Posts Tagged ‘public television’

WQLN lays off five, cuts salaries

Dwight Miller has been warning us for months that if something didn’t change in the state budget for the upcoming year, it was going to be a painful summer for public broadcasting in NWPA.

WQLN-TV

The pain is here.

In advance of the elimination of state funding for public broadcasting coming in two weeks, WQLN Public Media made deep cuts to its personnel and operating budget Tuesday. According to broadcast and published reports, five employees have been let go, including program director Gordon Stroufe, and Director of Engineering Ed Upton.

Other cost-cutting moves include:

  • 5% salary cuts for all management, with Miller taking a 10% cut
  • Two-week unpaid furloughs fro all employees
  • Hiring and wage freeze
  • No unnecessary travel, conference attendance, and staff training
  • The “Marketplace” financial program on WQLN-FM will be dropped

Miller told JET-TV that they tried to cushion the blow on the viewer:

Our goal is for viewers not to see an impact on the services we provide to them. We were very strategic in choosing positions to try to minimize the impact that the public will see. But eventually it will have an impact in the long run.

WQLN normally receives $800,000 from the Commonwealth, and neither version of the state budget currently being considered in Harrisburg would continue that funding. There is hope that a portion of the funding could be restored in the final budget bill. If that were not to happen, more layoffs could be likely.

WQLN: all state funding threatened

Dave Richards reports this morning in the Erie Times-News that embedded in Governor Ed Rendell’s 2009-10 state budget is a total reduction of state funding for Erie’s public broadcasting stations WQLN-TV/FM.

In the article, WQLN President/GM Dwight Miller says that the stations received $800,000 a year in state grants for the past decade, which represents one-quarter of their annual budget. Miller says that if the cuts hold, it would mean certain elimination of several jobs, cuts in community education initiatives, as well as on-air programming enhancements currently on the schedule.

Of course, the Rendell budget is just the initial volley in a lengthy budget process, where the funding could be restored at some level as legislators dig into the spending decisions. State Rep. Flo Fabrizio is quoted in the article as being ready to fight for restoration of most of the dollars.