBS, NPR cuts already hurting many stations

The headquarters for National Public Radio in Washington, D.C., in May. Early Friday morning the House of Representatives passed President Donald Trump’s bill to cut PBS and NPR funding. File photo by Bonnie Cash/UPI | License Photo

July 18 (UPI) — A bill rescinding $1.1 billion in funds to public broadcasting is awaiting President Donald Trump‘s signature, and many critics, including some Republicans, say it will devastate some rural areas and even put the country in danger.

The claw-back bill will cut $9 billion in total, including major reductions to foreign aid. It passed the House early Friday morning.

The public stations already have received funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to get them through September. Once that money runs out, more than 100 PBS and NPR stations are at risk of closing. The cuts will hit especially hard in rural areas.

For example, a magnitude 7.3 earthquake hit off the coast of Alaska on Wednesday. Public media helped broadcast a tsunami alert, said Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska.

“Their response to today’s earthquake is a perfect example of the incredible public service these stations provide,” Murkowski said Wednesday on X. “They deliver local news, weather updates, and, yes, emergency alerts that save human lives.”

Murkowski was one of two Republican senators who voted against the bill.

The effects of the cutting off of funding could be even wider-reaching than expected, obsersers said.

“Failing stations will create a cascade effect in this highly connected and interdependent system, impacting content producers and leading to the potential collapse of additional distressed stations in other areas of the country,” Tim Isgitt, CEO of advisory firm Public Media Company, told The New York Times.

An analysis by non-profit Public Media Company identified 78 public radio organizations and 37 TV organizations that will likely close. They rely on funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting for about 30% of their budgets.

“I think unfortunately this is cutting off their constituents’ noses to spite NPR’s face,” NPR CEO Katherine Maher said Wednesday on CNN. “It doesn’t help anyone to take this funding away.”

PBS President and CEO Paula Kerger said in a statement that the cuts “will be especially devastating to smaller stations and those serving large rural areas.”

“Many of our stations, which provide access to free unique local programming and emergency alerts, will now be forced to make hard decisions in the weeks and months ahead,” she said.

Reporting on local issues will see cuts, too.

Michigan’s WKAR Public Media general manager Shawn Turner said he has already had to lay off nine staffers because of the impending cuts, noting that about 16% of WKAR’s budget comes from federal funding.

The cuts will prevent the newsroom from doing investigations into issues like the impact of tariffs on Michigan’s manufacturing industry, he said.

“We’ve been able to ask [reporters] to begin to do a deep dive in really understanding how that’s going to impact the community so that we have that reporting ready to go,” Turner said. “Our ability to do that going forward is going to be limited.”

Native American areas will also suffer from the cuts.

They pose “an immediate threat to the survival of small, rural, and Tribal stations across the country,” said Loris Taylor, head of Native Public Media.

“These hyperlocal stations, many of which are the only source of local news, emergency alerts, educational programming, and cultural preservation, operate with limited resources and rely on [the Corporation for Public Broadcasting] funding to stay on the air.”

Taylor heads a network of 57 Native radio stations. She had privately implored Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., to reject the package, The New York Times reported Wednesday.

“Without this federal support, Native and rural communities stand to lose critical lifelines that connect them to the rest of the nation,” she said.

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