Despite all the recent downsizing news at The Record and Star Ledger, similar economic pressures at New Jersey's only statewide television station have virtually been ignored by the media. Aside from the headliner early retirements announced and the station's budget proposal to wean itself off state's coffers back in May, very little attention has been paid to the pressing financial predicament at NJN.
"We are at an urgent point in our history," emphasized NJN Executive Director Elizabeth Christopherson. "Being so lean for so many years makes you creative, but it is also like living on an oxygen tank. If you turned it off now, we will not be able to be sustainable."
If you give Christopherson an hour, she'll lay out in rapid-fire detail its efforts over the last three years to develop a framework for meeting the looming economic challenges while maintaining its "editorial integrity and professional standards of excellence." And she'll detail the multiple dialogues she and others have had with the administration, legislature and stakeholders.
So it was a bit surprising when NJN's proposal to change its operations was not greeted with open arms during its May budget proposal according to published news accounts.
Here's the bottom-line at NJN: Slashed state funding in FY2009, a hiring freeze on the heels of an early retirement offer which cut personnel in key positions -- including news anchorperson. If that's not enough, throw in the unfunded Federal Communications Commission mandate to convert all analog broadcasts to digital by 2009. NJN estimates it still needs about $23 million in capital investment to upgrade its aging infrastructure and complete its digital conversion.
Anyone see that funding coming from the State House?
"Some are under the impression that we can just up the ante and hold another fundraiser," added Christopherson noting the success NJN's foundation has had since its creation in the 1990s at the turn of the last state fiscal crisis.
Christopherson explained raising more than $95 million in the past cannot guarantee success in the current economy.
"The good news is we love our news department, our educational programs and our workforce," she said. "The difference is how we will continue to pay for it."
"Forty years ago this structure made sense for the state, but not today," she added. Across the U.S., out of 174 public broadcasting entities, 90 are community licenses and only about 20 are state licensed. Recently, both Oregon and Vermont have made similar transitions.
You may ask, what's the difference between a state license and a community license? Basically it comes down to reporting lines -- the governor and the legislature on the one hand or a nonprofit board of directors on the other. The audience/viewers are the same -- except that the tab is no longer picked up by the taxpayers.
As far as any NJN assets go, here's the numbers:
From the perspective of management at NJN: "The new organizational structure will give NJN the flexibility to lease some if its licenses to generate new revenues to help fund...operations and modernize equipment. All proceeds gained from these business arrangements will be channeled right back to the organization to provide economic sustainability and encourage growth."
So, as NJN's ultimate shareholders (that's anyone paying taxes in NJ), we thought we'd give you a chance to weigh in.
Should the state transfer NJN ‘s assets to a private foundation as part of the station's efforts to transition from a state funded entity to a community public broadcast station serving the same folks?
Up Next: The replacement search (and hiring pitfalls) for the NJN news anchor slot.
Debbie Holtz, PolitickerNJ.com's political media columnist, studies and teaches public policy and writing at Rutgers University.
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You forgot the big asset
The licenses, which are probably worth over a billion dollars, maybe two. The current licenses, coupled with the FCC's "must carry" rule for Cable, give the owner of these licenses the right to have their signal on every cable system in New York City, the Northern Suburbs and those Pennsylvania and Delaware Counties bordering the Delaware River.
look at their programming
all that lawrence welk and doo-wop crap. no wonder no one donates. it's tough competing in the ny market, but njn is just plain boring.
Loser NJN
When the best watched show is a set of ping pong balls and it only lasts for 2 and a half minutes, that tells you all you need to know about NJN programming. By the way, how old is Kent Manahan and when is she going to learn how to read a teleprompter. No news anchor makes so many mistakes reading text. Oh, when did they resusitate Michael Aron and who ever told Jim Hooker he was qualified to be on TV. Loser, after loser after loser. Sell the dam license and reduce the state debt for cryin out loud. It is worth nothing the way it is being used right now.
NJN Funding
As with most items in the State's budget it is wholly inappropriate for the overburdened - dare I say schnook - taxpayers to be supporting programs like NJN.
We have sufficient public broadcasting coverage from New York, Allentown, and Philadelphia. It seems to me that NJN is just another me-too feel-good progressive effort.
I was one of the invitees to Comrade Corzine's luncheon meeting about cutting the State budget, and the elimination of NJN funding was on my list of items.
We have forgotten that the market should drive business. If NJN had intrinsic worth, they would not need to come to us hat in hand.
Hocking the license would probably be reasonable, but what businessman would want to enter a saturated market?
Corzine's pledge of bold action might be more than just smoke were he to do something like turn out the lights on NJN.
Sic Semper Tyrannis!
Time to Merge NJN
Did you know WNET Ch. 13 PAYS NJN $350,000 each year to air NJN Nightly News? This makes no sense at all! It's time for WNET to take over NJN, just as it did a few years ago with WLIW Ch. 21 in Long Island. Instead of 3 PBS stations competing to serve North Jersey, let one entity coordinate what the 3 stations air! Imagine, no more competition between WNET/WLIW vs. NJN for the same viewer contributions. And the 3 channels could coordinate programming and avoid running the same PBS shows at the same times -- yes, 3 PBS channels with 3 different shows! Let WNET/WLIW take over NJN in North Jersey and WHYY Ch.12 in Philly for South Jersey. Aside from its news and public affairs shows, NJN runs PBS programs the same at WNET/WLIW and WHYY. Require WNET/WLIW and WHYY to provide 2 or 3 hours of time each week for a NJ-oriented weekly news program and public affairs tv shows. Get NJN's news readers off the state payroll and public employees pension system! That's what the employees are objecting to with Christopherson's just-announced plan to get off state funding. Did you know NJN does not air Public Service Announcements for free? Its true, state depts. pay NJN to air PSAs. Personnel dept. pays for those spots about current govt. job openings. Lottery pays NJN to host its nightly drawings. NJN operates a 10-station radio network that few people know about or listen to. It's not 1970 anymore and the need for a state-owned, state-employee operated tv and radio network is passe.
can you say sell it
why sell the turnpike - when you can sell NJN? At least the turnpike works.. NJN is boring crap recycled...
feh! Shut 'em down.
NJN hasn't had any worthwhile original programming since they canned THE UNCLE FLOYD SHOW.
The Saturday night lineup is better than Sominex. Decades old British pap. What demographic really wants that? Senile ex-pats?
How can you seriously expect them to cover political scandals when they are beholden to the same crooks for their funding?
News12 on cable is a better source of local weather and information anyway, and they don't have their hand in the taxpayers' pockets.
Sell it off and shut it down.
Canned obsolescense
The NJN is fast sliding into irrelevance, what with coverage by commercial alternatives, and the advent of webcasting by those same media. One can only view a single broadcast to see how stilted and unimaginative the programming has become alongside its cometition. Canned and served-up-nightly segments covering such world-shaking topics like a high school environmental awareness day in Newark struggle for the attention of the "undiscriminating" viewer. Remove NJN from state subsidy, and allow it to compete for its daily bread in the media market like all others
Real Value
NJN is a public treasure that has great potential for the citizens of New Jersey. What some commenters perceive to be "boring crap" is for most a balanced, comprehensive statewide voice that will be silenced if NJN is handed to media outlets in other states. NJN covers the entire state, not just North Jersey, with a proud tradition of fair reporting and public affairs programming. Surely Uncle Floyd would agree with Thomas Jefferson who said, "Whenever the people are well-informed, they can be trusted with their own government." We should save our only statewide television and radio PBS affiliate.