OK, I have not talked about any of the funding cuts just because I don't want to get political (and we're not supposed to on R-D). I will probably get downvoted to oblivion for some of the things I say.
NRB has a point. They want to spread the Gospel into other parts of the country that do not have a religious FM station. However, there needs to be a balance between the non-commercial religious FMs vs. secular and public FMs that serve communities.
If NRB supports VCY, AFR and others buying up NPR stations in the dozens and piping in a satellite format, I'm NOT supporting that. I do support local voices that spread the love of Jesus Christ in their communities through the radio. Shut-ins and those "on the fence", those that want to go all in with God but are on the kiddie end of the pool, really need to have a friendly voice from their hometown (or nearby) that can reach them. VCY IS NOT A LOCAL VOICE, NOR IS K-LOVE. Sorry. The pet peeve I have about Christian radio is how many LOCAL voices we are losing. Salem sold their Christian Contemporary stations to K-LOVE, and that meant several markets lost their hometown Christian station to a national satellite-caster. I'll use this analogy.
Would you rather go to a local congregation on Sunday morning that goes out in the community, helps at food banks and soup kitchens, cleans parks and community spaces, and does special events benefitting non-profit organizations? This is what KTSY (Boise), Positive Life Radio (eastern WA and OR), Shine 104.9 (Spokane), etc. are.
Or would you rather have a Lakewood Church in every town...except that it's just an auditorium, a satellite dish, and Joel Osteen on a giant screen. That's K-LOVE, AFR, VCY, BBN.
Churches could work up some time, prayers, and money to start their own radio ministry if they so choose. Some already do.
As for NPR, I can understand why the cuts happened (Republicans claim they have biased reporting). One thing I will say is that I don't really care for NPR's news programming. I haven't listened for years. HOWEVER...I'm not anti-NPR...their music programming is excellent. I really hope there are enough supporters of Jazz Night in America, Mountain Stage with Kathy Mattea, and the PubJazz service (heard locally on KBSK McCall) to keep them going for the foreseeable future. NPR does an excellent job with the music programming, and commercial FMs can't come close.
I'll stop for now.