Big Bird Debate: How Much Does Federal Funding Matter to Public Broadcasting?

Suevon Lee
Pro Publica / News Analysis
Published: Friday 12 October 2012
“Given the recent flurry of attention, we thought it would be helpful to examine how much federal funding actually affects public broadcasting.”
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Are Big Bird’s 15 minutes up yet? Last week, Mitt Romney pulled public broadcasting into the presidential campaign when he said he would “stop the subsidy” to PBS, despite his love for the furry yellow Muppet.

The remark launched endless Internet memes, fueled late night television jokes and spawned a satirical Obama campaign ad (which the Sesame Workshop, a private, non-partisan charitable organization, has requested the campaign pull). Given the recent flurry of attention, we thought it would be helpful to examine how much federal funding actually affects public broadcasting.

How large is the federal subsidy to public broadcasting?

It’s not exactly breaking the bank. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, the entity created by Congress in 1967 to disperse funds to nonprofit broadcast outlets like PBS and NPR, is set to receive $445 million over the next two years. Per a statutory formula, public television gets about 75 percent of this appropriation while public radio receives 25 percent.

This amounts to roughly .012 percent of the $3.8 trillion federal budget – or about $1.35 per person per year. (Some global perspective: elsewhere in the world, Canada spends $22.48 per citizen, Japan $58.86 per citizen, the United Kingdom $80.36 per citizen, and Denmark, $101 per citizen.)

This sounds like a drop in the bucket. Why would Romney focus on such a small figure?

Because Romney’s approach is to target every government program he thinks is “not essential.” The candidate’s current spending plan not only calls for eliminating Obamacare and privatizing Amtrak, but deep reductions in subsidies to CPB and cultural agencies such as the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities – expenditures he says are “things the American people can’t afford.”

Public broadcasting also happens to be a popular target among conservatives, who’ve long portrayed it as an example of wasteful government spending (in the mid-90s, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich proposed pulling federal funding from the CPB altogether).

Romney’s no exception on the campaign trail. As ABC News’ The Note reports, last week’s debate wasn’t the first time Romney has suggested Sesame Street seek outside advertisers to earn its keep. At a campaign stop last December, Romney told voters, “we’re not going to kill Big Bird, but Big Bird’s going to have to have advertisements, all right?”

How crucial is federal funding to public broadcasting?

Sesame Workshop’s executive vice president told CNN last week that the company receives “very, very little funding from PBS.” Indeed, the nonprofit generated nearly two-thirds of its $133 million revenue in 2010 from royalties and product licensing alone, according to its website. Its executives are also handsomely compensated: former CEO and president Gary Knell (who now runs NPR) earned $718,456 in executive pay plus $270,000 in bonuses in 2010. So, as the Washington Post points out, Big Bird doesn’t exactly depend on the federal government for survival.

PBS draws roughly 15 percent of its revenue from the CPB. NPR’s revenue mostly comes from member station dues and fees, with 2 percent coming from CPB-issued grants. Member stations, in turn, receive about 11 percent in federal grants. According to this CPB report, most revenue to both public radio and television (about 59 percent) consists of donations from individuals, corporate underwriters and private grants, followed by state and local support (roughly 20 percent).

But from a leverage standpoint, PBS says it’s pretty important. Each federal dollar local stations receive generates roughly six dollars from local sources as a type of bargaining chip, according to a coalition of public broadcasting stations, producers and viewers.

Are there downsides to scaling back federal funding?

Yes. While shows like “Sesame Street” may remain safe under Romney’s plan, its viewers in remote areas wouldn’t fare as well. Public television and radio stations in poor, rural areas depend the most on federal support to survive. So while large public television markets producing more than $10 million in annual revenue require just 10 percent of federal funds to get by, its counterparts in small towns like Bethel, Ala., or Odessa, Texas, may very well need up to four times that much to operate.

How many markets could be at risk today?

A CPB-commissioned study released earlier this year estimated 54 public television stations (31 in rural areas) in 19 states at “high risk” of going dark if stripped of federal funding. The study also found 76 public radio stations (47 in rural areas) in 38 states at “high risk” of going silent without federal funding.

Aren’t there other sources of news, culture and entertainment over the airwaves?

Yes, but public broadcasting has a specific mission of bringing a distinct brand of educational and cultural programming – free of commercial trappings – to a broad swath of the American public.

In establishing the CPB 45 years ago, Congress envisioned a broadcasting service that would encourage development of programming to address “the needs of unserved and underserved audiences, particularly children and minorities,” and which could be made “available to all citizens of the United States.”

In some areas of the country, public broadcasting still remains the only option, commercial or otherwise: at least 10 public radio stations around the country offer the only broadcast service, radio or television included, to their community.

Have there been prior attempts to defund public broadcasting?

