Jan 31, 2009

Daily Breeze on the move

The Torrance Daily Breeze moved its offices this weekend, leaving behind the Daily Breeze building of 40 years for Suite 170 in the 20000 block of Hawthorne Boulevard. The hours and main phone number will remain the same.

Along with an article about the move, the Daily Breeze has a compendium of historic moments. Maybe more interesting, however, is the remembrance from "Vince the maintenance guy" in the comments section:
I am happy for the Breeze to finaly gets its new 'digs' in a more updated building. Although I am quite saddened at the thought of the old building being removed. I spent 15 years in the old building and I know every crack in the floor, every leaky roof area, every -- problem, that the buidling has had in these last years. I know this as I have repaired and or replaced most of 'everything' many times - in the building. It was very much a labor of love for the old buidling, as the paycheck I received was not much of an incentive...

Found around the Internets

Jonathan Veitch, a literature professor at the New School of Liberal Arts in New York takes over as president of Occidental College in Eagle Rock.

The city of Claremont (trees, PhDs and all that) is contending with a $3.5 million budget shortfall.

Should newspapers follow the college endowment model? If they do, would they still be able to opine about pending legislation? (via Romenesk0)

Jan 30, 2009

Breaking up isn't hard to do

A fed up Celeste Fremon of Witness LA kicks the Los Angeles Times off her curb:
I’ve subscribed faithfully to the LA Times for over 30 years and, with great regret, I just this minute cancelled my subscription.

-snip-

Unfortunately, the LA Times management seems to possess neither optimism—cautious or otherwise—nor a feel for anything resembling innovation (that awful Abrams man, most prominently included).

So I broke up with them.

Like most break-ups, it hurts.

But, while painful—as is always the case—finally doing the honest thing is a relief.

And now I can respect myself in the morning.

White powder

Finally, an anthrax hoax with a happy ending.

More bad news for the Times

The Los Angeles Times killed the California section and decided to lay off 70 additional editorial workers all in one day. LA Observed has the latest here.

Rove to speak at Loyola

Karl Rove, columnist, commentator and former deputy chief of staff to President Bush, will speak at Loyola Marymount University on Tuesday, February 3 at 6 p.m. as part of the college's First Amendment Week celebration. The speech is closed to the public but open to the media. Contact Celeste Durant at 310-338-7708 to attend.

From the chopping block

Speaking in Davos, Rupert Murdoch called for "drastic action" to quell the credit crisis. Meantime, Portfolio reports that Murdoch's Wall Street Journal will trim 50 employees from the newsroom.

The Austin American-Statesman, owned by Cox Enterprises, will offer early retirement to anyone over age 55. The paper expects to shed about 45 employees from its 906 person staff. Cox has put the newspaper up for sale and bidders include the owner of the bankrupt Minneapolis Star-Tribune.

The Denver Post and Rocky Mountain News want a divorce.

Another round of layoffs at Belo

The A.H. Belo chain, which counts the Riverside Press-Enterprise and Dallas Morning News among its newspapers, announced a new round of layoffs today in a memo from CEO Robert Decherd.

Decherd buries the lede a bit, waiting til the sixth graf to say that 500 jobs could be on the chopping block:
The most significant cost initiative will be a further reduction in force across the Company. The revenue trends we continue to experience simply do not support or require the same number of people as we have previously employed. This reduction in force will impact all of the operating companies and corporate, and will probably be in the range of 500 jobs. Specifics about the reduction in force plan will be communicated as soon as possible, but no later than mid-February.
Additionally, Belo will suspend company matches to 401k accounts and limit reimbursements for work-related expenses. Employees will also have the pleasure of paying to come to work:
Similarly, it is no longer reasonable for the Company to provide free parking in downtown Dallas. A monthly charge of $40 will take effect May 1, 2009 for all downtown Dallas surface lots owned by the Company. Parking for A. H. Belo employees in the garage of The Belo Building will be increased from $40 per month to $70 per month. Bus and rail passes in Dallas will have charges ranging from $18.75-$30 per month beginning May 1. Combined, these fees will generate approximately $520,000 per year. We are looking at the possibility of similar transportation-related charges in Riverside and Providence.
(Decherd memo comes via Romenesko)

Bad morning for the Times*

LA Observed reported early this morning that the Los Angeles Times will kill its California section. Local news will instead be folded into a single reconfigured A section. The shrinkage comes on the heels of a 25 cent rise in the newsstand price.

*Updated: An excerpt from LAO:
The move will apparently be spun as an enhancement in local coverage, but Times officials are bracing for howls of protest from print readers who already have been canceling subscriptions over the paper becoming thinner and less well edited.

-snip-

For the journalists, this is another big hit. They already work under the constant threat of layoffs — department heads have reportedly readied their lists, awaiting the final count from [Publisher Eddie] Hartenstein — and there's not much confidence that things will ever get better. Morale totally blows, especially in Metro, the department most hurt by losing the section.

Jan 29, 2009

Another reason to grind your teeth

The rich are different from you and me - they still get bonuses.

From the New York Times:
Despite crippling losses, multibillion-dollar bailouts and the passing of some of the most prominent names in the business, employees at financial companies in New York, the now-diminished world capital of capital, collected an estimated $18.4 billion in bonuses for the year.

