Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG)
 offers rationale for in VOA, RFA and RFE/RL cuts to short-wave. Letitia
 King, spokesperson for BBG, provides the following reasons:
U.S.
 international media must optimize program delivery by market. We are 
ending some shortwave transmissions. We continue shortwave to those 
countries where these transmissions are still reaching significant 
audiences or where there are no reasonable alternative platforms at a 
lower cost to the BBG.
The shortwave reductions will save U.S. taxpayers almost $1.6 million annually.
There
 are no reductions in staff or programming – these are transmission 
platform reductions only. Programming continues to be available through 
other media.
Shortwave
 transmissions continue in many languages including to key shortwave 
markets like North Korea, Nigeria, Somalia, Horn of Africa, and 
elsewhere. (List enclosed below). Transmissions also continue on other 
platforms including AM, FM, TV and online.
VOA Azerbaijani
- Cuts: 30 minutes SW
-
 Continuing Distribution: Satellite TV (HotBird)and satellite audio 
(TurkSat); Multimedia web and mobile sites & social media
-
 SW is used by just 2% of adults weekly in Azerbaijan, and does not 
yield significant audiences for the service (0.4% weekly reach on radio 
in BBG’s most recent survey). By contrast, satellite dish ownership is 
widespread, at 56%, and 18% use the Internet weekly. The service has 
both satellite and online products, which are far more likely to reach 
audiences in Azerbaijan.
VOA Bangla
-  Cuts: 1 hour SW
-  Continuing Distribution: 1 hour MW(AM); FM and TV affiliates; Multimedia web and mobile sites; Social media
-
 SW is not widely used in Bangladesh (just 2% weekly), and the majority 
of the service’s audience comes to its programming via FM and TV 
affiliate networks in the country.
VOA English (in Asia)
-  Cuts: 6.5 hours SW (2 hours of programming that was repeated)
-  Continuing Distribution: Some MW; Multimedia web and mobile sites & social media
- 
 Outside of sub-Saharan Africa, English speakers are rarely users of 
shortwave radio. They are more likely to be educated and affluent, and 
to have access to a broad range of media. Years of BBG research 
questions on consumption of VOA English on shortwave have failed to find
 any significant audiences outside Africa, in large part because usage 
of shortwave radio in other regions is mostly very low.
VOA Lao
- Cuts: 30 minutes SW
-
 Continuing Distribution: 30 minutes MW; 7 affiliates in Thailand on Lao
 border, with reach into Laos; Multimedia web and mobile sites; Social 
media
- SW is very 
little-used in Laos – less than 1% of adults report listening to SW 
radio weekly. In BBG’s most recent research in Laos, no surveyed 
listeners reported using the SW band to access VOA content. A strong 
majority (66%) hear VOA on FM, through affiliate stations on the Thai 
border that carry VOA content (Laos is so small that border FM stations 
have decent penetration into the country).
VOA Special/Learning English
-  Cuts: 5.5 hours SW
-
 Continuing Distribution: Learning English programs continue on SW on 
English to Africa. 30 minutes MW; Multimedia web and mobile sites, 
including special interactive teaching products; Social media, including
 social English lessons
-
 BBG audience research indicates strong interest in learning English, 
but very limited shortwave listenership to VOA Learning English, outside
 a few select markets. The service is working more closely with other 
VOA language services to create English learning products for 
distribution on more popular channels. And Learning English offers a 
variety of digital products that are increasingly popular, including a 
Skype call-in show, videos on YouTube, and a website featuring both 
audio and transcripts for online audiences to follow as they listen.
VOA Uzbek
-  Cuts: 30 minutes SW
-
 Continuing Distribution: Satellite audio and TV (HotBird); FM and TV 
affiliates in neighboring countries; Multimedia web and mobile sites 
(with circumvention tools deployed); Social media
-
 SW is not widely used in Uzbekistan (just 2% weekly), and does not 
yield significant audiences for the service (0.3% weekly). Adults in 
Uzbekistan are much more likely to own a satellite dish (13%) or use the
 internet (12% weekly) than to use SW, so the service provides content 
on those platforms. Uzbekistan is an especially difficult market to 
penetrate with USIM content, but SW is not an effective platform for the
 country.
RFE/RL Persian (Farda)
-  Cuts: 1 simultaneous SW frequency for 6 broadcast hours
-
 Continuing Distribution: SW on multiple frequencies for all 24 
broadcast hours remains on, in addition to 24 hours daily MW; “Radio on 
TV” on VOA Persian stream; 24 hours daily satellite audio with slate 
plus 24 hour Audio on 4 other satellites including Hotbird, the most 
popular satellite in Iran; Multimedia website (with circumvention tools 
deployed); Social media; mobile app with anti-censorship proxy server 
capability built-in.
-
 This is only a reduction to the number of simultaneous frequencies 
during some of the broadcast day. SW radio, with 5% weekly use in 2012, 
is considerably less popular than other platforms on which audiences can
 access Farda content, such as MW (10% weekly use), satellite television
 (26% own a dish, and 33% watch satellite television weekly) or the 
internet (39% weekly use).
RFA Lao
- Cuts: 2 hours SW
-
 Continuing Distribution: 5 FM radio affiliates in Thailand provide 
cross-border coverage; Multimedia web & mobile sites; Social media
-
 SW is very little-used in Laos – less than 1% of adults report 
listening to SW radio weekly. RFA Lao’s listeners come overwhelmingly 
via FM stations on the Thai border – 94% of past-week listeners report 
hearing RFA on FM. (Laos is so small that border FM stations have decent
 penetration into the country).
RFA Vietnamese
-  Cuts: 2 hours SW
-
 Continuing Distribution: MW coverage of all broadcast hours remains on;
 Multimedia web and mobile sites (with circumvention tools deployed) 
include webcasts and other videos; Social media
-
 SW radio is very little-used in Vietnam – less than 1% of adults report
 any weekly use of the waveband, and RFA reaches just 0.2% of adults 
weekly on radio. MW is slightly more popular, but the future for USIM in
 Vietnam is likely online: 26% of Vietnamese use the Internet weekly now
 (with much higher rates among certain populations, like the young and 
the well-educated), and three in four personally own a mobile phone. 
While Vietnam attempts to block access to sensitive sites, Vietnam is 
actually the most active country in our most popular Internet 
Anti-Censorship tools with almost 600 million hits per day.
LANGUAGES THAT WILL CONTINUE ON SHORT-WAVE
VOA
    Afan Oromo/Amharic/Tigrigna to Ethiopia and Eritrea
    Bambara
    Burmese
    Cantonese
    Dari
    English to Africa
    English to South Sudan
    French to Africa
    Hausa
    Khmer
    Kinyarwanda/Kirundi
    Korean
    Kurdish
    Mandarin
    Pashto (to FATA and Afghanistan)
    Portuguese to Africa
    Somali
    Swahili
    Tibetan
    Shona/Ndebele/English to Zimbabwe
OCB
    Spanish to Cuba
RFE/RL
    Avar/Chechen/Circassian
    Belarusian
    Dari
    Pashto (to FATA and Afghanistan)
    Persian
    Russian
    Tajik
    Turkmen
    Uzbek
RFA
    Burmese
    Cantonese
    Khmer
    Korean
    Mandarin
    Tibetan
    Uyghur
MBN
    Arabic (Afia Darfur to Sudan/Chad)
 
 
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