Attached, for those whom it might interest is a letter I sent in response to our local public radio stations letter soliciting a supplemental contribution, which followed almost on the heels of an announcement that its morning classical music format was being pulled in favor of "Morning Edition" and "Weekend Edition", programs that are currently available on another station in our listening area. May 30, 1999 WETA P.O. Box 2600 Washington, DC 20077-4778 Att'n: Ms. Sharon Percy Rockefeller, President and CEO, and Ms. Susan Richmond, Senior Vice President Dear Ms. Percy and Ms. Richmond: I thought I should explain to you why, after years of being a loyal contributor to WETA, I returned your "1999 Fiscal Year-End Fund Reply" form with no contribution. It's because I'm still in a state of shock at WETA's unilateral announcement of its curtailment of classical music without any significant attempt to obtain listener input (compared with your intense efforts to contact listeners on the air and by mail when you are looking for money). While you say that your program will still offer about 15 hours a day of classical music, it is clear that, if you can cut it back to fifteen, you can cut it back to ten, etc., and perhaps eventually, no classical music at all. This has happened in Philadelphia, New York, Denver, and Takoma Park among other places I know of, and, in view of the lack of apparent necessity for your change, I have no assurance that it won't happen here. From a listener's point of view, I see no reason for substituting three hours of "Morning Edition" (which is available on another station if I want to listen to it) for the classical music program you had previously. I am desolated that "Sunday Baroque", one of your finest, most original, classical programs, has been cut back to the early hours of Sunday morning, where I will no longer be hearing it. Your morning classical music programs gave periodic hourly, sometimes half-hourly news broadcasts and weather reports, with late breaking developments broadcast as they came in, thus keeping the classical music listener fully aware of the important matters that had occurred since the previous day. I enjoy some of your non classical music programs like the BBC's "My Word" and "My Music" and "Car Talk" and "The Savvy Traveler", but for me WETA has always been essentially, a classical music station and I sense this slipping away in some sort of public radio version of a ratings war. So far as I am aware, your source of revenue is not corporate advertisement, which depends upon ratings, but contributions from varying sources, including listeners. As I understand it, you don't get paid to broadcast "Morning Edition" or "Weekend Edition"; to the contrary, you have to purchase those programs. Therefore, while I realize that, "once the gods have spoken", it is unlikely that there is going to be a reversal or even a revision of WETA's program changes any time soon, I'm expressing my dismay to you in the language I think you come closest to understanding, a withholding of financial support. Sincerely, Walter Meyer