[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 39 (Tuesday, March 15, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H1801-H1802]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PUBLIC BROADCASTING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, this morning thousands of people on
Capitol Hill turned to NPR radio or the NPR Web site to find out the
latest developments on the horrific situation in Japan, the potential
nuclear meltdown, and with the fast-moving events in the Middle East.
This is why the Pew survey revealed yesterday that, while media across
the board is declining--broadcast television news, newspapers, radio--
that we are watching a renaissance as far as public broadcasting, in
particular NPR, which is increasing its audience, its revenues, and its
reporting staff.
But the health and vitality of NPR is not a reason to slash the
financial support for public broadcasting. First and foremost, it is a
miniscule part of the budget, less than one half a cent per day for
each American. But more important, this is the type of infrastructure
America needs right now.
The public broadcasting support provides a unique service that is not
available on commercial television. The education, culture, news, even
the boring news, is an area where there is no commercial market. That
is why you will search 500 stations in vain on cable and satellite to
find that type of programming that is available for news and for
educating our children, not selling them something.
{time} 1020
More significant, the amount of money that comes from Public
Broadcasting to NPR is a tiny fraction of its budget. Most of the
Public Broadcasting support that is provided by Congress goes to local
stations, with particular emphasis on rural and small-town America.
Taking as an example my home State of Oregon with its awarding-
winning Oregon Public Broadcasting, it costs 11 times more to broadcast
to the far eastern reaches in Burns, Oregon, than it does in
metropolitan Portland. That is a pattern that is repeated coast to
coast. Rural and small-town America relies more heavily on Public
Broadcasting. It doesn't have the population base to ever provide for
itself.
Slashing Public Broadcasting funding is not going to stop Public
Broadcasting in New York or Washington, DC., in Seattle or Los Angeles,
or even Portland, Oregon. What it will do is make the programming less
rich, and it will reduce the ability to provide those services in the
outlying areas.
Even the most recent flap about the media ambush of a former NPR
fundraiser, which produced an 11-minute video that appeared to be very
damning as far as Public Broadcasting is concerned, well, it took NPR
to do an in-depth study. It reviewed the entire 2-hour conversation
captured on tape to find out that the edited 11-minute version was
misleading, trying to portray the point of view of the ambush
journalist. This is the same guy who was caught by law enforcement
officials trying to illegally ``bug'' the office of Senator Mary
Landrieu in Louisiana.
In the course of 2 hours, it was very clear, reviewing the entire
record, that it had been inappropriately edited to suggest that there
was an acceptance or that it was amusing that there was somehow an
attempt to impose sharia law across the country. It ignored the fact
that the NPR employee made it clear that there was a firewall between
any contributions and influencing the editorial content.
That is why NPR and PBS are the most trusted names in broadcasting,
and why 78 percent of Americans in a recent poll said they wanted
Public Broadcasting support maintained or
[[Page H1802]]
even increased. And, indeed, two-thirds of the Republicans wanted
support maintained and increased. I hope my Republican colleagues will
listen to the public and support this vital resource.
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