That was the sixth-largest haul on record, according to a report released Wednesday by the New York State comptroller.

Tax collectors in blue

One more reason to be concerned that the public-safety mission of police is being supplanted by a revenue-generating mission. The cost of fix-tickets went up on Jan. 1 as a way to fund courthouse construction, the San Jose Mercury News reports. Fix-it tickets generally hit those who can least afford it. Add this to the list of violations California law enforcement will be on the lookout for as city, county and state revenues drop.

A no newspaper town?

Seattle, which can't even depend on coffee anymore, already has one newspaper on the auction block at a time when buyers are scarce. Now comes word that the the other newspaper in town, the Seattle Times, might be slipping toward bankruptcy.

Jan 28, 2009

Forced furloughs for MediaNews

All employees of MediaNews Group's California newspapers were told today they will be required to take a one-week, unpaid furlough between Feb. 1 and March 31. Salaried employees will be required to take the furlough all at once, non-salaried employees can take the time off one day at a time.

A copy of the memo sent to LANG's Inland Division of newspapers is here. I understand each publisher drafted an individual letter, although the information is basically the same in each.

Updated 3:07 p.m.: Romenesko posted a copy of the memo sent to Bay Area News Group employees.

The Associated Press says the furloughs will affect about 3,300 employees California-wide, adding that MediaNews is considering furloughs for its papers outside of California.

In related news, the union representing the Los Angeles Daily News and Long Beach Press-Telegram newsrooms put out a statement saying furloughs are still subject to negotiation for union members. A new union blog for the Daily News is tracking the issue as well.

Rocky Mountain dispute

Scripps, owner of the Rocky Mountain News, has accused MediaNews Group, owner of the Denver Post, of violating their joint operating agreement. Scripps alleges MediaNews borrowed $13 million from joint operating funds to make payroll at the Post.

From the RMN:
"We request that this practice cease and that the Post find a way to fund its editorial payroll without resorting to this . . .," Scripps executives Rich Boehne and Mark Contreras wrote.

The letter was dated Dec. 9, five days after Scripps announced it would sell the Rocky and would pursue other options, including closure, if it couldn't find a buyer.

"We continue to reserve our rights to pursue remedies for the several breaches caused by these practices or to assert them in connection with any future legal proceedings," they added in the letter sent to top Post executives Dean Singleton and Joseph "Jody" Lodovic.

-snip-

The payroll issue, previously undisclosed, sheds new light on Scripps' decision to seek an exit from the Denver market and its partnership with the highly leveraged MediaNews, which owns The Post.

The companies are each losing roughly $4 million per quarter as the newspaper industry nationally continues a rapid deterioration, based on the most recent public financial filings by Scripps. The agency, which handles business functions for the two newspapers, has a $130 million bank loan that it's attempting to renegotiate.

Veggie lovers

Given the full-frontal brain assault perpetrated by most Super Bowl advertisers, it's tough to see how NBC can claim PETA's pro-vegetable commercial is too racy for network standards. But since NBC has, that's good enough reason for me to link to it here (and, yes, I know it's a publicity stunt).

Jan 27, 2009

Links in the (late) afternoon

Chris Bray doesn't support re-inflating the burst economic bubble vigorously historiblogography

Where do journalists go after the layoffs/buyouts? AJR (via Romenesko)

NOTP reporter still waiting on public records... forty months later NOTP

Republican Rep. Gary Miller wants to fix college football Daily Californian, Frank Girardot

Like puppies, only not as cute New York Times

Jan 26, 2009

She knows how to sell

An interesting item from reporter Janette Williams tucked into Sunday's City Beats column in the Pasadena Star-News:
Imagine our surprise at the Star-News office when the quiet, charming advertising account executive of six months we knew as Maria turned out to be our very own Bernie Madoff.

As Jeanetta M. Standefor of Altadena, she was sentenced last week to more than 12 years in federal prison for running a $17.8 million Ponzi scheme from 2005 to 2007. About $1.9 million of that was spent on herself, according to the case brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission.

She spent $76,000 on her wedding, not to mention shelling out $17,000 for the honeymoon, $170,000 for jewelry, $270,000 for cars and car-related expenses, $180,000 for entertainment and $650,000 for improvements "one of her homes."

Not quite up to Madoff standards, but enough to defraud nearly 600 investors in California, Georgia and Nevada through her Accelerated Funding Group that mostly targeted middle-class African-American investors.
Apparently Standefor/Maria was tops in sales at the paper.

Fixing a hole before it forms

Former Washington Post editor Marsha Hamilton offers an instructive analysis of the news media's failure to adequately signal the severity of the coming economic crisis (it's certainly more informative than the hyperventilation found here).

Hamilton writes:

But even in hindsight, I think it would have taken a miracle for business journalists to have foreseen the current crisis in its magnitude and depth. Beat reporters saw the pieces of it, and columnists who took a broader view warned about the buildup of risk. But even those who predicted disaster, I think it’s fair to say, didn’t know how widespread it would become or how unprecedented the government’s reaction would be...

Nonetheless, there are certainly lessons to be learned about how to change some structural and cultural biases that might have gotten in the way—including the segregated silos we sometimes fall into in our beats, and a bias against speculative “this trend could be dangerous” stories. It’s not as sexy to prevent disasters as it is to cover them, but maybe we should rethink that, and learn to view warnings and prevention as one of the most important parts of our jobs.

