White House Urges Congress to Eliminate Funding for Public Media
June 9, 2025
The U.S. House of Representatives could vote as early as Wednesday (June 11) on whether to approve the White House request to claw back previously approved funding from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), including two years worth of grant funding already approved for KPCW. More broadly, the funds at stake ensure communities across all 50 states have access to news, emergency alerts, and educational programming provided by public radio and television stations.
If the rescission package passes in the House, it will head straight to the Senate – where it only needs 50 votes to become law. That means fewer barriers, faster action, and reversal of decades of bipartisan support for federal investment in public journalism and educational programming on which millions of Americans rely.
MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD
If you are concerned about efforts to eliminate federal funding for KPCW and public media stations nationwide, you can contact your Members of Congress.
PATCH-THROUGH CALLING:
Use this platform to quickly make calls via Protect My Public Media's patch-through dialing system.
CONGRESSIONAL OPERATOR:
Call the U.S. House of Representatives Switchboard (202-225-3121) to be connected to Rep. Blake Moore (UT-1), Rep. Celeste Maloy (UT-2), Rep. Mike Kennedy (UT-3), and Rep. Burgess Owens (UT-4).
Call the U.S. Senate Switchboard (202-224-3121) to be connected to Senator Mike Lee and Senator John Curtis.
EMAIL:
Visit the American Coalition for Public Radio to quickly send emails to your Members of Congress to urge them to oppose efforts to eliminate funding for public radio stations.
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In addition to the White House's recission request, other actions targeting public broadcasting funding include:
- President Trump circulated federal budget request for Fiscal Year 2026 that eliminates all future funding for CPB, which would impact more than 1,500 public media stations across the country, including KPCW.
- The White House issued an executive order on May 1 to prohibit the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) from using federal funding for National Public Radio (NPR) and Public Broadcasting Services (PBS). The order applies to direct and indirect spending by member stations, like KPCW, to carry national programming.
- It is not clear that the president has the authority to make such orders to CPB under the law because CPB is not a federal executive agency. On May 27, three public radio stations in Colorado, along with NPR, filed a federal lawsuit arguing that the order exceeds presidential authority and violates the free speech rights of 246-station NPR network as protected under the First Amendment. PBS and Minnesota Public Television filed a similar suit on May 30 on behalf of the 330-station PBS network.
On behalf of the staff at KPCW and the community this public radio station serves, KPCW President and General Manager Juliana Allely has issued the following statement:

Ways to support KPCW:
Donate: Click our donate button below or call (435) 649-9004 to make a single donation or become a monthly sustaining donor. Sustainer support ensures that KPCW has a reliable source of funding in times of federal and economic uncertainty.
Learn More: Visit Protect My Public Media and American Coalition for Public Radio to learn more about how federal funding supports public radio stations like KPCW around the country.
What is the Corporation for Public Broadcasting?
- Congress established the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) in the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967. CPB is a private, nonprofit corporation responsible for stewarding the federal government’s investment in non-commercial programming, telecommunications services and emergency alerts for more than 99% of Americans.
- CPB currently receives $535 million annually in federal appropriations – an amount less than 0.01% of the $6.9 trillion federal budget or about $1.60 per American tax payer each year.
- CPB does not produce content and is independent of the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and National Public Radio (NPR), which produce programming that local stations, including KPCW, pay a licensing fee to broadcast.
- A primary goal of CPB is to promote an educated, informed and inclusive civil society by ensuring efficient distribution of local, regional, national and international fact-based news and educational programming.
- CPB is committed to supporting fact-based journalism that includes a wide variety of ideological viewpoints, and CPB encourages transparency and inclusiveness in local, regional, and national public media newsrooms.
- CPB is the largest single source of funding for public media in the country, and funds are distributed directly to public media stations as annual grants. Recipient stations are able to leverage each $1 of federal funding to raise nearly $7 from other sources, including local donors, private businesses and philanthropic foundations. This return on investment makes CPB funding one of the most effective public-private partnerships in the country, serving critical public needs with bipartisan support for nearly sixty years.

- KPCW, along with with more than 1,500 local, independent public media stations nationwide, form the backbone of America’s public information ecosystem to deliver trusted news, educational programming and emergency information to communities across the nation.
- 1,216 public radio stations and 365 public television stations nationwide receive annual CPB funding. Of these, 245 stations are considered rural, including KPCW.
For a list of frequently asked questions about CPB, click here.
How does CPB support local stations like KPCW?
- As a locally-owned and operated nonprofit, KPCW receives an annual Radio Community Service Grant (CSG) from CPB, which accounts for roughly 12-15% of its annual operating budget. KPCW uses this funding for daily operations and to pay for programming like NPR headline news, NPR's "Morning Edition" and American Public Media (APM) programs such as Marketplace, and BBC world news.
- CPB funds infrastructure that delivers emergency alerts to local stations, which are then responsible for delivering time-sensitive content to their audiences and public safety partners. Examples include critical alerts for weather warnings, wildfires, avalanches, floods and other public safety messages that public media stations like KPCW disseminate in real time.
- CPB also negotiates music licensing rights on behalf of noncommercial radio stations. It would be cost-prohibitive and burdensome for individual stations to negotiate the same music licenses and fees on their own. CPB’s role in securing music licenses is truly an existential matter for noncommercial public radio music stations. Without federal funding for CPB and CPB’s management of these music rights, public radio stations like KPCW would not be able to play any music on the radio of any genre, or stream music on the internet, in turn deeply impacting local artists, musicians, venues and audiences.
- KPCW employs a newsroom of 10 reporters and producers, plus other production staff, who work tirelessly to report on issues that directly impact residents and visitors to the Wasatch Back. KPCW conducts daily live radio interviews with city and county elected officials and municipal staff; delivers breaking news and emergency alerts; provides public service announcements for local nonprofit organizations serving our community; showcases local musicians and music spanning genres; and offers services that aren’t found anywhere else, like the hourly “Lost and Found” report.

- Beyond KPCW's annual CSG grant from CPB, our station's sources of funding include annual underwriting revenue, local government and philanthropic grants and individual donor support — which is the most significant and reliable form of funding. Should federal funding be eliminated entirely, KPCW would need to make up the loss of more than $260,000 annually through additional philanthropic and direct donor support.
- CPB’s federal funding also covers station costs of national programming, music licensing fees and broadcast, satellite and digital distribution services which total another $78,000 in KPCW’s case.