Yes. In 2010, a flap over the firing of former NPR contributor Juan Williams (now a Fox News contributor) for comments he made about Muslims heightened the cries to cut NPR off from federal grants. Last year, Republican lawmakers introduced legislation to block NPR from receiving such grants.

Today, conservatives also argue that the smorgasbord of media offerings renders the form of public television obsolete. As the National Review recently put it, “If PBS doesn’t do it, 10 million others will.” Others, like Time’s Michael Grunwald, argue that the right to watch commercial-free TV “does not strike me as a basic human right” and that if “private funders feel it’s important for South Dakotans to watch Big Bird, they can make that happen with their own tax-deductible contributions.”

Can public broadcasting turn to alternate forms of funding?

Yes, but with varying degrees of success. In recent years, budget cuts have forced states to decrease funding for public broadcasting, the New York Times reported early this year. CPB also notes that revenue from individual donations went from $373 million in 1999 to $349 million in 2005.

CPB claims private advertising isn’t a solution — and at least one independent analysis estimated it could even lead to net losses by raising operating costs and diminishing support from corporate underwriters or private foundations. According to the report, “a shift to a commercial advertising model would lead to a chase for ratings and move public broadcasters off their fundamental role in lifting the educational and informational boat for all Americans.”

What’s the Obama administration’s stance?

In 2010, the president’s bipartisan deficit budget commission proposed cutting funding to CPB to reduce the federal deficit. But the campaign was quick to seize on the issue with its Big Bird ad. First lady Michelle Obama followed suit, telling Virginia voters this week, “We all know good and well that cutting Sesame Street is no way to balance a budget.”

The candidates aside, what does the public think?

A March 2011 poll shows that more than two-thirds of the public opposes eliminating government funding for public broadcasting. A more recent poll indicates that 55 percent of voters oppose such cuts to public television.



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5 comments on "Big Bird Debate: How Much Does Federal Funding Matter to Public Broadcasting?"

Garfield28

October 12, 2012 7:32pm

PBS, NPR and C-SPAN are the only balanced news outlets. FOX is known to generate its own news (all Republican), MSNBC is definitely Democratic and CNN gives the spin in both directions. Only PBS, NPR and C-SPAN give enough depth to stories to understand the situations.

Give me the News Hour, Washington Week, and the plays and even Metropolitan Opera rebroadcasts. Commercial stations just simply don't do this kind of entertainment. Commercial stations also do very little really good children's programming.

Because Republicans have tried to kill public TV and radio every chance they get, I don't trust them.

gromoh

October 12, 2012 5:20pm

I have read the names of many philanthropic organizations and individuals who fund PBS. I watch it often and not just Big Bird! PBS is not totally funded by the government. I have never read Mitt Romney's name as being a contributor and I guess the reason would be that he does not believe in keeping the citizens informed and educated. It's beyond his realm of thinking. It is all about meeeeeee, a different mindset. Do we want hm as president?

enuf

October 12, 2012 5:10pm

Have you watched PBS lately? There are ads! Many producers won't rock the boat including the bland news hour for fear of losing funding from Chevron, BP Archer Daniel Midlands (big GMO pusher) and the plethora of corporations. Programs like Bill Moyers and Democracy Now that tell it like it is, get there funding from non corporate sources. Our Public Television like our health care system is a joke compared to Europe BBC, DW etc

Norman Allen

October 12, 2012 11:00am

Why doesn't anyone talk about the difference between government functions and a business? Government is concerned with social stability, equality, quality of life for all the people in a society, social justice, providing services that for-profit institutions cannot/would not provide, future of a society, territorial integrity of its domain (defence of its borders), general welfare. These are goals embodied in the spirit of our constitution. If a government fails to serve these goals, it becomes a private corporation, supplementing smaller private corporations in pursuit of profit for the owners of corporations, squeezing the people from all directions. Well being of citizens (WE, THE PEOPLE) become not the end but the means for corporation profit. PBS, NPR are in the forefront of providing objective informations and thus a major goal of government function, serving vital interest of all.

RoundPonda

October 12, 2012 10:57am

The REAL reason Romney wants to CUT the PBS funding has nothing to do with the budget... It is because PBS tells the TRUTH about everything that politicians do -- Good and BAD.... Since the GOP is Totally OWNED by big business, the GOP does everything to favor corrupt business donations, stopping campaign reform, avoiding Wall Street reform, allowing pollution, etc...... Take the News Hour for instance: It is neither conservative or liberal... It never SPINS the news... It always invites both opinions from both sides... The only opinions come from Shields and Brooks on Friday for about 10 minutes, they give their opinions...
PBS provides Education for OUR children... Sesame Street provides Terrific pre school education VALUABLE formative education that Idiot GOP voters want to eliminate...