NPR is slashing jobs and restructuring its newsroom as the public-radio giant grapples with a financial crunch fueled by federal funding cuts, weakening station revenue and dramatic changes in how Americans consume news.
The nonprofit broadcaster told staff this week that roughly 300 employees, mostly on newsgathering desks, are eligible for voluntary buyouts as executives scramble to close an $8 million budget gap.
NPR management expects only about 30 employees to accept the buyouts voluntarily, meaning layoffs in the 425-strong newsroom could follow if too few workers opt in.
The downsizing comes during a grim moment for the news biz, with the Washington Post seeing brutal cuts and CBS News launching layoffs earlier this year.
NPR’s crisis traces back at least to last summer, when Congress voted to eliminate roughly $1.1 billion in funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, dealing a massive blow to local stations that pay NPR for programming.
Though NPR has long said direct federal grants account for less than 1% of its budget, the organization depends heavily on fees from member stations, many of which are now under severe financial strain.
NPR CEO Katherine Maher told staff the organization expects a $15 million drop in station-fee revenue while sponsorship revenue is also softening amid economic uncertainty and declining radio listening.
The exec has become a lightning rod for conservatives, who have accused her of bringing lefty politics into public broadcasting.
Maher, a former chief of Wikimedia Foundation who took over NPR in 2024, has drawn backlash for past comments describing the First Amendment as “the number one challenge” in combating misinformation, as well as old social-media posts criticizing President Trump and echoing progressive activist rhetoric.
Her leadership became a focal point in the broader conservative campaign against NPR after longtime editor Uri Berliner accused the outlet of ideological groupthink and liberal bias in a widely circulated essay last year.
Republican lawmakers and critics cited Maher’s record while pushing to eliminate federal funding for NPR and PBS.
The newsroom overhaul is set to reshape NPR’s editorial structure dramatically.
National and general-assignments desks will merge, according to NPR Editor-in-Chief Thomas Evans. Culture, education, religion, addiction and sports coverage will be consolidated into a single society-and-culture desk, he said.
Science and climate coverage will also combine, while global health reporting will move under the international desk, under the new plan.
NPR is also eliminating its regional bureau chief structure and replacing it with a centralized “Regions & Stations” desk designed to coordinate local and national reporting.
The cuts mark NPR’s second major retrenchment in recent years. In 2023, the network axed about 10% of its workforce after a projected deficit exceeded $30 million.
This time, however, NPR is confronting broader industry changes as audiences increasingly shift toward podcasts, video, social media and AI-generated search results instead of traditional radio broadcasts.
Reuters Institute’s 2025 Digital News Report found social and video platforms now reach more Americans for news than television or news websites.
Podcast listening has also surged. Edison Research found 73% of Americans age 12 and older have consumed a podcast in either audio or video form.
At the same time, AI-generated search summaries are reducing traffic to publishers’ websites. NPR executives have warned internally that AI-enhanced search has caused referrals to NPR.org to “all but” disappear in some cases.
The cuts are landing as local-news ecosystems continue to weaken nationwide.
According to Medill School of Journalism’s 2025 “State of Local News” report, the US now has 213 news-desert counties — meaning they have no professional news outlet covering them — while nine counties rely on public radio as their only local news source.
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