One of the biggest obstacles to understanding, however, was out of our control: it was the decision to let major financial markets full of new types of housing-related investments expand with little or no federal oversight. No regulation means no transparency. Reporters and investors alike were kept from seeing what was going on behind the curtain.
The article, which Hamilton wrote for Columbia Journalism Review, contains this wise observation:
...there isn’t much appetite for speculative stories about complicated issues in most newsrooms. Once the crisis occurs, once you can quote government officials referring to credit-derivative obligations and credit-default swaps as “toxic assets,” it gets easier.
The truth is, there isn't much appetite for these kinds of stories outside the newsroom either. It makes me think of the film "Jaws" and the difficulty Roy Scheider's character had convincing people to get out of the water before they saw the shark fin for themselves.

Also, speculation can be dangerous. Just ask Judy Miller. In hindsight, we often assume that the newspaper warnings would have pointed to the danger that came to pass - but speculation can just as often warn of false dangers, and in the process embolden bad decision-making.

(CJR vis LA Biz Observed)

Consolidation means earlier deadlines in LANG (Updated)

The merger of LANG's Inland Division copy desks is set to take place today and one of the immediate consequences is earlier deadlines for everyone involved. The most severe deadline changes apply to stories set to run inside the A sections - which means everything not scheduled to run on the front page.

A memo from SGVN Managing Editor Steve Hunt provides the details:
Because many of our copy editors and designers will be working 1:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. shifts, we also are going to change the copy deadlines for reporters at all five papers. Beginning Monday, Jan. 19, all inside A section copy for the three SGVN papers will be due at 1:30 p.m. A1 copy for Whittier and Pasadena will be due at 5 p.m., while A1 copy for the Tribune will be due at 5:30 p.m.
The San Bernardino Sun and Inland Valley Daily Bulletin implemented a 3 p.m. deadline* for inside-A material.

The SGVN papers (San Gabriel Valley Tribune, Pasadena Star-News, and Whittier Daily News) had already instituted a 2 p.m. deadline for non-A1 copy, so the change might be less dramatic there. Still, the earlier deadlines will mean less timely news in the printed newspaper and bolster reader reliance on online briefs and updates for the latest news. It will probably also force the sister papers to rely more on each others copy to fill in gaps.

The Inland Division copy-desk merger will also result in earlier "off the floor" deadlines - that's the point at which stories need to have been edited, copy edited and set for print. Once again, the memo:
Beginning Jan. 26, the deadline for the Sun will be 9:30 p.m. and the deadline for Whittier will be 9:45 p.m. The Bulletin deadline will remain 10 p.m. Pasadena's deadline will remain 10:45 p.m., while Tribune's will change to 11:30 p.m.
The Sun's deadline comes before most city council and county board meetings are even at their half-way points, so readers will have to go online to find out what happened the night before.

The gaps left after the Bulletin deadline might be designed to accommodate further copy desk consolidation, with the other members of LANG - Torrance Daily Breeze, Los Angeles Daily News and Long Beach Press-Telegram - possibly joining the uber desk in the next few months.

Read the full memo here.

*The original post listed an incorrect deadline time here. The information is now correct.

Attitude adjustment

The Chicago Tribune, according to a memo obtained by Romenesko, has instituted new performance review standards for newsroom employees, including an alarmingly vague measure of "attitude."

From the memo:
Our attitudes influence our own behavior and performance, and also that of our colleagues'. We believe positive attitude is crucial to our changing culture and all that must be accomplished for our company to be successful.
Perhaps reporters could pin some flair next to their press badges? Of course, the real idea behind setting vague performance standards like this is to make it much easier to justify firing someone, and easier for managers to smooth over the rough edges of reality.

Another performance standard that should alarm journalists everywhere is "customer focus." I know it sounds cheery to say reporters should do more to interact with the people leaving racially tinged comments at the end of stories, and I'm not averse to asking reporters to be more engaged and engaging, but this talk is best suited for ice cream shops not serious newsrooms:
Innovation and customer focus. Embrace change by seeking out new and innovative ideas that serve key audiences and move the Chicago Tribune forward. Demonstrate a customer-first mentality in content creation, delivery, reader contact and service.

Moody's junks the New York Times

A quick $250-million cash infusion from a Mexican billionaire didn't stop Moody's credit rating bureau from downgrading the New York Times Co.'s debt to junk status. From Editor and Publisher:
"In Moody's opinion, earnings pressure and higher cash interest costs will
limit free cash flow generation in each of the next two years notwithstanding a significant reduction in capital spending, and the recent 74% cut in the dividend."
In other words, there's really nothing the New York Times can do in the short run to repair its rating. Just relax and let the tide carry you out to sea.

Jan 25, 2009

Obama to grant California auto emission waiver

The New York Times reports that President Barack Obama will move to grant California's request for a waiver to implement the toughest restrictions on automobile tailpipe emissions in the nation. Thirteen other states have since adopted the same law. Together they account for half the market for autos. From the NYT:
The California law, which was originally meant to take effect in the 2009 model year, requires automakers to cut emissions by nearly a third by 2016, four years ahead of the federal timetable. The result would be an increase in fuel efficiency in the American car and light truck fleet to roughly 35 miles per gallon from the current average of 27.

