Public Radio and the Role of Federal Funding
This report documents information that GAO presented to Congress on March 31, 2011, in response to a congressional request that we examine the extent to which federal funding is used to support public radio.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) was established pursuant to the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 and receives federal payments through the annual appropriations process. CPB distributes the federal payments it receives in accordance with a statutory formula. Under this formula, the majority of each annual federal payment must be distributed to public broadcasting television and radio stations and program producers, such as National Public Radio (NPR), typically in the form of grants. This report addresses the following questions: (1) What are the missions of CPB, NPR, and local public radio stations? (2) What are the processes through which CPB receives federal payments and disburses them to grantees? and (3) What are NPR's sources of revenue, both federal and nonfederal?
(GAO-11-669R, May 19)
Public Radio and the Role of Federal Funding