After a sexual-harassment scandal rocked NPR’s newsroom, public-radio station WAMU felt it needed to be proactive and let donors know what it does to prevent sexual misbehavior in the workplace. While there had been no reports of similar issues at WAMU, people had called the Washington, D.C., broadcaster with questions about NPR’s problems.
Some WAMU supporters conflate the station, the main Washington-area outlet for NPR programming, with NPR itself, says Audrey Johnson, the local affiliate’s senior director of development.
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