Desk clearing

Dan Gillmor is overwrought; or, Why does journalism let bad things happen to good people?

Nothing builds confidence like watching the captain jump ship.

Measuring the political blogosophere blog by blog.

Have it your way, unless your paper folds first.

Speculation

Dean Singleton, CEO of MediaNews, visited the Los Angeles Daily News on Friday. Except for anonymous conjecture in the comments section for this post, I've heard nothing concrete about what he said or proposed or ordered, if anything.

LA Observed referenced some newsroom scuttlebutt about publishing the Daily News on fewer days. There's the universal copy desk concept still looming, with LANG's Inland Division merging copy desks as early as this month and the remaining three papers following in April.

Whether further cuts or more profound changes are required might depend a great deal on the outcomes of union negotiations with the newsroom guilds in Denver and San Jose, the fate of the Rocky Mountain News, and the financial health of Hearst.

Mercury News asked to give up 15 percent

According to a letter posted on the Newspaper Guild's site, MediaNews negotiators have asked newsroom employees at the San Jose Mercury News to accept pay cuts of up to 15 percent and reduced benefits as a way to save the company money. Ad sales reps would also have to depend more on commissions.

Guild negotiators said they needed time to "fashion a response."

Jan 23, 2009

Of split infinitives and simulacra

From the moment slave owners declared all men to be created equal, American politics has fostered an interesting relationship between truth and representation. Successful politicians seem to find ways to reconcile the schism in the minds of the electorate. They speak in metaphor and yet we call it plain speaking. They use symbolism and yet we call it authenticity.

For those inclined to think about such things, Tuesday's inauguration provided a few hiccups that might at first be dismissed as "things not going smoothly," but really offer us a glimpse between the seams.

First, there was the live quartet that didn't play live. Would it have been better had we been told the musicians would be simulating an earlier performance? Would we rather have heard the recording without all the false gestures? Should the performance have been scrapped if the musicians couldn't play live? If you enjoyed the performance of the performance, does it really matter?

Then there was the fumbled oath of office - Which has more meaning to us, word order or speaker's intent? Does speaking a word out of order do more damage to the oath's authenticity than adding words that aren't in the text? Does a second oath lack potency if it wasn't broadcast on television the way the first oath was? What if Obama had taken the second (or even the first) oath in private - the Constitution makes no demand that the oath be taken publicly?

Shorties

California unemployment rises to 9.3 percent; 9.9 percent in L.A. County

Conservative radio, keeper of the doctrine, goes apeshit over tax talk


Is that a Trojan horse in your registry or are you just happy to see me?

It rhymes with 'tennis'

Jan 22, 2009

Cubs could be sold by April

The debt-laden Tribune Co., owner of the Los Angeles Times, should be able to buy a little breathing room if a $900-million deal to sell the Chicago Cubs to the Ricketts family goes through as planned. The Chicago Tribune's breaking news site has the story.

Singleton on his way

MediaNews Group CEO William Dean Singleton will be in L.A. tomorrow.

More cuts to public radio

They aren't buying and they aren't giving either.

Citing a precipitous drop in donations, public radio station WNET in New York plans big staff cuts to save money. This follows last month's staff cuts at NPR West.

From the New York Observer:
Neal Shapiro, President and C.E.O. of WNET.org, told The Observer on Thursday evening that his organization, including the stations, will be cutting 8 percent of its budget for the upcoming fiscal year. The cuts will be achieved, according to Mr. Shapiro, through cost-cutting measures (such as reductions in back-office costs) and by reducing the current staff by roughly 14 percent.

Out of roughly 500 individuals, 85 or so will be losing their jobs.

The current round of cuts comes at a time when for-profit media companies across the country are suffering from a significant downturn in advertising. Public media outlets are faring little better. Back in December, executives at National Public Radio announced that they were cutting 7 percent of NPR's work force and slashing expenses across the board. It was the first major round of layoffs at NPR in roughly a quarter century.

Covering Obama in California

Given the fact that California's newsrooms are in tatters, it is fitting that the panel set to discuss how best to cover the Obama administration at a time when California's newsrooms are in tatters consists mostly of cast-offs from California's tattered newsrooms.

The discussion, hosted by the Los Angeles Press Club, begins tonight at 7:30 p.m. and will be held at the Steve Allen Theater, at 4773 Hollywood Blvd. The speakers are Beth Barrett, a reporter who left the Los Angeles Daily News in August; Susan Pinkus, a pollster who got laid off from the Los Angeles Times in December, and Jonathan Wilcox, a USC communications professor and former speechwriter for Gov. Peter Wilson. The discusion will be moderated by Ron Kaye, who was laid off as editor of the Daily News in April.

Delgadillo for AG

Patrick McGreevy of the Los Angeles Times reports that Los Angeles City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo is positioning himself to run for state Attorney General in 2010. Delgadillo ran in 2006, but got trounced by Jerry Brown.

Chu gets labor support

Two of the most powerful unions in Southern California, the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor and Service Employees International Union, have endorsed state Board of Equalization chairwoman Judy Chu to succeed Rep. Hilda Solis in Congress, assuming Solis is confirmed as President Obama's secretary of labor.

