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Congress should guarantee permanent funding & independence from partisan meddling
Take action by Wednesday, February 28, 2007
George W. Bush is trying—yet again—to slash funding for NPR and PBS. This week, Bush proposed a new budget with devastating cuts to public broadcasting.1 "Sesame Street" and other ad-free kids' shows are under the knife. So is the independent journalism our country needs.
Enough is enough. We've fought this fight before and won—but we can't afford the risk anymore. With the new Congress, we can make sure this never happens again. We need Congress to insulate NPR and PBS from the political winds.
We can make it happen if enough of us sign this petition: "Congress must save NPR and PBS once and for all. Congress should guarantee permanent funding and independence from partisan meddling." Clicking here will add your name to the petition:
After you sign, please forward this email to your friends, family, and co-workers to keep this campaign going. We'll deliver the petition to members of Congress as they consider Bush's budget—offering a public counterpoint to this dangerous attack.
Congress can protect NPR and PBS from future cuts. The long-term solution to save public radio and TV is to:
- fully restore this year's funding
- guarantee a permanent funding stream free from political pressure
- reform how the money is spent and keep partisan appointees from pushing a political bias
Bush's budget would cut federal funds for
public broadcasting by nearly 25%.1
According to PBS, the cuts "could mean the end
of our ability to support some of the most
treasured educational children's series" like
"Sesame Street," "Reading Rainbow," and
"Arthur."2
As
telecommunications chair Rep. Ed Markey said,
"In a 24-7 television world with content often
inappropriate for young children, the public
broadcasting system represents an oasis of
quality, child-oriented educational
programming. We owe America's children and
their parents this free, over-the-air
resource."1
The cuts could
also decimate one of the last remaining sources
of watchdog reporting on TV—continuing the
partisan war on journalism led by the ex-chair
of public broadcasting, Ken
Tomlinson.3 More people trust public
broadcasting than any corporate news
media.4 President Bush would rather
undermine our free press than face reporters
who are asking tough questions.
Let's
put an end to the constant threats to NPR and
PBS. Let's ask Congress to guarantee funding
and stop partisan meddling. Clicking here
will add your name to the petition:
Sign the Petition
Thank you for all you do.
–Noah,
Marika, Eli, Adam G. and the MoveOn.org Civic
Action Team
Thursday, February
8th, 2007
P.S. Our friends
at Free Press have more on how to save NPR and
PBS once and for all:
http://www.freepress.net/publicbroadcasting/=
Sources:
1.
"Bush Proposes Steep Cut to PBS Funding," TV
Week, February 5, 2007
http://www.tvweek.com/news.cms?
2. PBS' Ready to Learn program
(funds "Sesame Street" and other children's
shows)
http://www.pbs.org/readytolearn/
3.
"Tomlinson Slinks Away," MediaCitizen, November
3, 2005
http://www.moveon.org/r?
4.
"2005 'Open to the Public' Objectivity and
Balance Report," Corporation for Public
Broadcasting, January 31, 2006
http://www.cpb.org/aboutcpb/goals/objectivity/
