Public Broadcasting Gets a Budgetary Lift
By STEPHEN LABATON
Published: July 12, 2005
WASHINGTON, July 11 - A senior Republican and a senior Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Committee endorsed overturning proposed cuts to the budget of public broadcasting on Monday, while the chairman of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting defended himself against accusations by Democrats that he has injected politics into programming.
"I have brought the issue of political balance - common-sense political balance - to the debate," said Kenneth Y. Tomlinson, the corporation's chairman, in his first appearance before Congress since recent disclosures that he was under investigation by the corporation's inspector general for a series of decisions and payments to consultants that he has said were necessary to ensure balance in programming.
Others have criticized Mr. Tomlinson's decisions as interference with programming, and three weeks ago, 16 Democrats in the Senate called on President Bush to remove him.
The decisions under review include the hiring of a former official of a conservative journalism training organization to monitor several programs, notably "Now" with Bill Moyers; payments of $15,000 to two Republican lobbyists last year to help defeat a proposal to have more broadcasters on the corporation's board; and the use of a White House official to help create a new office of ombudsman at the corporation to monitor balance in programs.
Appearing before a Senate appropriations subcommittee, Mr. Tomlinson defended his decision to order the corporation to pay more than $14,000 to retain Fred Mann, a former official at the National Journalism Center, which was founded by the American Conservative Union, to monitor the Moyers program, along with programs featuring David Brancaccio (Mr. Moyers's successor on "Now"), Diane Rehm, Tavis Smiley and Tucker Carlson....
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/12/arts/music/12broa.html