Is NPR Special – Or Just Another Non Profit Getting Fat and
Ugly
It is bad enough to suffer the attacks of right wing
critics, but even worse is to provide those critics with the gun, ammunition
and a clear target. Yet this is just
what National Public Radio has done in
building a new, expensive luxurious headquarters building in D.C.
NPR's $200 million palace - Built with support from people like you (and I) - people who may be fools. |
First of all they didn’t just build an office building, they
built a palace.
NPR’s gleaming new headquarters building in the shadow of the
Capitol in Washington has soaring ceilings, a “wellness” center, an employee
gym and a gourmet cafe staffed by a resident chef.
.
Oh but they say, this wasn’t built with taxpayer money,
NPR
officials point out, the new headquarters wasn’t financed with tax dollars, at
least not directly. The organization raised funds through a combination of
tax-free bonds, individual donations and the proceeds from the sale of its old
building.
But yes some taxpayer subsidization was involved.
the
District granted $40 million in tax abatements and froze property taxes on the
site for 20 years as part of a deal to keep NPR from moving out of the city.
NPR had considered a site in Silver Spring .
Having a building in downtown Washington is about the most expensive way
to go. And those of us who support NPR
and its mission are certainly going to think twice about making any
contributions to an organization so politically tone deaf, so lacking in understanding
of what it means to be a non-profit and so possessing a feeling of entitlement
that it would lavish itself with a luxury building.
NPR now joins the ranks of other national non-profits who
think that the public support, whether from tax dollars or contributions
entitle them to pay huge salaries to executive, to have great benefits and to
provide employees with the Taj Mahal of office space. Maybe it’s a disease of post-modern America , maybe
this disease has no cure.
Mitt Romney, when asked to come up with cost savings
famously said he would cut support for public radio, a statement that only
revealed his utter ignorance on public policy (the elimination of the federal
subsidy would not make the slightest dent in public spending or the national
debt). But as a cultural issue maybe
Mitt was on to something. Maybe all of
us should redirect our efforts and support only those local groups that we know
are using the money to fund its mission, not to fund a workplace palace.
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