Home WMRA needs your help to get through tough times
Local

WMRA needs your help to get through tough times

Chris Graham

It was “pretty obvious” by early December that the short-term budget hole that WMRA was in was not like any other that Tom DuVal had experienced in his 13 years as the general manager at the public-radio station.
It’s just basic math, really. Listener support has generally held steady, which you might not expect at first glance when talking about being in a period of economic recession. It’s been the underwriting support from the business and organization sectors that has been the biggest punch in the gut, that and the $15,000 in cuts from the state in calendar year 2008.

Where that leaves WMRA and its sister station WEMC is staring at a projected $75,000 budget shortfall that could force some tough decisions on programming and staffing at the Harrisonburg-based radio station.

“We could just say, We’re going to continue with the status quo and hope that we’ll raise that much more than we anticipate, than we have conservatively estimated that we’ll raise at this point. The problem is that if three months from now we’re not doing that, it’s a lot harder to make up the difference in two or three months than it is in six months with cuts. You’ve got to cut more deeply then to get things to balance,” DuVal told me.

The talk of a projected $75,000 shortfall is actually good news, if you can believe that. As of this time last month, it was looking more like a $200,000 shortfall in the current fiscal year for WMRA, which operates on a July 1-June 30 budget year.

DuVal and the staff at WMRA decided to go public with the station’s plight in mid-December, and an uptick in support the last months of the last month of ’08 and the first week of ’09 have shown some promise of light at the end of an otherwise dark tunnel.

“We’re still making the appeals. Somebody walked in yesterday and wrote a check for a thousand dollars, said I’ve been hearing the message, and I wanted to see what I could do. So the money is still coming in every day. But we’re not out of the woods yet, by any means,” DuVal said.

 

– Story by Chris Graham

Support AFP




Chris Graham

Chris Graham

Chris Graham is the founder and editor of Augusta Free Press. A 1994 alum of the University of Virginia, Chris is the author and co-author of seven books, including Poverty of Imagination, a memoir published in 2019. For his commentaries on news, sports and politics, go to his YouTube page, TikTok, BlueSky, or subscribe to Substack or his Street Knowledge podcast. Email Chris at [email protected].

Latest News

james cox waynesboro
Local

Waynesboro: Local man arrrested, faces five child porn charges

mike parme bard college
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Bard College alum Mike Parme named director of analytics

After promoting Matt Hart from director of analytics to a newly-created GM position on his staff, UVA Basketball coach Ryan Odom hired Mike Parme to the analytics post, the school announced on Wednesday.

donald trump healthcare
Local, Politics

Doctors, nurses will be out in force in Charlottesville to protest MAGA healthcare cuts

You might see a bunch of doctors, nurses and other medical professionals in their white coats and scrubs on the Downtown Mall in Charlottesville on Friday evening.

phone handcuffs arrest photograph camera spying
Politics

Albemarle County man arrested on child sex charges dating to 2005

teen student school healthy food lunch
Local

Staunton: School system announces 2026 Summer Meal Service Program schedule

donald trump
Politics, U.S. & World

John Whitehead: If this is winning, America can’t afford much more of it

ridgeview stream photos
Local

Augusta County: Residents raise issue with dangerous stormwater channel