The endorsements give Chu an early advantage over state Sen. Gil Cedillo, D-East Los Angeles, who also plans to run for the seat.

Jan 21, 2009

Transparency*

President Barack Obama today signed a few executives orders that will place new restrictions on lobbyists, bar anyone who leaves the Obama administration from lobbying the Obama administration, and, most important to journalists, shift the way the Freedom of Information Act is interpreted so that there is a presumption of openness rather than a presumption of secrecy. He also froze executive salaries and set up a system whereby he'd need to seek Attorney General approval before asserting executive privilege over administration records.

*Update: Some thoughts from CJR on Obama's transparency moves and a link to Obama's executive orders.

Monetizing the news*

Last year, the mayor of Portland hired the news editor of the weekly Portland Mercury as a policy adviser. The fact that the news editor had no relevant experience and just happened to be reporting on an affair the mayor had had with an 18-year-old man... probably just coincidence.

From the Oregonian via Romenesko:
In early 2008, Amy Ruiz was a reporter at the Portland Mercury news weekly when she confronted Sam Adams about his relationship with an 18-year-old man three years earlier.

By the end of the year, Ruiz had joined Adams' staff as a planning and sustainability policy adviser.

The two events have opened Adams and his staff to questions about whether Adams hired Ruiz -- who had no formal experience in planning, policy or as an analyst -- to stop her from digging deeper into the story

-snip-

Although Portland is packed with urban planners looking for a gig, Miller said he wasn't necessarily searching for a technocrat. He wanted someone who could translate the benefits of the city's planning work to the masses.

*Update: Adams has shown an affinity for the press - he's apparently dating Oregonian reporter, and former Los Angeles Daily Journal staffer, Peter Zuckerman.

Media synergy

The local CBS affiliate gives the Daily Breeze a nice plug for the paper's special inauguration edition. Check out the video here.

Industry approves $500 million bond

Given the state of the economy, it might seem an odd time to ask voters to approve a half-billion dollars in new borrowing. But the City of Industry did just that Tuesday, and 60 voters agreed to go along with the plan. Only one voter said no to the bond.

The main impetus for the borrowing, despite what city officials say, is a planned $800 million NFL stadium that billionaire Ed Roski wants to build. At least a third of the money would go toward improvements around the proposed stadium site.

Industry also convinced voters to approve no-bid contracts, which should grease the skids if and when a stadium project gets underway, and a new tax on tickets.

The Industry electorate also passed a law that restricts enfranchisement to residents with a permanent city address - hotels excluded.

Jan 20, 2009

None of our business

Tribune Co. owner Sam Zell visited UCLA's business school last week. The press was barred from attending the event, but Matthew Fleischer of LA CityBeat hung around outside to get a sense of things. From his dispatch:
A couple of students described the event as “mellow.” Questions for Zell ranged from the economic downturn to Zell's management style. Most students lacked an opinion about the efficacy of referring to your staff as "overhead," as Zell has told members of the Times' editorial section on at least one occasion.

In general, the students I spoke with seemed to eat up Zell's spiel. His presentation style was "lucid," and he had a tremendous "command of the room."

"I really like how the event was media-free," one student remarked to another.

“Really?" her conversational partner responded. "I thought that it was kind of ironic actually. I mean, the guy owns a bunch of newspapers right?"

Hey, the kid’s alright.

Words work plan

Policy and politics aside, the craft that went into today's inauguration speech reminds us of the importance of words.

In our public sphere, we have lived through an era of increasingly imprecise and careless language; a time in which 'short' became a substitute for 'pith' and buzz a replacement for clarity; a time in which we concluded, in fear and in shock, that words might fail us, that description might hinder us, that definition might deceive us. We let inarticulateness stand for authenticity, and chose reaction as the truest form of storytelling. We embraced soundbite punditry, calling it a smart solution to busy lives, but really to conceal that we no longer had much to say to each other. Online and on TV, we chose echo location over thoughtful deliberation.

And, so, as the information age spreads at an accelerated pace, we look into the vast empty reaches waiting to be filled and realize we have not said much about who we are or what we mean. Now is the time to put words back to work - to better understand the consequence and significance of what we're doing, where we're going and what we've done.

'Welcome to the new White House'

Change dot gov, indeed

In case you hadn't heard...

Today is Inauguration Day. NYT, WashPost, LA Times, WSJ, Politico, Time, Newsweek, New Yorker, McClatchy, The Root, KCRW, Ryan Carter, Witness LA

Jan 19, 2009

Beware the Ides of March

Another round of layoffs is coming to the Los Angeles Times. Ed Padgett at the Pressmans 20 Year Club blog posts a letter saying "the Company intends to implement the cutbacks no later than March 15, 2009." (via LA Observed)

Truth-o-meter

President-elect Barack Obama made a few promises as a candidate and the St. Petersburg Times is tracking whether he keeps, breaks, compromises or delays 500 of them using The Obameter. Experience expected disappointment and pleasant surprise all at the same time!

