The Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s board voted on Jan. 5 to dissolve the organization. Here's what to know.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting is dissolving after major federal funding cuts. Here's what it means for PBS, NPR and local stations.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) will now dissolve, meaning public broadcasting is losing millions of dollars in federal funding.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the federal nonprofit that for nearly six decades helped fund the Public ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds PBS and NPR, is shutting down due to a lack of federal funding. How many ...
There’s been a dizzying amount of news related to public media’s federal funding recently. FCC Chair Brendan Carr opened an investigation Jan. 29 into the system’s underwriting practices. Four days ...
On Thursday, RBR+TVBR shared the news that a markup of the 2026 Labor and Health and Human Services appropriations bill had taken place and provided no funding for the Corporation for Public ...
Congressional Republicans voted to strip more than $1 billion in funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) this week, a move that could force local radio and television stations to ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) has announced plans to formally wind down operations after being excluded from the Senate Appropriations Committee’s proposed budget for the 2026 fiscal ...
The nonprofit institution that provided significant funding for PBS and NPR is disbanding after nearly 60 years in operation. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting — created by Congress in 1967 — ...
A new audit from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting found that Capital Public Radio and its affiliate stations overstated funding, reported “questionable costs,” and failed to comply with ...
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