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| Forte User Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Atlanta, GA
Posts: 2,405
![]() | Minnesota Public Radio Minneapolis StarTribune Article Minnesota Public Radio May Skip Tax Money Rather Than Make Salary Data Public Posted by Tim Graham on February 19, 2006 - 07:15. One of the annoying things conservatives discover when they spend any time studying public broadcasting is how much cash pub-casting bosses take home even as they beg struggling audience members for donations (and ever more taxpayer funds). The Minneapolis Star Tribune reports that Minnesota Public Radio may forego $190,000 in state tax money rather than disclose how many MPR execs make more than $100,000. One sharp Republican legislator (my hero!) is saying you want the money, you disclose your salary info: Thomas Kigin, MPR executive vice president, said MPR would ask legislators to change the law. Asked if it might forgo the state money should the disclosure provision remain, Kigin said, "It's possible." Rep. Marty Seifert, R-Marshall, who pushed last year for the law requiring the salary disclosure, said inaction on the grant by MPR may reflect its opposition to complying with the disclosure provision. "They don't want the taxpayers to know this or they would have unveiled this information like the accountability language requires," Seifert said. MPR says it discloses plenty of data about compensation and that giving a complete listing of all employees making six figures would invade privacy. But Seifert said the new disclosure requirement would only force MPR to reveal how many positions pay more than $100,000 a year and wouldn't disclose names. To give you some context, Minnesota Public Radio is a public-radio fat cat that makes millions of dollars through its national "Wireless" catalogue merchandising business. It has enough money that in the early 1990s, it bought one of Minneapolis's biggest hit-radio stations, WLOL-FM at 99.5, and plopped an NPR station right in the middle of the FM dial. Marty Seifert explained why he put this salary-disclosure requirement into law last year: Seifert said he focused on MPR because he was bothered by the more than $500,000 in annual compensation for its president and CEO, William Kling, for work at MPR and another media organization. Seifert said that MPR content was not a factor. He said the other broadcast organizations had assured him that few or none of their employees earned more than $100,000. MPR, like other nonprofits, must disclose many compensation details in federal tax return forms that are available to the public. The forms list names and salaries of the five highest-paid employees and of officers or trustees. On the 2004 tax return, MPR listed the names and salaries of 13 officers or trustees, 12 of whom earned more than $100,000. Kling received $326,700 in salary, pension and benefits, and incentive compensation at MPR. He earns roughly an additional $218,000 from American Public Media Group, the parent company of MPR. The top five highest-paid employees earned from $117,845 to $174,040, plus benefits and deferred compensation. "It's tough for me to justify spending hard-earned tax dollars on an organization that claims to be nonprofit and gives its top executives that type of money," Seifert said. Now let's stipulate that in the nonprofit world, major executives can make hefty salaries, in liberal groups and conservative groups. But at least most ideological groups aren't also operating largely on federal and state taxpayer dollars. Seifert expressed the principle that executives like Kling shouldn't be making more money than the Governor of Minnesota. What do you think Manny, RJZ, GZent and the rest of you folks? |
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| Mezzo Forte User Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Saint Paul, MN
Posts: 780
![]() | i never have supported and never will. for all the things that you mentioned alex. and they have the ability to buy out their competitor (wcal) what do they need pledge money for. i have other issues too, the programming seems rather limited, no full lenghth mahler or bruckner symphonies, a lot of repeats in a very short time.
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Forte User Join Date: Dec 2005 Location: Minnesota
Posts: 1,273
![]() | They don't want to play ball, they should get no public $$.
__________________ ![]() “If there must be trouble, let it be in my day so that my child may have peace.” Thomas Paine 1737-1809 “That’s all the bullets we had, or we would have shot him more,” Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Forte User | I've never been a huge fan of NPR or of MPR, though they do provide us a musical service few other stations or networks can. I enjoy "Car Talk", "The Thisle and Shamrok" (though It's been a while, so I'm not even sure if it's still on air or not), and similar shows. And the MO broadcasts are a real treat. But it has always bothered me that these places launch massive pledge drives almost as often as I get a haircut (which, if you've seen my lid, you'd know that's pretty danged often) and still soak down insane sums of money from federal and state coffers. Either you're supported by the public through taxes, or your support by the public through pledges and donations. Now, I don't mind offering up money for good programming to help out a struggling station, but that doesn't seem the case around here. I better stop before I get worked up here. Very interesting post, Alex. I guess it just rips me that every time something "non-profit" rears its head, we find out the people at the top are milking it for every last penny. It's telling that they have no worries about giving up $190,000 just to keep payroll info confidential. Once more, we see how people look at government funding as an entitlement instead of a support or grant mechanism. I....aw....nevermind. Z
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