Public broadcasting faces closure after budget slash
Summary
- Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) to shut down
operations. - Shutdown follows loss of $1.1 billion federal funding
by Congress. - Most CPB staff will be laid off by September 30, 2025.
- The small transition team remains until January 2026
for wind-down. - CPB funded over 1,500 local public TV and radio
stations for nearly 60 years.
Last month, the Republican-controlled U.S. House
of Representatives approved a $9 billion cut to foreign aid and public media
financing.
During the next two years, $1.1 billion
designated for the CPB, which disburses funds to news organizations National
Public Radio and Public Broadcasting Service, was eliminated.
“Despite the extraordinary efforts of
millions of Americans who called, wrote, and petitioned Congress to preserve
federal funding for CPB, we now face the difficult reality of closing our
operations,”
CPB President and CEO Patricia Harrison said.
With the exception of a small transition team
that will stay until January 2026 to complete closeout of operations, CPB
notified its employees that the majority of its workforce will be let go by the
end of September.
Established by the U.S. Congress in 1967, the
CPB provided more than 1,500 locally controlled public radio and television
stations, PBS, and NPR with more than $500 million a year.
Many Republicans, like U.S. President Donald
Trump, contend that funding public broadcasting is an unnecessary investment
and that its news coverage is biased against the right.
In addition, the Trump administration has sued
three CPB board members who have remained on their positions in spite of
Trump’s attempt to terminate them.
What will happen to the local TV and radio
stations relying on CPB grants?
Local TV and radio stations that rely on grants
from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) face severe consequences due
to the shutdown of CPB operations following the loss of federal funding.
Many of these stations, especially those in
rural areas and tribal communities, depend heavily on CPB grants for a
significant portion—sometimes as much as 80%—of their annual budgets. Without
CPB support, these stations may be forced to reduce services, merge with
others, or shut down entirely, with closures likely beginning by next summer.
These stations are vital for local news,
educational programming, emergency alerts, and cultural content. The loss of
funding could therefore degrade local media access significantly, especially in
underserved areas with limited internet or alternative media.