Public defenders: Alumni in news are undeterred as Congress claws back funding

Kirk Siegler reporting on location for NPR in the Amazon. The rescission package will almost certainly limit the ability for rural stations to afford journalism from NPR and PBS; Siegler says he's trying to let his reporting into rural communities and the challenges they faceāespecially related to climateāspeak for itself.Ģż
Going-to-the-Sun Road is known for its natural beauty, its sweeping views of Glacier National Park, its white-knuckled masses of tourists travailing its winding roads.
It is not known for cellular service.
So, when Kirk Siegler was driving the road while on assignment in the park, he turned the dial to the local NPR station to see what heād missed while being away from coverage.
āI tuned in to the top of the hour newscast and got it loud and clear,ā said Siegler (Jourā00), a correspondent for NPR News. āThere have been a lot of investments in towers and infrastructure by local public radio stations in recent yearsāespecially here in the West, where the topography is so challengingāto ensure information gets out during disasters, as well as basic news services.
āIn some of the more rural areas, you donāt have 5G and may not have reliable broadband, but you do have public radio.ā
Last week, Congress signed off on Donald Trumpās $9 billion rescission package, which claws back more than $1 billion in previously approved funding for public broadcasters. For Siegler and other alumni of the College of Communication, Media, Design and Information, thatās meant a major shift in an industry where seismic shocks are becoming the norm.
āItās not the most stable business generally, so when we hear about funding cuts, itās hard not to start worrying about layoffs and that sort of thing,ā said Siegler, who has done notable work covering climate disaster, wildfires and public land in the West. āBut the directive has been to keep our heads down and keep doing the journalism, which hopefully will speak for itself.ā
An outsized rural impact
ĢżāThis is not the time to fall on our sword, but to raise our sword and cut a new path.ā
Neal Scarbrough (Jourā84),
vice president and general manager, Marketplace
The cuts wonāt be the end of NPR and PBS, both of which receive only a small amount of funding from the federal Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Where it will hurt are at the rural and smaller stations that for the programs they produce.
Itās why professionals like Neal Scarbrough (Jourā84) are trying to pivot and provide additional value to those smaller stations. Scarbrough is vice president and general manager of Marketplace, a publicly funded media outlet that licenses its business and economics coverage to stations around the country. He has an editorial background, but his day-to-day focus is on innovation.

āThe strength of Marketplace is weāve maintained our audience, even as radio listenership is dipping,ā he said. āIn this moment of economic turmoil, we do have relevance for our listeners, who are seeking answers to questions on tariffs, trade wars, the markets and so on. But we have to demonstrate our value every dayāwhile paid syndication helps our partner stations save money, we donāt have the luxury to think that way.ā
Scarbrough hasnāt been shy about exploring digital alternatives to radioāincluding podcasts, which have been hit or missābut he sees a chance to add value by offering digital content to partner stations, instead of just sharing radio programming and keeping other news on Marketplaceās own platforms.
As he put it, āthe longer weāre restricted to radio, the quicker weāll decline.ā
āItās not that simpleā
For rural editors, publishers and station managers, innovation is a challenge, said Patrick Ferrucci, chair of the journalism department at CMDI and a researcher who studies the funding model of rural newsrooms.
āYouāre mostly talking about family-owned newspapers that havenāt really changed their approach in a hundred years,ā said Ferrucci, whoās mostly worked with newspapers in Kansas and Nebraska. āItās easy to say, just innovate, but itās not that simple.ā
He said rural journalism needs to diversify its funding structuresāaway from solely focused on advertisingāand change its community engagement practices. Heās also advised on using open-source technology, instead of costly platforms, and using their presses to take on commercial printing work.
āRural journalism has always done a really good job of being part of a community, unlike a New York Times or Boston Globe,ā he said. āWe donāt want to change that emphasis on community-based storytelling, but weāve seen some success with things like membership models and events that make the newspaper a public space.ā
Those connections to the communities he covers are important to Siegler, who is based in Boise, Idaho. Heās happiest while melting shoe leather in the nationās under-represented rural communities, asking peopleāespecially those whoāve never been interviewedāabout topics like federal funding cuts.
Those sources have usually never met a reporter, āand so Iām always asked, āWhy would you want to come all the way out here to talk to me? Iām not that interesting,āā he said. āBut they usually are.ā
His work in climate reporting showcases the importance of local perspectives on national issues, and demonstrates whatās at stake for rural stations priced out of NPRās journalism. Siegler has covered everything from raging wildfires, to access to the Colorado River, to development projects in Arizonaās fast-growing Maricopa County.
āIf there arenāt reporters covering city hall, holding politicians and developers accountable, then people donāt see it in the news and change doesnāt happen,ā he said.
Both Siegler and Scarbrough said there are other ways to make a living. But neither sounded ready to give up the fight.
āOne thing about journalists is, we always believe we can win,ā Scarbrough said. āThis is not the time to fall on our sword, but to raise our sword and cut a new path. Rather than say, woe is us, we lost our funding, we need to see this as a moment to redefine what public media is in a way that continues to help our audience make sense of the world around them.ā