I hope most of posters here are not running stations. All I know is when 70% of billing left during Covid in commercial radio, we survived on the rainy day fund we had without a layoff. In fact, we had the opportunity to hire a seasoned journalist to do local news during all of this and did. We never had a cutback all through Covid (and if someone quit, exising employees got to pick up the slack for extra cash). In fact, I took on another task 15 hours a week. I guess for most posters here, losing 20% of your revenue means you should fire everyone, lock the door and go home. I was always taught that you find a way and you bust your butt to make it happen. If you have nothing in reserve to sustain you for the long haul, maybe you should fall by the wayside. Let me exclude the few NCEs in places where the population cannot sustain a shoestring budget. My point here is the world falling apart is just BS. If NCEs were all that close to the edge, they would have all gone away before the funding had. If all you're doing is moaning about losing money, you sure are not spending your time trying to find what went away. If that's the case, I can almost guarantee you'll go under.
I only know a few non-comms and in my opinion their employee roster is quite bloated. Too many people doing only one thing (and doing it well I might add) but capable of doing more without a sacrifice in quality. Obviously the plan has to be sharing resources with other NCEs in the region and to do so in a way that you don't have to have a bunch of layoffs.
What is not mentioned here is the bulk of CPB dollars go to TV. If you want to hear me talk doom and gloom, I will with NCE TV. Funding for children's programs and documentaries and such are lost. The TV end of NCE has had a tough time as of late and that just got tougher. The TV side likely will have to make more drastic reforms to survive.
Last, you don't have to be a statistic. At my AM (with translator) we are doing 50% more revenue a year than pre-Covid. How'd we do that? First we weren't sucked in to radio is dead and AM is rotting. We don't buy into translators being worth nothing. We're the #1 station is our county out of 50 sations recived and we set new revenue records each year. That's because we refuse to believe the doomsayers and are determined to create our own success. We could lose 20% and not bat an eye, not that we're rolling in money but rather smartly programmed, sold by building relationships and operated by a brilliant owner who loves radio as much as I do. My point is you can get under the cloud of defeat or rise above it to be the exception.
P.S. Thank you left leaning posters for telling me what I think as a conservative. I have no idea what you think. Don't have the time to watch your every move and poll to tell you what you think. Then again, I hope you don't think I fit your stereotype 90%+ of the time. I know that screws up your mindset but that's reality.