A going concern

In today's Los Angeles Times, Geneva Overholser, director of the USC Annenberg School of Journalism, and Geoffrey Cowan, dean emeritus of the USC Annenberg School, argue that the government should do more to boost the prospects of our downtrodden print media - no bailout, but some friendly legislation that helps preserve and create jobs. From the article:
There are many areas for creative solutions. Congress could increase postal-rate subsidies for magazines. It could change tax policy to remove barriers to philanthropies purchasing major news outlets. FCC policies, including rules against cross-ownership, could be reconceived to reflect the new realities of the information marketplace. Antitrust laws could be revised to allow publications to band together to charge for content. The founders understood that writers should be compensated for their work and included the copyright clause in the Constitution. We need to be equally aggressive in finding new ways to protect and reward journalism's intellectual property in this new era.

Locals in DC

KCRW is posting dispatches and video from Washington, DC in the runup to Inauguration Day. We'll also have three days of inauguration-related coverage on "To The Point," starting today with a discussion about expectations and reactions within the African-American community.

San Gabriel Valley Tribune business reporter Ryan Carter is blogging about his inauguration experiences here.

Celeste Freemon at Witness L.A. is covering the inauguration and associated festivities using her iPhone here.

Jan 18, 2009

Union charges against MediaNews granted a hearing

The National Labor Relations Board has agreed to hear two complaints brought against MediaNews for transferring newsroom jobs from the unionized Long Beach Press-Telegram to the non-union Daily Breeze last March.

The watchdogs that didn't bark

James Rainey of the Los Angeles Times peeks his head into L.A. County's Hall of Administration and notices that the supervisors now outnumber the reporters who are there to cover them:
A slow plague has reduced the corps of journalists who cover county government to four. That's just four reporters (and one of them has other responsibilities) who focus a critical eye on the biggest local government in America -- a $22-billion behemoth that provides policing, healthcare, welfare and more to a county of nearly 10 million people.

-snip-
Some news outlets have gone out of business. Others discontinued regular county coverage. Small nameplates on one wall display the names of the dead and or merely departed: the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, the Outlook, the Daily Journal, the Newhall Signal, the Whittier News, KFWB radio, KABC-TV, the Long Beach Press-Telegram and the Pasadena Star News.

The daily newspapers in Long Beach, Torrance and Pasadena all used to station reporters here. But that changed when Singleton snapped up the organizations over the last decade. His eight L.A.-area dailies serve vastly different communities, but they now rely on just one reporter, Troy Anderson, for all stories on county government.
County coverage has been diminishing for years, and the slippage only promises to accelerate as newspapers continue to cut and consolidate. It should be noted that these same eight MediaNews newspapers already are without a single reporter in Washington, DC or Sacramento, and most have too few reporters to keep a watchful eye on all of the cities in their respective circulation areas.

NYT's Mexican bailout plan*

The New York Times is courting Mexican businessman Carlos Slim, who is said to be worth $60 billion, in hopes that he will invest several million dollars in the newspaper company. From the Wall Street Journal:
The talks are ongoing and may yet fall apart but one of the options being discussed is a preferred-stock issue. Under this scenario, the Times Co. would issue Mr. Slim preferred stock, which carries no voting right but pays an annual dividend, in return for his investment. The investment would be similar to a loan. Preferred shares are often convertible into common stock after a defined period.

-snip-

The Times Co. has about $46 million in cash and $1.1 billion in debt as of the end of September. It has a $400 million credit facility that expires in May, $250 million in notes due in 2010 and another $400 million credit facility due in 2011.
*Update: In related news, New York Times is cracking down on newsroom expenses for meals, travel and association dues. Given that some of the newspapers I worked for refused to approve almost any outside expense, a $30 limit on lunches and $50 limit on dinners sounds rather generous.

Jan 17, 2009

No deal yet for Union-Tribune, layoffs likely

As Mark Lacter at LA Biz Observed observes, Copley's failure to sell the San Diego Union-Tribune and poor ad sales have already put employees in a bind. The Pulitzer-prize winning paper has suspended merit raises, cut health benefits and ended 401k matches. Now Copley CEO Gene Bell warns of another round of layoffs:
We must make even more dramatic changes in our cost structure that, unfortunately, must soon include a reduction in force. We are working through the details of staff reductions thoughtfully with a focus on protecting the quality of the products our readers and advertising customers expect.
It's a buyers market out there for anyone looking to snap up a struggling newspaper. Unfortunately, there doesn't appear to be anyone out there looking to buy a struggling newspaper. The Rocky Mountain News, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer have all been put up for sale in recent weeks. The two advantages the U-T has over the others is that San Diego is a one-newspaper town and the owner hasn't been crippled by bad debt.

Consolidation moves up north

MediaNews is taking steps to consolidate management at some of its Northern California newspapers - which could be a sign of newsroom consolidation to come. The publisher of the Chico Enterprise-Record and Oroville Mercury-Register lost his job today, as did the publisher of the Times-Herald in Vallejo. The former will be replaced by the publisher of the Reporter in Vacaville and the Woodland Daily Democrat, and the latter will be replaced by the publisher of MediaNews' Northern Community Newspapers.

Jan 16, 2009

Sell or die

The Tucson Citizen is the latest newspaper to be put up for sale without a buyer in sight.

Circuit City goes liquid

Electronics retailer Circuit City, with an estimated 34,000 employees, will soon be no more - meaning the end of another big newspaper advertiser.

Jan 15, 2009

Star-Tribune files for bankruptcy

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune filed for bankruptcy today. From the Wall Street Journal:
The filing came less than two years after Avista Capital Partners, a private equity group, purchased the newspaper for $530 million.

