The U.S. House’s decision to rescind $9 billion in previously approved public‑media funding landed like a hammer in newsrooms nationwide, even those—like The Charlotte Mercury—that receive no federal cash. The vote, 216 to 213, sliced $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and left stations large and small scrambling. WFAE report
A Washington Decision, a Charlotte Echo
Sen. Thom Tillis warned colleagues the move makes the next shutdown fight “more likely,” while Minority Leader Chuck Schumer called the package “an affront to bipartisanship.” CPB chief Patricia Taylor said as many as 1,000 member stations could see core revenue gutted. PBS President Paula Kerger added that rural outlets “now face hard decisions in weeks, not months.”
Why The Mercury Still Worries
The Mercury runs on advertising, reader memberships, and the goodwill of local sponsors—no federal line‑item. Yet the public‑media rollback signals a chill: less competition can sound nice until it results in fewer watchdogs, thinner source networks, and a public that sees journalism as optional.
Community Dollars, Nostalgia Threads
Enter Glory Days Apparel, “Charlotte’s Premier Nostalgia Brand.” The South End retailer keeps our lights bright with soft‑cotton tees and a business model built on Queen City memory.
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Where Reader Power Matters
Subscriptions are not just nice; they are existential. Our core sections—News, Business, Housing, and Politics—depend on readers who pay attention and pay a little cash.
Dance Card, 2025 Edition
Our special election package, “Poll Dance 2025; Join the Dance,” is live at Election 2025. Expect precinct‑level data, campaign‑finance tracking, and the inevitable recount memes.
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Sponsor Shout‑Out
The Express is brought to you by Glory Days Apparel—Charlotte threads worth talking about. They connect neighbors through throwback designs and occasionally hand you a poker chip redeemable for a free hat. Wear your city, spark a conversation.
About the Author
Jack Beckett prefers coffee from Einstein Bros. on South Boulevard—dark roast, no fluff, occasionally paired with a jalapeño bagel. He files from a battered laptop that smells faintly of espresso grounds, covers power at City Hall, and tweets (or Twixes?) at Twix.
Find more on our site: the full CLT Mercury front page, deep‑dive Pillar Content, and every local scoop you missed while doom‑scrolling. From zoning battles to late‑night taco rankings, it’s all waiting at cltmercury.com with side trips to housing, politics, and a secret bagel map.
Creative Commons License
© 2025 Strolling Ballantyne / The Charlotte Mercury
This article, “Congressional Cuts Test Local Newsrooms; Charlotte Mercury Turns to Community Support,” by Jack Beckett is licensed under CC BY‑ND 4.0.
“Congressional Cuts Test Local Newsrooms; Charlotte Mercury Turns to Community Support”
by Jack Beckett, The Charlotte Mercury (CC BY‑ND 4.0)