Hit by Recession, NPR to Lay Off Seven Percent of Staff
By Paul Farhi
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, December 10, 2008; 2:44 PM
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Washington-based NPR said it would lay off about 7 percent of workforce and eliminate two daily programs produced out of its facilities in Culver City, Cal. The shows include "Day to Day," which was aimed at younger listeners, and the newsmaker-interview program "News & Notes," which NPR hoped would attract African Americans.
The layoffs of 64 of NPR's 889 employees is designed to close a $23 million shortfall in NPR's current fiscal year, said Dennis Haarsager, NPR's interim president and chief executive in an interview. The cutback will affect all departments, including reporters, producers, researchers and digital media employees.
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Underwriting -- the public broadcasting equivalent of advertising -- accounted for about a third of NPR's annual budget, and is the most seriously impaired. In particular, the decline of support from companies in the entertainment, automotive and financial fields prompted NPR to cut its projected underwriting revenue from $47 million to $33 million this year, according to Dana Davis Rehm, NPR's senior vice president of strategy and partnerships.
At the same time, some of the stations that carry NPR's programming are themselves in trouble, threatening NPR's fees from its member stations. For example, WBEZ-FM, a Chicago station that hosts production of the weekly program "This American Life," on Friday announced a round of layoffs amid expectations of a drop in revenue from pledge drives and other sources.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/10/AR2008121002064.html?wprss=rss_nationI'm hopeful that under a democratic administration they can free themselves somewhat from the creeping politicization and corporatism that has affected them in recent years.