logo
Public media cuts costing 4 Indiana stations at least half their revenue

Public media cuts costing 4 Indiana stations at least half their revenue

Four of Indiana's smaller stations will lose at least half their revenue after Congress approved a $1.1 billion spending cut last week and the state zeroed out its funding earlier this year.
Northern Indiana's Lakeshore Public Media, Ball State Public Media, WVUB and PBS in Vincennes, and Tri-State Public Media in Evansville will be hardest hit by the cuts, according to a WFYI analysis and station messaging.
Hoosier public media leaders told IndyStar the loss of government support has created immediate, gaping holes in revenue they fear could force them to cut local coverage, drop national programs or potentially close some stations.
"You can't just lose a third of your budget and say, 'Well, we're just going to go on as normal,'" said Jennifer Miller Kelley, president and general manager of PBS Michiana - WNIT.
Federal and state money accounts for a smaller percentage of larger stations' revenue. For example, federal support is 12% of WFYI's budget and 1% of NPR's.
Hoosier stations combined will lose nearly $9.4 million in federal dollars. Seven of Indiana's 10 public media markets will lose more than $1 million. That's in addition to $7.4 million lost in state funding.
"They'll obviously be entering into a period of austerity, cutting back on some of the services that they currently offer," said Mark Newman, executive director of Indiana's network of public broadcasting stations. "It's a challenging time, but they're focused on mission and ensuring that they continue to produce content and provide services of a high quality."
Despite millions lost, public media leaders said they will be attempting to preserve local coverage by finding efficiencies and prioritizing coverage.
Leaders like Shelli Harmon-Baker, the news director and host at WVPE in Elkhart, said it's not an option to lose local coverage. Her team will work harder, despite the cuts, to keep up because, she said, local news is critically necessary in her rural community.
"We're going to work harder and smarter," she said. "We are going to make the very best with what we have, as long as I've got a breath in me and I'm working here, darn it."
In line with President Donald Trump's demands, U.S. Congress cut $1.1 billion in public media spending last week, and Indiana's Republican supermajority stripped $7.4 million from Indiana Public Broadcasting earlier this year.
Local stations have had little time to prepare for massive budget cuts.
"You don't sleep a lot, and you pull out your hair," Miller Kelley said regarding remedying budget cuts. "We have been looking at everything we can do to maintain the quality of content that our audience has come to rely on."
Without a ramp-down period, she, said it feels like stations are "going off a cliff financially." They hardly have time to plan their budget, she said, since federal funding was previously expected this fall. Her station lost about a third of its revenue, totaling $1.3 million.
Miller Kelley said she expected public media would need to fight for support during the next 2028-2029 federal funding cycle. She didn't expect Congress to claw back dollars it had already allocated.
"Anything that would've been wound down just has to be stopped, halted, like screeching stop, hit the brakes," she said, "which does a disservice certainly to the community and is a disservice to those of us who are trying to plan what the future looks like."
According to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which disperses federal dollars, here's what Indiana's public media stations received in fiscal year 2024:
Stations have been working to find efficiencies and consolidate operations following state cuts, Newman said. Now, with federal cuts, he said some stations will be digging into their reserves, and all outlets will be looking to cut back, including in personnel.
A statewide reporting team was told earlier this month that they will be laid off at the end of the year.
"I don't think anything is off the table," Newman said when asked about station consolidation. "It would be a prudent business decision to explore how our stations might share services in a broader way."
Miller Kelley said her station is sorting through local and national programming, community outreach programs and other spending. There is no way to move forward without answering really hard questions, she said, such as whether they will reduce local coverage, drop national programs or reduce the number of the families their programs support.
For Travis Pope, the president and general manager of WBOI in Fort Wayne, losing money means deciding whether they pay for gas to send a reporter in the field. He said they now need to be choosier about what stories they can cover and weigh whether they need to send a reporter on an hour round-trip to an under-covered community.
"You're telling me you have to do more, you have to cover more, you have to be in more places, and you have less money to do it," Pope said, recounting a conversation with a community member. "And that is absolutely right. That is the equation."
All three public media leaders said the cuts are also an opportunity to work harder and continue coverage that their communities find valuable. They are still figuring out what that looks like financially.
Harmon-Baker said she and her three reporters are motivated to work harder.
"What's important right now is to continue to bring local news, continue to do the very best job we can so that we can keep informing people," she said.
Stations must now turn to philanthropic support and their listeners to make up hundreds of thousands to millions of dollars. Leaders and fundraising experts alike say it's unlikely they can make up everything they lost.
"Asking the community to, within one year, make up a $1.3 million deficit and then do that again next year and the year after that and the year after that," Miller Kelley said, "it's a big ask, especially when we need to make up that difference in just a couple of months."
"Rage giving" is a common response to contentious or unpopular cuts, and Newman said supporters have increased donations as a result. Still, he said, those surges are not sustainable long term.
Indiana's 17 stations join the 1,500 across the country looking for grants and large donations to sustain their operations. Private philanthropy is rarely able to make up the gap, a nonprofit expert said.
"Those will not be offset dollar by dollar at all," said Patrick Rooney, a professor emeritus of philanthropic studies at Indiana University in Indianapolis.
Some stations may find monetary support as applicants for national pots of money, Rooney said, but most, and likely all, funding will come from local and regional entities. Those national funding rounds will also become increasingly competitive.
Rural America, especially, does not have the infrastructure that urban cities have to pump philanthropic money into charitable causes, he said.
A smaller population means fewer individual donors, organizations and businesses that can contribute large sums. Small nonprofits also tend not to have the staff or expertise needed to organize a mailer campaign, write competitive proposals or approach prospective funders, he said.
"Some of the charities that may need the help the most are probably the least prepared to put on an organized campaign and go out and raise that money," Rooney said. "That's not to say they'll all be unsuccessful; it's just to say they're at a disadvantage."
The USA TODAY Network - Indiana's coverage of First Amendment issues is funded through a collaboration between the Freedom Forum and Journalism Funding Partners.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Video: Top Democrat senator falls during Senate floor vote
Video: Top Democrat senator falls during Senate floor vote

