Following criticism over news bias, NPR has added editorial oversight to its newsroom. They are hiring 11 new people, paid for by an anonymous doner, to pay for the new staff:
In addition, the company's new CEO has met with a Republican Senator:
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The new oversight is in addition to the existing editorial process, as well as the company's ombudsman.
After criticism over “viewpoint diversity,” NPR adds new layers of editorial oversight
"We will all have to adjust to a new workflow. If it is a bottleneck, it will be a failure."
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NPR plans to hire 11 new employees to help enact the changes. Last year, it laid off around 10% of its staff, a total of around 100 people. An anonymous funder is “helping” to pay for the positions, The New York Times reported Thursday, but editor-in-chief Edith Chapin reportedly declined to elaborate on the source of the money when pressed by staff.
In addition, the company's new CEO has met with a Republican Senator:
NPR chief works to clean up public image with extra editorial review, meeting with GOP senator
NPR's CEO met with a Republican senator the same day NPR rolled out a new editorial layer at the publication after receiving an onslaught of criticism due to alleged bias.
"She acknowledged the problem, which I think is a pretty good first step," Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., said in an interview with Fox News Digital. "She pretty much validated the concerns that I raised."
The new oversight is in addition to the existing editorial process, as well as the company's ombudsman.