KQED, the Bay Area’s most notable public broadcaster, is expected to lay off between 18 and 25 employees after recently initiating staff buyout packages to help with a budget deficit, SFGATE has ...
KQED, the public broadcasting giant covering California, has laid off 45 people and accepted buyouts from 12 others, amounting to 15 percent of its workforce, according to an all-staff email sent ...
Nineteen staffers at KQED in San Francisco are being laid off, 11 are taking early retirement or voluntary buyouts, and four open jobs will not be filled, spokesperson Peter Cavagnaro confirmed.
KQED, the dual licensee in San Francisco, announced plans Tuesday to cut its workforce by 15% in an effort to stabilize its financial position. In total, 67 positions are being affected. The cuts ...
KQED in San Francisco acquired the podcast and public radio program Snap Judgment and its spin-off podcast Spooked. Snap Judgment, launched in 2010 and hosted by Glynn Washington, blends dramatic ...
KQED in San Francisco offered buyouts to staff earlier this month, according to an email obtained by Current, and aims to stabilize its financial position and seek a path towards sustainability.
KQED, one of the nation’s largest public media broadcasters serving the Bay Area, will reduce its workforce by 15%, the company announced Tuesday. “KQED is in the midst of one of the most difficult ...
KQED is initiating staff buyouts, an effort to reduce costs in the face of a budget deficit, SFGATE has learned. In an April 17 email to staff at the Bay Area’s best-known public broadcasting station, ...
SAN JOSE — KQED is closing its downtown San Jose office due to budget cuts, a move that leaves up in the air the future of the media outlet’s high-profile sign atop a prominent high-rise. The public ...
KQED in San Francisco is offering buyouts to staff to offset a budget deficit, CEO Michael Isip told staff in a Wednesday email obtained by Current. The station is offering an voluntary “early ...