American Military News

time21 minutes ago

  • American Military News

Video: Top Democrat senator falls during Senate floor vote

A new video shows a top Democrat senator falling on the Senate floor during a vote on Wednesday. The Democrat senator was quickly helped back to her feet by Republican senators in the chamber. In a Thursday video shared by The Blaze on X, formerly Twitter, Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) can be seen falling to the ground of the Senate floor during a voting session. In the video, Warren appears to be trying to sit or lean on a desk before suddenly falling backwards, knocking over the desk, and falling on the ground. After Warren fell to the ground, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) quickly rushed over to help her. In the video, Cruz can be seen offering Warren a hand as she rose back up to her feet. The video also shows Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) and Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) walking over to the Democrat senator to potentially provide assistance. 🚨Elizabeth Warren just FELL on the Senate floor — TheBlaze (@theblaze) July 31, 2025 The Daily Caller reported that the Democrat senator did not appear to have suffered any harm from her fall on the Senate floor on Wednesday. The outlet noted that Warren's fall took place as the Senate was voting on a pair of resolutions that would have blocked U.S. military sales to Israel. READ MORE: Videos: Trump adviser collapses suddenly on stage According to The Hill, Wednesday's vote on the sale of U.S. weapons to Israel saw a record number of Democrat senators vote in favor of blocking weapon sales to Israel. The outlet noted that while the pair of resolutions brought by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) received record support from Democrats, the resolutions were opposed by every Republican senator as well as 20 Democrat senators. The Hill reported that the Senate voted 70-27 against a resolution Sanders brought to block $675 million in U.S. weapons sales to Israel, while the Senate voted 73-24 against a resolution that would have blocked the sale of tens of thousands of automatic rifles.