The move was widely expected after the paper missed multiple payments to its lenders. Management of the paper said recently that it would resort to such action if it didn't win a series of labor concessions.

In (measured) praise of furloughs

Alan Mutter says Gannett's unpaid furlough plan will save jobs.

Union agreement in Long Beach

The guild representing editorial employees at the Long Beach Press-Telegram has reached a tentative contract agreement with LANG management, the Stress-Telegram reports. All that's left is for members to ratify the thing. Some details from the S-T:
The proposed contract calls for a 2/2/2 wage increase (two percent at ratification, and subsequent annual raises of another two percent), and perhaps most importantly, gives Guild-covered newsroom employees a one-year moratorium on layoffs. Given industry conditions at the moment, obtaining such a guarantee is no small accomplishment.

After a year, if employees are laid off, the team secured additional benefits and rights for our members, including 60 days advance notice (or pay in lieu of), additional severance, and extended health and tuition-reimbursement coverage.

LANG to suspend raises for 2009

Jim Janiga, head of human resources for MediaNews in California, sent LANG employees a letter dated Jan. 14 informing them that all merit raises will be suspended in 2009. Janiga also asks employees to suggest other ways to cut costs and says unpaid furloughs and additional layoffs are on the table.

From the memo:
Suspending merit increases will not reduce our current expenses but it does help us contain our expenses for a period of time. So obviously more needs to be considered and implemented, if warranted. To this end we are asking everyone to share with us any suggestions you might have regarding cuts in our operating expenses that are measurable, timely and sensible; cuts that can help us avoid more layoffs and are cuts you may be willing to accept. We need your input.

Unfortunately we cannot promise there will not be layoffs in the future but we should always endeavor to do what we can to prevent as many as possible. Obviously, growing revenue is our best option but until revenue streams stabilize and grow, reducing our expenses will continue to be a painful but necessary focus. Some early suggestions have included mandatory furloughs, cuts in our vacation benefits, pay cuts (temporary and/or permanent), reduced work schedules, allowing volunteer reduction in hours while retaining most full-time benefits, and more.
Read the full memo here.

Breeze gets city assist

The Torrance City Council has approved a $50,000 grant to assist the Daily Breeze in its move to new offices. Did the city ask for anything in return?:
In return, the newspaper has agreed to provide a credit for advertising space that municipal officials can use over the next five years "for communication from the city to residents and businesses."
(From the Daily Breeze via LA Observed)

Tribune could turn to Post for foreign, national coverage

The Wall Street Journal reports on negotiations between Tribune Co. and the Washington Post that could shrink the Tribune papers even further. From the WSJ:
Tribune Co., which owns the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune, is in talks with the Washington Post Co. about a deal to pay the Post for foreign and national coverage for Tribune's eight major dailies.

-snip-

Talks between Tribune and the Post Co. have been under way for more than a month, but no agreement has been reached, according to people familiar with the matter. One possibility is that Tribune's eight major dailies could close dozens of news bureaus, in favor of publishing the Washington Post's stories from areas where Tribune doesn't have operations.
The story goes on to say that a deal, if reached, might be more collaborative in nature, with the two companies sharing stories, rather than the severe approach referenced above in which a bankrupt Tribune cedes foreign and national coverage to the Post.

Jan 14, 2009

What's it worth?

There's a deadline fast approaching in Denver and a domino falling in Seattle; little in the way of good news out of Minneapolis and a couple Horsemen on their way to Los Angeles; mandatory and unpaid furloughs for Gannett employees and yet more advertisers slipping into bankruptcy; the layoffs that were and the layoffs that could be...

So it's time to break out Occam's razor to cut through the foggy notions of new business models and instead apply the most straightforward model we can think of to keep newsrooms running. Rather than twisting ourselves in knots trying to invent exotic ways to extract value from secondary or even tertiary transactions (we saw how that shit played on Wall Street), shouldn't we try a more straightforward approach?

Ryan Chittum at CJR is the latest (that I've read) to say news organizations need to charge for the news if they want to survive.

I agree - and not only because newsrooms need money. Rightly or wrongly, we value things more when we get them at a cost. When something costs us nothing, we generally assign it the same value.

But money is not the only way to measure cost. There's blood, sweat, tears, etc. The key here is that a transaction needs to take place - a transaction that both sustains the newsroom and imbues value to the reader.

The transaction might not save newspapers in their present form - although I think our innovators would do well to reconsider the benefits of the newspaper form - and the transaction might look different from our present subscription system. There are multiple ways to extract/imbue value. Nonprofits, cooperatives, foundations and grants will all have a place, I'm sure.

On the for-profit side, one idea floating about is called "micropayments." It seems to follow the logic of Apple's iTunes, which is alluring on one level and disturbing on another. My concern is that it rewards popularity above all else and encourages hit-count lust. Perhaps there are ways to guard against this, perhaps not.

All of this being said, I do worry about a scarcity of links available to bloggers, aggregators and various online communities once "cost" is reapplied to the information economy. But I think this is the place where we need to exert our inventiveness, rather than get stuck working the financial Rubik's cube as the ship sinks.

