Congress allots $25 million ‘stabilization’ aid to stations

Published in Current, Dec. 14, 2009

CPB will get $25 million for “fiscal stabilization” grants to aid public TV and radio stations this year, a House-Senate conference committee decided last week. The number was a compromise between the House’s $40 million figure and the Senate’s $10 million.

With the Senate acting Saturday, Congress has now sent to the White House a package of six funding bills for the fiscal year that began Nov. 1.

“Given the unprecedented negative budget climate, with concern about deficits growing each day, APTS is especially thankful to Congress for recognizing the enormous fiscal pressures on public broadcasting stations during these tough economic times,” said APTS President Larry Sidman.

The stabilization funding falls far short of CPB’s request for emergency station assistance — $307 million, including $211 million for public TV and $96 million for pubradio.

Stations will benefit, however, from slow but steady increases in CPB appropriations over the next three years, compared to amounts hovering around $400 million for four years:

In sum, over three years, CPB will have an 11 percent increase in the basic appropriation.

Along with the advance appropriation for CPB, the conference committee had earlier approved other budget lines for fiscal year 2010:

“APTS is particularly grateful to Chairmen David Obey, Daniel Inouye and Tom Harkin, and Ranking Member Thad Cochran for their extraordinary leadership in supporting much-needed and necessary funding," Sidman said in a news release.

Sidman also credited Reps. Ben Chandler (D-Ky.), Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), Nita Lowey (D-N.Y.), Betty McCollum (D-Mn.), Jesse L. Jackson, Jr. (D-Ill) and Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Calif.) for their support of public broadcasting’s fiscal stabilization request.

Web page posted Dec. 16, 2009
Copyright 2009 by Current LLC

EARLIER ARTICLES

APTS estimated early in '09 that public TV revenue already was down $189 million since early '08. A consultant to CPB projected TV/radio funds would drop $418 million in fiscal 2009. CPB's figures for '09, based on detailed station reports, are not available yet.

APTS sought $211 million supplemental appropriation as economic disaster relief.

The stations' loss may be turning out to be that big. CPB estimated that system revenues were down $167 million between fiscal 2007 and 2008.

LINKS

System's request to Congress for FY10, including advance appropriation for FY12.

CPB statement after conference committee meeting, Dec. 9.

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