Are programs/funding supposed to just lurch along simply because it has for 50-plus years?
Once a law is written, it continues to be in place until it's repealed. That's how the government works. In this case, the law is still there. It wasn't repealed or even amended. All they did was defund it for two years. So in two years, the funding can be put back.
In this case, every year, CPB goes to congress for a new request for funding. They did it last year. The funding was evaluated and approved in March. Then the president demanded it get removed. Here is a link to the presentation CPB made to congress for funding:
Then every year, all of the radio & TV stations have to apply for funding. They have to fill out a government form, they have to meet qualifications, and then CPB decides if the grant should be approved. The president says that system is biased. Rather than fix the system, amend the law, or repeal it, they just defunded it.
There are hundreds of laws that operate this way. Laws that deal with health care, social security, and education. People depend on these laws to be there and protect them. There's a level of personal security people have from that kind of consistency. Am I right?
As we all know, public TV got out of in-school instructional programming decades ago, as that use was one of the original reasons for the related legislation over 50 years ago.
The in-school instruction pre-dates the public broadcasting act. Even in the 60s, this use of TV in the classroom was becoming dated. If you read the public broadcasting act, there is nothing in it that deals with in school instruction. The main thing it does is create PBS as a system of TV programming that is meant to be educational for everyone, regardless of age. That's why you have science programs like Nature or history programs like The Civil War and the other Ken Burns films.
This kind of TV still isn't done anywhere. The History Channel is filled with reality shows like Pawn Stars and American Pickers.
As a result, some reconsideration and pruning isn’t too much to ask for.
Absolutely, but that's not what was done here. Most of what you're talking about should be done at the state level. Maybe it'll happen now. But these funds weren't stopped because areas are oversaturated. I posted the actual text of why the funding was cut.