
aberkowitz
Audioholic Field Marshall
I was curious so I checked out PBS' financial statements for 2007. This company is clearly no longer being run as a simple non-for-profit that puts on television programming. First of all- they "made" $101 million in 2007, an increase from $81 in 2006, and as of year-end they are actually sitting on $28 million in excess cash. When you include short-term investments (E.g. money markets and maturing bonds) and cash equivalents, they have over $115 million in cash on hand. Remember, this is a company with tax-exempt status... every dollar of expense they cut goes directly to adding to their net assets.
They also have another $190 million in investments (long term bonds and equities), against a grand total of $20 million in debt and $12 million in future lease obligations (which gets marked as a liability).
The only restriction they have is that a number of their assets come with earmarks- meaning they have to be used specifically for programming, technology, specific types of shows, etc. However since 90-95% of their expenses are classified as "programming", it doesn't seem that hard to meet these "restrictions".
From a financial standpoint, this organization is doing remarkably well and certainly doesn't look or act like most non-for-profit organizations that you'll see on a regular basis. If I was reviewing this budget from a government standpoint (looking solely at financials and their mission statement), I absolutely would question the amount of federal funding that they get and whether it could be trimmed. This company has been very well-prepared for a long time against a cut of federal funding, seems like they've expected it, and the company is financially run to be independent of it. I'm not surprised that they would be on the list to have funding cut... they are almost TOO well run!
They also have another $190 million in investments (long term bonds and equities), against a grand total of $20 million in debt and $12 million in future lease obligations (which gets marked as a liability).
The only restriction they have is that a number of their assets come with earmarks- meaning they have to be used specifically for programming, technology, specific types of shows, etc. However since 90-95% of their expenses are classified as "programming", it doesn't seem that hard to meet these "restrictions".
From a financial standpoint, this organization is doing remarkably well and certainly doesn't look or act like most non-for-profit organizations that you'll see on a regular basis. If I was reviewing this budget from a government standpoint (looking solely at financials and their mission statement), I absolutely would question the amount of federal funding that they get and whether it could be trimmed. This company has been very well-prepared for a long time against a cut of federal funding, seems like they've expected it, and the company is financially run to be independent of it. I'm not surprised that they would be on the list to have funding cut... they are almost TOO well run!