Save Our Press

Entries tagged as ‘layoffs’

Farewell to the printed P-I

March 24, 2009 · 1 Comment

I know it’s been a long time since I’ve posted anything to this blog. It’s just that the news is so depressing.

Saying goodbye at the end of a long relationship can be strained and awkward.

But it didn’t feel that way at all at a quickly organized tribute outside The Seattle Post-Intelligencer last Monday, the day its staff was writing their newspaper’s obituary. P-I reporter Carol Smith has written a lovely obituary that catalogs the newspaper’s origins, achievements, and mournful end. The P-I was the oldest newspaper in Washington state, even predating statehood (1889). After more than 145 years, the newspaper – owned by New York-based Hearst Corp. – bowed to overwhelming economic pressures that are shoving newspapers across the land into history’s dustbin.

There were several tributes and memorials to the newspaper. The editors of Columbia Journalism Review invited P-I staff to submit their reflections. The Pacific Northwest Newspaper Guild, which owes its existence to P-I workers, lamented its passing. The alternative weekly, The Stranger, chronicled the last day at the P-I. Two minority journalism groups (one of which I am co-president of) issued a joint statement. Even the P-I’s cross-town rival, The Seattle Times Co., issued a statement.

And in a confessional video, some P-I staffers shared their own reflections with their readers.

As P-I Publisher Roger Oglesby told the staff, “the bloodline will live on,” referring to Hearst’s re-launch of seattlepi.com as an online-only publication. But the website will have a staff of about 20, a fraction of the printed P-I’s workforce, which numbered close to 170.

But you can’t keep a newsroom full of journalists down. Former P-I staff plan to get together and drink later this week, and some are talking about raising money to launch their own online-only website, taking a page from the former staff of the Denver Rocky Mountain News, which published its final edition (and a tear-jerking documentary-style video obituary). Some of the Rocky’s staff have launched InDenverTimes.com.

There are hard times for all media, but especially traditional media. Today, the family-owned Ann Arbor News announced it will stop publishing a printed edition later this year. We need creative minds to test new business models and philanthropists to offer their support to journalists willing to try something radically new. We also need to support the surviving newspapers in our cities, so they have the chance to make the transition to this new world we are hurtling towards.

If democracy is an engine, journalism is its lubricant. Without journalists to verify information and assertions, will our civic sphere descend into partisan screed? Without trained professionals to investigate waste, corruption and abuse in business and government, what happens to the balance of power?

President Thomas Jefferson, who was often the subject of savage criticism in the press, had this to say: “If I had to choose between government without newspapers, and newspapers without government, I wouldn’t hesitate to choose the latter.”

My fingers are crossed for all of us.

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Bravo to Erica

May 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Erica Smith, a graphic designer at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, is mapping all the recent layoffs in journalism. The map says it best.

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News & Observer slashing one-fifth of payroll

April 29, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Another quality newspaper is making deep cuts. Here’s the latest from the N&O:

In an effort to streamline its operations, The News & Observer Publishing Co. will offer voluntary buyout packages to some employees today. The package will be offered to 204 of the newspaper’s roughly 900 employees, though only a small percentage of those people are expected to accept and leave the company.

Publisher Orage Quarles III said the decision to trim the company’s staff came following a period of declining revenues and other factors such as the rising cost of newsprint and gas.

“It’s almost a perfect storm of factors,” he said. “We’ve got to get the organization to a size that supports the revenue.”

Those who accept the offer will leave the company on May 23.

I remember when the News & Observer won the Pulitzer Prize in 1996 for “Boss Hog,” its exhaustive coverage of the environmental and health risks posed by the waste disposal practices of the state’s powerful hog industry. That was when newspapers were fielding foreign bureaus, juiced by dot-com advertising and exploring the startling power of mapping and database mining at your desktop.

Now it feels like we’re the ones who are wallowing in stuff that’s not good for us right now – nostalgia, despair, and fear. Can we muster the entrepreneurial creativity to rescue ourselves? Send me your comments.

Categories: Business
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