PolicyIndustry TrendMay 5, 2026
Cord-cutting threatens public access TV funding nationwide
Public access channels in the U.S. are facing potential funding cuts from cable providers. This is due to a decline in cable TV subscriptions, which previously supported a vital revenue source for these local stations.
Key Takeaways
- Cable TV subscriptions have been a vital revenue source for public access channels.
- As more people cut the cord, that support base is shrinking.
- The article frames the issue as a nationwide risk for local public access stations.
- No companies, executives, or station names are identified in the source.
Why It Matters
The immediate effect is straightforward: less cable subscription revenue means less money for public access channels that rely on that funding. For the broader streaming ecosystem, this is another example of cord-cutting weakening legacy distribution-era revenue models, even for local and public-interest services. The article does not name specific operators or stations, so the key thing to watch is whether any funding changes are announced as cable subscriptions continue to fall.
Read full article at democracynow.org