The CPB, which for 58 years has funded public shows like "Sesame Street" and "Mister Rogers' Neighborhood," is folding after the group lost federal funding last summer.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) will now dissolve, meaning public broadcasting is losing millions of dollars in ...
Created in 1967, CPB was a private agency that steered federal funding to PBS, NPR and hundreds of public television and ...
Lucas Adcock Staff Writer The year was 1967. President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Public Broadcasting Act, establishing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) as a private, non-profit entity ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the federal nonprofit that for nearly six decades helped fund the Public ...
The shutdown of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) marks the end of a nearly six-decade experiment in using ...
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting has voted to dissolve after nearly 60 years due to federal funding cuts and political pressure. The dissolution follows an executive order and a bill signed by ...
This means the CPB is officially shutting down months after Congress passed spending cuts that stripped it of more than $1 billion in funding.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting will shut down after funding cuts. Will it impact PBS, NPR and Ohio public media stations?
The organization which distributed funding to PBS, NPR and other public stations lost funding over the summer.
The decision follows a $1.1 billion funding rescission, ending the organization that has supported NPR, PBS and local ...