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Tuesday, July 26, 2022

State Bill Would Use PBS-NPR Model To Support Local Media


A state bill that would support local media with a model like that of NPR or PBS is being hotly debated in California.

MediaPort reports the bill, SB 911, would create a five-year pilot program to provide grants to local media. The sponsor is State Sen. Steve Glazer from the 7th District.

But critics charged in an article in LAFocus that “SB 911 is promoting a ‘nonprofit’ model that would expressly forbid ethnic media from endorsing political candidates or lobbying for or against proposed legislation.”

Glazer countered last week that the bill would address the crisis in local journalism by using “a model that Americans have long trusted – the non-profit Corporation for Public Broadcasting.” Glazer noted that "The law and the CPB’s bylaws prohibit any government influence on the news decisions of the stations that receive the grants."

SB 911 would be similar, Glazer added. “Politicians would be prohibited from influencing the grants to media organizations, and the board would have no say in the editorial decisions of the grantees.”

It is not clear what SB 911’s chances are of passage, or if it could be a model on the national level.

The bill advanced in June when the Assembly Accountability and Administrative Review Committee voted 4-3 to advance the bill to the Appropriations Committee, California Local reports.

But it received its share of criticism.

“This bill is fundamentally flawed,” said California News Publishers Association general counsel Brittney Barsotti. “It is based off a model that really forces philanthropy or… would benefit large nonprofits over the small businesses that are ethnic media and local media.”

Glazier countered that “The California News Publishers Association tries to portray SB 911 as some kind of radical idea. But Californians know that PBS and NPR are trusted, independent news sources.”

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