Three observations about West Virginia Public Broadcasting (WVPB):
- The legislative auditor wants to have it both ways with WVPB. He wants to control the money that I give the Foundation and Friends groups because state employees solicit and manage my donation. I don’t mind the State controlling my tax dollars, but I do mind them controlling my donations. The State should be happy that I entrust some of my hard-earned dollars to support a state program, instead of discouraging me by trying to get their grubby hands on my money. I should have a right to trust a private foundation that state employees assist to operate with my money if I want.
- If this is such a big problem, why not simply turn WVPB into a 501(c)(3) organization and provide them with future state funding via a grant? This is precisely how the West Virginia Department of Education and the Arts funds the West Virginia Humanities Council, another worthy organization that receives a lot of state funding. WVPB’s grant still would be subject to state appropriation and the conditions in a grant agreement, but they otherwise would be free to do the public good without political interference. I believe the British handle the BBC using a comparable approach.
- I make the second recommendation because I am very concerned about a governor or his or her designee serving as chairman of the Educational Broadcasting Authority, a board a governor appoints and thus easily can control anyway. It’s not difficult to imagine a situation in which an overreaching governor tries to use WVPB as a propaganda instrument. One salutary effect of quasi-privatizing WVPB: The board itself, not a governor, would appoint new members.
I really hope someone sponsors legislation to quasi-privatize WVPB, while continuing its state appropriation.







