Opinion: Public media is a pillar of our communities. Don’t defund it.

It’s one of the few civic institutions that still commands broad trust in an age of division and disinformation

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This column was published recently in the The Minnesota Star Tribune from Knight Foundation President Maribel Perez Wadsworth on the importance of public media in an age of disinformation:

When Hurricane Helene struck North Carolina last fall, Blue Ridge Public Radio leapt into action. When cell service went down, they kept reporting. When power went out, they switched to a backup generator. When other reporters needed a place to work, they opened their doors. Broadcasting for 12 hours or more each day, and constantly updating their website, Blue Ridge Public Radio became a crucial source of information for a devastated community.

At Knight Foundation, where I’m president and CEO, we know that a well-informed public is the cornerstone of a thriving democracy. It’s why the free press is guaranteed in our Constitution, so that citizens have the information they need to make informed choices. And it’s why proposals to defund NPR and PBS — and by extension, thousands of public media stations across the country, which deliver reliable news to their communities — are not just misguided but dangerous.

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