'Big Beautiful Bill' imperils tribe's critical survival project: 'We still have homes that are not electrified'
'Big Beautiful Bill' imperils tribe's critical survival project: 'We still have homes that are not electrified'

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

'Big Beautiful Bill' imperils tribe's critical survival project: 'We still have homes that are not electrified'

'Big Beautiful Bill' imperils tribe's critical survival project: 'We still have homes that are not electrified' The vast majority of Americans can expect their electricity to be available when they need it — even though energy rates have risen significantly over the years, and there are emerging concerns about how new technologies could impact grid reliability. However, the One Big Beautiful Bill could uniquely threaten access to electricity for residents on the Hopi Tribe's reservation in Arizona, according to Tribal Business News, leaving tribal members vulnerable to extreme weather conditions, such as heat waves, and economic hardship as they fight to preserve their lands and cultural values. What's happening? President Donald Trump signed the Big Beautiful Bill, also known as House Resolution 1, into law July 4 after months of debate and amendments to the legislation by Congress. As expected, the final version of the bill is slashing many clean-energy tax incentives that the Hopi Tribe has relied on to expand access to electricity on the reservation, including electric credits for renewable projects that have reduced building costs by up to 30% to 50%. This could also imperil utility-scale solar projects meant to replace jobs and revenue after the 2019 closing of the Navajo Generating Station coal plant. The plant supplied others in the region with power while doing little to improve access to electricity on Hopi lands — while also releasing toxic, heat-trapping pollution into the surrounding area and atmosphere. Why is this important? According to the U.S. Department of Energy, a 2023 investigation into Tribal Electricity Access and Reliability found that lack of access to electricity on the Hopi Reservation and Trust Lands hit nearly 29%, whereas that percentage was just 1.4 for the average U.S. household. In an area where a round trip to the grocery store can take four hours, access to electricity can mean the difference between having food that's fit to eat or going without. Northeastern Arizona, where the Hopi reservation is situated, is also experiencing more frequent and intense heat waves because of a changing climate, making it all the more essential for residents to stay cool and protect themselves from the No. 1 weather-related killer. Hopi Tribal Chairman Timothy Nuvangyaoma told Tribal Business News that the passage of the Big Beautiful Bill has introduced "a lot of uncertainty" to the situation. "We're disappointed in leaders that don't look beyond their nose when it comes to those communities that rely on moving forward with this technology. We're in 2025 right now and we still have homes that are not electrified," Nuvangyaoma said. Do you think our power grid needs to be upgraded? Definitely Only in some states Not really I'm not sure Click your choice to see results and speak your mind. What is being done about this? While provisions in the Big Beautiful Bill do disincentivize many green projects that can improve access to electricity and stabilize rates — and cut the Tribal Energy Loan Guarantee Program — attorney Pilar Thomas told Tribal Business News that there's still a window of opportunity to get projects off the ground before tax incentives end. "The One Big Beautiful Bill Act is a big step backward, but I'm not quite as pessimistic as some, because most tribes are doing smaller projects," the partner at the Quarles and Brady law firm said. "... You've got to move, but I think tribes are doing mostly smaller projects for themselves, and I think those are still viable." The legislation also permanently reauthorized the New Markets Tax Credit, which has supported some tribal projects and makes it attractive for companies to build in underserved areas. For his part, Nuvangyaoma said the Hopi Tribe was "digesting" how the act could impact larger projects in development, including a 40-megawatt utility-scale solar array. Despite potential setbacks, he indicated his tribe still saw solar as a path toward achieving energy sovereignty. "I believe that there's people out there who see the impacts that tribal energy sovereignty can have, and so I am hopeful," he said. "We're always looking at what can be done in the darkest situations. We're used to that. With a little bit of light, we'll still move forward with development — we're acting as though none of our projects will be impacted until we can't do so anymore." Join our free newsletter for good news and useful tips, and don't miss this cool list of easy ways to help yourself while helping the planet. Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store