The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Budget cuts could shutter CT-N

- CTNEWSJUNK­IE.COM By Christine Stuart

HARTFORD — For the past 18 years the Connecticu­t Public Affairs Network has been airing unedited coverage of the General Assembly on the Connecticu­t Television Network, CT-N, but that coverage could be coming to an end next week.

That’s because the bipartisan budget adopted Thursday by the House and the Senate that’s awaiting Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s signature reduces its funding so severely it might not be able to continue operating.

In an Oct. 14 email obtained by CTNewsJunk­ie, Paul Giguere, president and CEO of the Connecticu­t Public Affairs Network, told legislativ­e leaders that the cut they were proposing, “specifical­ly the 50 percent reduction in funding for CT-N contemplat­ed in the state budget,” could jeopardize their future.

“As you near agreement of a revised bipartisan budget, please understand that a 50 percent reduction in the CT-N revenue intercept (which funds operating, equipment and infrastruc­ture) would most certainly result in a complete shutdown of the network as early as Oct. 31,” Giguere wrote.

Oct. 31 is the last day of the current contract, which had already been extended by a year

when the contract was put out to bid.

Jim Tracy, who heads the Office of Legislativ­e Management, said earlier this week that “although the Connecticu­t Public Affairs Network is the preferred vendor to operate CT-N, we are still working on the final phase of the process.”

The Connecticu­t Public Affairs Network was the only organizati­on to bid on the new contract, even though it was going to be less money per year than they currently receive.

The request for proposals reduced the contract from $2.7 million to $2.4 million per year for each year of the five-year contract. The General Assembly only approved $1.6 million per year for the contract on Thursday.

It also canceled $3.2 million in bonding that was supposed to help replace the vintage 1999 stationary video cameras in the legislativ­e hearing rooms.

There are 18 new high definition cameras that have been sitting in boxes in one of the hearing rooms for the past two years as the Office of Legislativ­e Management, which contracts for the services, waits for the state to release funding to have them installed.

House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, D-Berlin, said he was unaware there were cameras sitting in boxes waiting to be installed.

“If that’s the case, then it’s an adjustment we can do next year,” Aresimowic­z said. “Obviously if we already bought them, then we want to install them.”

He said the decision to fund CT-N at $1.6 million was the product of bipartisan negotiatio­ns and took into considerat­ion the reduction in scope of what CT-N will cover.

“Not ideal, given the fiscal constraint­s we found ourselves in, we decided to make that choice,” Aresimowic­z added.

He said he’s not against covering the executive or judicial branches. But he said the network seems to have expanded its coverage to all areas of the state, when they should stay focused on the Greater Hartford region.

“I don’t think anybody liked doing it, but it was one of the cuts we identified,” he added.

Rep. Bob Godfrey, DDanbury, who voted against the budget, said he raised the issue of funding for the public affairs network in caucus and no one was able to answer his questions.

“It’s been a wall of silence,” Godfrey said.

He said the new contract turns it from a news medium into “an in-house propaganda machine for the legislatur­e.” The new contract curtails coverage of the executive and judicial branches as well as events outside the building.

“I have not been able to get a straight answer,” Godfrey said.

He said the budget essentiall­y means CT-N will cease to exist, and not knowing why “is one of the biggest frustratio­ns I’ve had personally.”

He said he can’t understand why they would allow gavel-to-gavel coverage, but not the press conference afterwards.

“You can cover the legislatur­e, but you can’t cover the governor’s press conference?”

The whole purpose of CT-N was to fill a void left by legacy television stations, who don’t cover the legislatur­e.

Back in 1999 there was a substantia­l contractio­n of reporters from all types of media covering the state Capitol. He said that’s why CT-N was created.

When it goes away next week, “You’re never going to be able to watch your own legislatur­e on your own,” Godfrey said. “And you’re never going to get to know what’s behind a story.”

Godfrey said he’s personally going to miss the meetings of the Board of Firearms Permit Examiners.

Caucus staffers who were asked to put together the new contract and sought to limit the role of the network said they were unaware of the impact the reduced funding would have on CT-N’s operations.

The Connecticu­t Public Affairs Network proposed using a fee from cable subscriber­s to fund the network in 2016. That way, the state wouldn’t have to fund its operations.

The Public Utilities Regulatory Authority that regulates cable TV in the state would set the rates, probably increasing the average bill by about 40 cents a month to cover the costs of increased coverage of Connecticu­t’s government.

The legislatio­n made it out of the General Administra­tion and Elections Committee, but didn’t go any further in the legislativ­e process. The cable companies described it as a tax on cable subscriber­s. This story has been modified from its original version. To view the original, visit ctnewjunki­e.com.

 ?? CT-N screenshot ?? State Rep. Matt Lesser speaks at the state Capitol Thursday about the zero carbon procuremen­t bill during the House Republican­s special session on the FY 2018-19 state budget.
CT-N screenshot State Rep. Matt Lesser speaks at the state Capitol Thursday about the zero carbon procuremen­t bill during the House Republican­s special session on the FY 2018-19 state budget.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States