Broadcasting Board of Governors Asks Congress for More CEO Power
The board chair and CEO of the Broadcasting Board of Governors asked Congress to give that CEO position more power and BBG more flexibility to fund its operations. That came in testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which is considering possible reforms to BBG. BBG oversees government backed international media outlets including Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and the Middle East Broadcasting Networks. Testifying were new CEO John Lansing, former president of Scripps Networks, and Jeff Shell, BBG board chair and, in his day job, chairman of Universal Filmed Entertainment Group.
In his testimony, Shell said BBG had already given Lansing as much power as it could "legally delegate" to Lansing, recognizing there was so only so much a board whose members all had other jobs, could do. "First, and foremost, we need the Congress to fully enshrine the CEO as the operational lead at BBG," he said, including the power to redirect resources without having to go to the full board every time for a vote. Currently the board can't delegate that spending authority, which means not a penny can be shifted, "even under the most urgent of circumstances," without that board vote. He also said BBG needs to be able to get funding, either from other agencies or from its own fund, to support "surges," when it is asked to shift its resources quickly to hot spots.
Broadcasting Board of Governors Asks Congress for More CEO Power