Nice Above Fold - Page 904
- A coalition of citizen groups including Common Cause and Free Press has urged CPB Chairman Ken Tomlinson to postpone the board’s vote on a new CPB president, now planned for Monday or Tuesday. The groups’ letter yesterday suggests that Tomlinson’s supposed candidate for the job, State Department official Patricia Harrison, got “inappropriately favorable consideration” because she and Tomlinson have worked together on U.S. propaganda efforts overseas.
- The House Appropriations Committee approved a bill last night that cuts pubcasting’s total 2006 funding by more than 40 percent. It would reduce CPB funding from $400 million to $300 million, eliminate the $23 million Ready to Learn program and deny requests for $39 million in digital transition funding and $50 million to replace the aging pubTV satellite system. But the committee approved a Democratic amendment that restores the traditional congressional practice of funding CPB two years in advance, earmarking $400 million for 2008. Rep. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) told Reuters he will try to add funding for pubcasting when the bill comes to the House floor.
- Stepping in where the Ready to Learn program may be cutting back, CPB has allotted up to $3 million for grants to stations that work with childhood literacy, the corporation announced at pubTV’s National Center for Outreach Conference. Eighty to 100 stations will get “Ready to Lead in Literacy” grants of up to $35,000, said Ken Ferree, acting president. [Text of his remarks.]
- Columnist Tom Teepen makes the case for supporting public broadcasting: “Public TV and radio are the anti-crudity media, refuges from the wasteland, a demonstration that mass media don’t have to probe constantly for the lowest common denominator, and a standing rebuke to the commercial media for defaulting on their putative public trust.”
- Rhode Island’s attorney general will continue investigating Boston University’s management of its Rhode Island stations, reports the Boston Globe, despite the university’s decision not to sell the stations. ”The motivation behind the decision to sell WRNI was shrouded in secrecy, and the motivation behind the decision not to sell doesn’t seem that much clearer,” said Patrick Lynch.
- The New York Times profiles WNYC’s Radio Rookies program as a new batch of the teen-reported pieces starts airing on the New York station. “The idea was to teach teens a way to introduce themselves to the public, in a way people can listen to and not just turn off because they’re wearing the wrong clothes or talking the wrong way,” says Rookies founder Marianne McCune.
- PBS’s revised editorial policy, which the PBS Board formally adopted today, includes a new definition of journalistic objectivity that emphasizes transparency over neutrality. Prior to the board’s vote on the editorial policy, PBS President Pat Mitchell announced that she plans to hire an ombudsman, an expansion of PBS’s editorial oversight that network’s Editorial Standards Review Committee recommended in its report.
- New York Times writer Frank Rich referenced the CPB controversy in last Sunday’s column, which drew parallels between the Watergate era and perceived chicanery within the Bush administration. “Though Nixon aspired to punish public broadcasting by cutting its funding, he never imagined that his apparatchiks could seize the top executive positions at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.”
- A House appropriation subcommittee has voted to cut $100 mil from CPB funding, deny $89 mil in DTV and satellite requests from public TV and kill the $23 mil Ready to Learn program, the New York Times reports. G.O.P. leaders say dozens of other spending programs suffered the same fate. APTS President John Lawson asserts that it’s “payback” for the Postcards from Buster conflict. On the APTS website, Lawson called the vote “nothing less than a direct attack on public television and radio.” APTS has begun a campaign to persuade legislators called No Member Left Behind.
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