[Dialogue] GOP Takes Aim at PBS Funding
Harry Wainwright
h-wainwright at charter.net
Sat Jun 10 13:03:32 EDT 2006
Published on Thursday, June 8, 2006 by the Los Angeles
<http://www.latimes.com> Times
GOP Takes Aim at PBS Funding
House panel backs budget reductions
by Rick Klein
WASHINGTON - House Republicans yesterday revived their efforts to slash
funding for public broadcasting, as a key committee approved a $115 million
reduction in the budget for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting that
could force the elimination of some popular PBS and NPR programs.
On a party-line vote, the House Appropriations subcommittee that oversees
health and education funding approved the cut to the budget for the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which distributes money to the Public
Broadcasting Service and National Public Radio. It would reduce the
corporation's budget by 23 percent next year, to $380 million, in a cut that
Republicans said was necessary to rein in government spending.
The reduction, which would come in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, must be
approved by the full Appropriations Committee, and then the full House and
Senate, before it could take effect. Democrats and public broadcasting
advocates began planning efforts to reverse the cut.
A similar move last year by Republican leaders was turned back in a fierce
lobbying campaign launched by Public Broadcasting Service stations and
Democratic members of Congress, in a debate that was colored by some
Republicans' frustration with what they see as a liberal slant in public
programming.
Still, Republicans say they remain adamant that public broadcasting cannot
receive funding at the expense of healthcare and education programs.
Republicans are looking for ways to save taxpayers' dollars, amid fiscal
conservatives' concerns over the budget deficit.
``We've got to keep our priorities straight," said Representative Ralph
Regula , an Ohio Republican who is chairman of the appropriations panel that
approved the cut. `` You're going to choose between giving a little more
money to handicapped children versus providing appropriations for public
broadcasting."
Democrats accused Republicans of trying to gut a bastion of
children-oriented television to pay for tax cuts for the wealthy that have
been backed by the Bush White House.
``Dick Cheney and the Republicans have decided to go hunting for `Big Bird'
and `Clifford the Big Red Dog' once again," said Representative Edward J.
Markey , a Malden Democrat who led the successful effort to reverse the cuts
last year. ``PBS is right at the top of their hit list -- always has been
and always will be, until they can destroy it."
Most of the savings would come by eliminating subsidies for educational
programs and grants for a number of technological upgrades.
Jan McNamara , a PBS spokeswoman, said the digital upgrade would have to be
funded with money that is now being used for other programs, forcing almost
all areas of public broadcasting to feel a pinch.
Paula Kerger , PBS's president and chief executive, said in a statement that
the cuts would force the network to ``drastically reduce the programming and
services public television and public radio can provide to local
communities."
The literacy television program ``Ready to Learn" would be eliminated, she
said, as would the online teachers' resource ``Ready to Teach."
The cuts could force smaller public-radio stations in rural areas -- which
rely almost exclusively on federal money for operations -- to close
altogether, said Kevin Klose , NPR's president. ``The impact of today's
decision could resonate in every community in America," Klose said.
John Lawson , president of the Association of Public Television Stations,
said Republican leaders are contradicting their own goal statements by
seeking to cut funding for public broadcasting on the day the House voted to
increase fines for indecent television content. ``These cuts are targeted to
inflict maximum damage," Lawson said. ``I guess we'll have to start ringing
phones on [Capitol] Hill again."
The cuts are included in a $142 billion spending bill covering domestic
social programs in health, education, and labor. Even with the cuts to
public broadcasting, the bill would spend $1 billion more in total than is
being spent this year on those programs, and $4 billion more than President
Bush had requested for those areas of spending. Student loans and research
grants to local hospitals are among the areas that would see funding boosts.
The same appropriations subcommittee called last year for an even more
drastic cut of $223 million from public broadcasting programs. At the time,
Republicans attacked the PBS for programming they said represented
out-of-the-mainstream viewpoints, highlighting in particular a ``Postcards
>From Buster" episode that featured lesbian couples and their children in
Vermont.
But, in a defeat for House leaders, 87 Republicans joined unanimous
Democrats in bucking an attempt to cut funding from the stations.
Markey expressed confidence that supporters of public broadcasting would
have more than enough votes to stop a cut again this year. Their arguments
will carry particular force in an election year in which moderate
Republicans fear being portrayed as callous to the demands of their
constituents, he said.
Regula also seemed resigned to seeing that sequence of events repeat itself,
though he maintained that he was right ``on principle."
``They've got a bigger megaphone than I do," he said. ``They'll trot out
Elmo and Mickey Mouse and Lord knows who else, and I'll be out there kind of
by myself."
Copyright 2006 Boston Globe
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