consultant's report called "confidential"

There would appear to be no sound basis for the consultant's report to be considered confidential. The legal concept of freedom of information comes to mind, and it's ironic and almost laughable that a Journalism and Communications Dean is hiding and obscuring information under the cloak of confidentiality.
Perhaps someone can encourage Nathan Crabbe or a newsprint colleague, or even a law school student to look into and explore the freedom of information aspect of the consultant's report. If the Dean's contract with the consultant specifies confidentiality, then someone please sound a very loud alarm, but not in HD as we won't be able to pick it up.
If as the Dean claims, the radio station is losing $300,000 a year, imagine the deficit after 2 more pledge drives deflated by disenfranchised former listeners.
As these layers of the conundrum of the true agenda are unfurling, this is surely becoming curiouser and curiouser.

You should contact Steve

You should contact Steve Orlando and inquire upon who you would file a public records request with for a document that exists within the College of Journalism. Steve Orlando is the designated PRR person by the Office of the Open Government (in the Governor's Office) for the University. Anything produced by the university that does not have to do with a student's academic record should be subject to a PRR.