Media

Federal funding loss leads to major cuts at Vermont Public – but organization was already in the red

by Compass Vermont

On August 27, Vermont Public, the state’s leading nonprofit public media organization, revealed plans for significant staff reductions amid a national wave of federal defunding.

According to the organization’s official announcement, these changes stem directly from a $2 million shortfall caused by a recent federal rescission bill that eliminated key funding for public broadcasting.

While this external shock has been cited as the immediate trigger, deeper financial records indicate that Vermont Public was operating with a substantial deficit even before the federal cuts took effect.

The Layoffs: Details of the Restructuring

Vermont Public’s restructuring involves the elimination of 15 positions, which includes the layoff of 13 current employees and the permanent removal of two vacant roles, according to CEO Vijay Singh in public statements and interviews. In addition, two full-time positions have been reclassified as part-time. These actions amount to a 14% reduction in the organization’s workforce, which stood at just over 100 employees prior to the changes.

Singh has described the decision as “heartbreaking,” emphasizing that it was necessary to stabilize operations and continue serving the community. The projected savings from these staff reductions are estimated at a minimum of $1.5 million, which the CEO characterized as a conservative figure. To further address the budget gap, Vermont Public has implemented other measures, including tightened departmental budgets and pay cuts for the entire executive team.

Regarding the distribution of cuts, leadership has indicated that they affect “almost every department,” according to Singh. This includes the loss of one reporter in the newsroom and reductions in production and support staff for various local programs. However, specifics on individual roles, affected employees, or precise programmatic changes have not been disclosed, with Singh declining to provide further details in initial announcements.

The Immediate Cause: Federal Defunding and the Rescissions Act

The layoffs are explicitly tied to the passage of the Rescissions Act of 2025, a federal bill that rescinded approximately $9 billion in previously appropriated funds across various programs. According to White House statements, this action targeted the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), eliminating $1.1 billion in advance funding allocated for the next two fiscal years. The bill passed the House of Representatives by a narrow 216-213 vote and the Senate by a 51-48 margin, according to congressional records.

For Vermont Public, this translated into an immediate $2 million loss from its operating budget, as Singh explained. The CPB, established in 1967 under the Public Broadcasting Act, has long served as a buffer for public media stations, distributing over 70% of its grants to more than 1,500 local radio and television outlets nationwide. In rural states like Vermont, such funding has been particularly vital, often comprising 25% to 50% or more of smaller stations’ revenues.

Following the bill’s passage, the CPB announced on August 1, 2025, an “orderly wind-down” of its operations, with most staff and functions concluding by the end of the fiscal year on September 30, 2025, and a small transition team remaining until January 2026.

The administration justified the cuts by arguing that public media represents a “politically biased and unnecessary expense,” according to official justifications, marking the end of a funding model that has supported American public broadcasting for nearly six decades.

Pre-Existing Financial Strains: A Closer Look at the Numbers

While the federal rescission has been positioned as the primary driver, an examination of Vermont Public’s financial health reveals a more complex picture. According to the organization’s most recent IRS Form 990 filing for the fiscal year ending June 2024, total revenue was $18,020,261, while total expenses reached $22,728,990, resulting in a net deficit of $4,708,729. This operational shortfall, which exceeds the $2 million federal loss by more than double, indicates that the organization was already facing significant structural challenges prior to the national policy shift.

Total assets stood at $85,551,477, with liabilities at $3,920,000, according to the filing accessed through nonprofit financial databases. These figures suggest that Vermont Public had been drawing from reserves to cover gaps in recent years, as vaguely noted in some initial coverage. The 2021 merger of Vermont Public Radio and Vermont PBS, which unified the state’s public radio and television services, contributed to elevated post-merger costs and revenue generation issues, according to organizational history.

Vermont Public Co.’s most recent IRS Form 990

This pre-existing deficit reframes the current crisis not as an isolated event but as a culmination of ongoing financial vulnerabilities meeting an acute external pressure.

Leadership’s emphasis on the layoffs as the “direct result” of the federal cuts, while accurate in the short term, does not fully account for these underlying issues, according to analyses of the financial data.

Vermont Public’s situation is part of a nationwide contagion affecting public media stations. According to reports from various outlets, South Dakota Public Broadcasting reduced its workforce by 25%, while American Public Media laid off 30 staffers in the immediate aftermath of the rescission.

Larger stations have also been hit hard: KQED in San Francisco affected 67 positions, representing 15% of its workforce, including the dissolution of its entire digital video team and slashes to the education department; GBH in Boston implemented 13 layoffs at its American Experience documentary unit and 54 total cuts in 2025; and WBEZ in Chicago announced 14 layoffs earlier in 2024, scaling back podcasting and closing its Vocalo radio broadcast.

These reductions stem from a fragile funding ecosystem, where even stations with smaller federal dependencies face ripple effects. For instance, member station dues account for about 31% of NPR’s budget and 61% of PBS’s, according to funding breakdowns. As smaller, rural outlets like those in Vermont struggle or close, they can no longer contribute these dues, threatening the stability of national networks. The CPB’s role as a “heat shield” against political pressures has been lost, exposing the system’s reliance on federal support.

Many questions unanswered for listeners and viewers

According to Singh, core programs will be maintained “at least for the time being,” even if some “faces of certain things” are lost. The impact of the cuts remain to be seen for flagship shows like the daily newsmagazine Vermont Edition, the investigative podcast Brave Little State, or the weekly political roundup Vermont This Week.

In response to the crisis, a coalition of foundations including the MacArthur, Ford, and Knight Foundations has pledged nearly $37 million for a “Public Media Bridge Fund” to provide emergency grants and loans to vulnerable stations, particularly in underserved regions like Vermont. However, this amount represents less than 7% of the annual $535 million lost through the CPB rescission, positioning it as short-term relief rather than a long-term solution.


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Categories: Media, News Analysis

6 replies »

  1. Headline fixed:

    Federal funding loss leads to major cuts at Vermont Propaganda – but organization was already in the red

  2. Hey Vermont Public:
    Why does NPR spend 5 minutes talking about the victims of the Minneapolis shooting at a Catholic school, and blip over the shooter, saying only the HE (Robin/Robert) was a graduate of the school HE shot up, and that HIS mother worked there? Did NPR not see the 11-minute video posted by the shooter? That we have all seen and lost our lunches over? Can’t find a motive? For shooting up a Catholic church? Do you REALLY think we don’t know this was a trans person with, um, problematic influences?
    Do you wonder why we celebrate your demise?
    (Spoken as a sustaining member until 2016, with a Clinton Foundation awakening.)

    Thank you, VDC, for giving me a way to communicate.

  3. I gave up om VPR about a year ago. I got sick of the constant propaganda. and the ever more frequent ads. I hear less ads nowadays on several “commercial” stations that I frequent (and more music).

    • Those aren’t “ads”…those are “important messages from our underwriters”.

    • Joe, I used to like the programing and would enjoy the semi annual fund raisers and would donate along with the ones from the Albany station, enjoyed Garrison Keeler, All Things Considered, Click and Clack to name few. But after this programing passed they became ridiculous and the current ‘underwriting’ has turned into commercials to be indistinguishable from commercial broadcast TV. They no longer fill the “public interest” in a true way.