jfc40ts said:
VOR may know Mr. Silverstein and find him personally repugnant, but I think the wrath is directed at him due to his position at WXXI and all the tangibles associated with it. In other words, if VOR was in Buffalo, the wrath would be directed at the CEO of WNED.
I'm a regular viewer of this site and hope I haven't offended VOR or anyone else here. What seems obvious to me seems to be more complex to others. Hope my take helps Bob1370 and others...
First of all you have not offended me. I've been taking the heat here for the longest time regarding my views on overpaid not-for-profit CEO's.
As for your first point, there is no personal "beef" between myself and Mr. Silverstein. I just honestly feel that if the general public was made aware of just how much money some executives at these stations made they would be shocked.
Let's look at this from another perspective. I just read in a New York City newspaper that a superintendent of schools was pulling down a yearly salary of $500,000. Now be honest here, how would you feel if this happened in the school district you lived in; especially if your school taxes were going up an average of three percent every year?
I will repeat once again that I do not have anything against public broadcasting. For years I personally donated to my local public television and radio stations. However when I discovered the amount of money being paid out to a few executives I raised the question why so much? That is when the avalanche of criticism came crashing down on my head for me to question why such high salaries and benefits are paid to the heads of not-for-profit organizations.
As for taxpayer dollars being spent to fund CPR, PBS, NPR, one should take a hard look at what faces this country when it comes to the "fiscal cliff" that is fast approaching. The reality is that the federal government is either going to tax the hell out of us, or cut back spending on programs. And if you don't think public broadcasting is among those programs that will lose federal funding, then you are in for a major shock. Lets put it another way. Would you rather see your Social Security, Medicare, and similar programs lose federal funding, or instead see the elimination of federal dollars for Public Broadcasting? If a poll was taken I am willing to bet that a vast majority would choose the latter when it comes to cutting back or eliminating taxpayer dollars.
The answer for the survival of public broadcasting is quite simple. For those who enjoy programs from PBS and NPR, then write a check and support those stations. If some stations fail, so be it. Failure in the business world happens all the time. How many commercial stations over the years have had to close their doors? Look at the station in Hornell as an example.
$400,000 a year (more than the governor of New York State makes) plus benefits is just too much money in my opinion to pay someone who is constantly on the air, or writing newspaper editorials, bemoaning the financial plight of public broadcasting.