PBS Shutters DEI Office

PBS closing office under the advice of legal counsel to comply with President Trump’s executive order

PBS closing office under the advice of legal counsel to comply with President Trump’s executive order

Share
PBS Shutters DEI Office
Copy

PBS is shuttering its Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI) office after President Trump last month issued executive orders aimed at curtailing DEI workplace initiatives.

“In order to best ensure we are in compliance with the President’s executive order around Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion we have closed our DEI office,” the public broadcaster said in a statement shared with NPR via email.

“The staff members who served in that office are leaving PBS. We will continue to adhere to our mission and values. PBS will continue to reflect all of America and remain a welcoming place for everyone.”

A memo from PBS president and CEO Paula Kerger that was shared with NPR says that on the advice of PBS’ legal counsel, the DEI office was closed and DEI staffers Gina Leow and Cecilia Loving are leaving PBS.

During his first term, Trump tried unsuccessfully on several occasions to axe or drastically reduce funding for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which is a funder of both PBS and NPR.

According to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting website, more than 70% of its annual federal appropriation goes directly to more than 1,500 local public media stations. In fiscal year 2023, CPB says its funding constituted around 10% of the average public television station’s total revenue and 6% of the average public radio station’s revenue.

NPR also has a diversity office and dedicated DEI employees. It has not responded to requests for comment about whether it is considering closing the office.

The Federal Communications Commission is currently investigating PBS, NPR and their member stations’ underwriting amid Trump Administration concerns that sponsorship messages may be in violation of federal law prohibiting noncommercial educational stations from broadcasting commercials.

In addition, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the chair of the Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency (DOGE), has requested that PBS CEO Paula Kerger and NPR CEO Katherine Maher testify at a hearing in March concerning public media’s funding and journalism practices.

Disclosure: This story was reported and written by NPR Correspondent Chloe Veltman and edited by Culture Editor Jennifer Vanasco and Managing Editors Vickie Walton-James and Gerald Holmes. Under NPR’s protocol for reporting on itself, no corporate official or news executive reviewed this story before it was posted publicly.

Copyright 2025 NPR.

Museum curator Melaine Ferdinand-King says the museum will highlight the cultural and historical contributions of Black Rhode Islanders
Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee lauded the bystanders who stopped a mass shooting in Pawtucket and called the team ‘an inspiration for all Rhode Islanders’
A Providence chef and cocktail bar move into the final round of the 2026 James Beard Awards
Without stoves or modern tools, participants learned to prep a full 18th-century meal over an open flame in a historic Rhode Island home
In Los Angeles, a new crop of curbside libraries are helping communities recover after last year’s wildfires. But instead of books, these libraries are full of seeds
The fires will return from May through November, featuring a milestone 500th lighting and themed nights