I
opened the Washington Post the other day and saw an
article detailing that National Public Radio (NPR), hit by the global
economic crisis, was preparing to lay off in March 2009 more than
60 staff and eliminating two major programs, one being “News
& Notes.”
“News
& Notes”, a program particularly targeted at people of color,
is hosted by Ms. Farai Chideya. In the interests of full disclosure
I must mention that I am regularly on the program, generally speaking
about Africa. Yet this was not what affected
me in reading about this tragedy. It was that “N&N” was a program
designed to reach audiences that NPR had previously either ignored
or been otherwise unable to connect with. Precisely because NPR
is National Public Radio it tends to cover
issues that are overlooked by or given short shrift by the mainstream
media. Nevertheless, NPR often has been criticized for giving insufficient
attention to the issues facing younger listeners and listeners of
color. It also has demonstrated little awareness of the fact that
the perspectives of people of color on issues of the day should
be incorporated into the programming of NPR.
The
questions that need to be asked are two-fold:
(1)what are we to make of the end of “N&N”, and
(2)what are the implications of the proposed termination of the
program?
NPR
states that the termination of this program is the result of the
downturn in the economy and the drying up of funds. I do not doubt
that this is the case. Virtually every non-profit institution is
suffering as a result of the battering that we are taking with the
financial crisis on Wall Street as well as overall tightening of
everyone’s belt.
Yet
the story should not stop there, and this relates to the implications.
In the world of work, there is a very long experience of “last hired,
first fired” when it comes to Black workers. We are very familiar
with this. In fact, in so many cases, the only reason that we have
been hired in many industries in the first place was/is because
of mass pressure, sometimes also involving litigation. This all
starts to unravel in bad economic times when, again and again, we
lose ground in the precious steps that we have made in the fight
for equity.
The
proposed end of “N&N” makes me think about “last hired, first
fired.” A bold and important initiative to reach audiences that
are either ignored or taken for granted, “News & Notes” has
been a very high quality program. Yet,
when times got tight, “N&N” is proposed to be thrown over board.
No,
this is not conscious racism. It is, however, a micro-aggression
against us. It is saying, once again, that efforts to be inclusive
can be considered optional, whereas reaching the traditional, aging
and mainly white audience should be considered the core mission
of the organization. I would suggest that this is or at least should
be, unacceptable.
It
is time that we speak loudly to NPR and insist that that they keep
“News & Notes.” Yes, NPR has journalists of color and that is
great, yet it is not enough, because these journalists do not necessarily
pick their stories. These journalists do not necessarily shape the
direction of investigations. “News & Notes” exposes the listener
not only to stories that range from the liberation struggle in the
Western Sahara to the implications of the foreclosure crisis on
people of color, but it also engages the voices of experts and activists
of color who are all too often marginalized by the mainstream media.
How
can we afford to lose this?
So,
if you want to do something and are as concerned and angry as I
am, then contact NPR’s Interim President and CEO Dennis Haarsager
at NPR [635 Massachusetts Avenue, NW//Washington, DC 20001].
You
can mail them or go to their website at www.npr.com and send in an email.
There is no room for silence. I am a bit tired of being marginalized.
BlackCommentator.com
Executive Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is a Senior Scholar with the
Institute
for Policy Studies, the immediate past president of TransAfrica Forum and co-author of, Solidarity Divided:
The Crisis in Organized Labor and a New Path toward Social Justice (University
of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor
in the USA. Click here to contact Mr. Fletcher. |