Another departure at the DJ*

Los Angeles Daily Journal entertainment reporter Noah Barron sent his colleagues an e-mail today announcing that Jan. 28 will be his last day on the job. Barron's departure comes roughly a month after associate editor Alan Mittelstaedt quit - Barron attended USC's graduate school of journalism, where Mittelstaedt teaches. From the e-mail: "I totes (sic) wish we could gather ourselves all up into a big group-hug news Web startup and make Alan editor. Maybe we can someday."

*Alan Mittelstaedt shares a few thoughts about the state of the newsroom at the Daily Journal in the comments section.

Jan 13, 2009

Blog on paper

From The Media Blog:
Yesterday Wired.com's Chris Snyder reported on a new venture that aims to create an off-line newspaper made up entirely of repurposed blog posts. Called The Printed Blog (slogan: "The Best of the Web on your Newsstand!"), the company aims to create, per Mr. Snyder, "a twice-daily free print newspaper in cities across the country aggregating localized blog posts."
Publishing blogs on paper strikes me as being a bit like selling tickets to a 7-year-old's play. Blogs are, for the most part, transitory in nature, designed to momentarily focus the attention of an increasingly distracted public. They are baby steps into a new frontier; markers at the head of an unfinished path; always forming but never fully formed. Once they are extracted and placed in a more permanent medium, doesn't the very thing that makes them a blog disappear?

Taking it to the street

The Chicago Tribune is the latest newspaper to switch to a tabloid-format street edition in hopes of boosting newsstand sales. The tabloid Tribune will cost 75 cents a copy - which, coincidentally, is what the Los Angeles Times now charges for a paper off the rack.

The Tribune will continue delivery the traditional broadsheet to home subscribers. Given the negative connotations of 'tabloid journalism' in America, the move seems to designed to lower the risk that long-term subscribers will drop the paper.

There were reports in September that the OC Register was considering going tabloid - the publisher said he preferred to call it a "compact" newspaper. Not sure whatever happened to that.

DJ Garcetti*

Los Angeles City Council President Eric Garcetti takes a turn on the other side of the microphone today when he interviews Matt Miller, host of the radio show "Left, Right & Center," about Miller's new book, "The Tyranny of Dead Ideas," at 2:30 p.m. on 89.9 KCRW. The show can be podcast, streamed live or downloaded at kcrw.com/etc/programs/pc.

*I mistakenly posted this yesterday

Jan 12, 2009

It's not you, it's us

In his eight minute address to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer newsroom, Steve Swartz, president of Hearst Newspapers, made several telling statements, but this one jumped out at me:
...I want to assure all of you that this is a business decision and it has absolutely no reflection on your work. Your work is spectacular...
Maybe Swartz was just trying to soften the blow to an already shell shocked office. After all, they'd learned the night before - from a competitor - that their paper was about to be sold (or possibly shuttered). But the statement signals an important, if dispiriting, shift in reality, to one in which newsrooms can no longer affect their own fate - good work and innovation be damned - and business, and business alone, is the reason to exist.

Another layoff

Jim Farber, theater and arts critic at the Daily Breeze, was let go today (Culture Monster via LA Observed)

Hit-count lust

LA Observed has an internal memo from the LA Weekly that suggests the alternative paper has a burgeoning addiction to hit counts.

I've written about the dangers of hits-based journalism before.

Training your replacement?*

The Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism's jobs link has an interesting opportunity for an experienced journalist who wants to travel to India and do a little teaching (this is a cut and paste job - the spelling and grammatical errors are theirs):

Job: Indian Institute of Journalism & New Media

Visitng Faculty- Print and/or Broadcast (TV)

Location: Bangalore, India
State: Intl

Duration: 6-12 months

Salary: Rs. 45,000 per month plus free boarding and lodging. $1,5000 round trip airfare

Application deadline: Sunday, February 15, 2009

This is a full-time position.

The Indian Institute of Journalism & New Media, Bangalore, India seeks two journalism professionals in print and television to teach for 6-12 months or more, starting in July 2009 to May 2010. We offer Rs. a monthly stipend of Rs. 45,000 plus free boarding and meals at the campus residence. 4 days per week workload allows 3 days of free time to explore the country and enjoy the culture. We are one of the top journalism colleges in India offering print, web and boradcast for a one year post-graduate diploma program. Please visit www.iijnm.org and email me at amgeorge99@gmail.com.

Abraham M. George, Dean

Experience required:

Work experience of no less than 10 years in TV and/or print. Our main needs are to ytrain students in reporting and writing, scripting for TV, covering/broadcasting news, and producing documentaries.

The monthly stipend works out to about US$920 give or take, depending on when you do the conversion calculation.

*Update: The Chicago Sun-Times might be one of the first newspapers in the country to employ Indian copy editors, if rumors are to be believed. The company is looking for $50 million in savings and has threatened to cut one-fifth of its editorial force. Apparently, company officials made some noise Friday about outsourcing the copy desk (Chicago Reader via Romenesko).

From lynching to lionizing

Change has come to the West Hollywood house where then-vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin once hung in effigy and faux flames licked at a likeness of then-presidential candidate John McCain seen emerging from the chimney.

Now on display is a large reproduction of Shepard Fairey's famous poster of Barack Obama and, atop the chimney where McCain once roasted, stands a tall black mannequin dressed in a Superman costume - except Superman's 'S' insignia has been replaced with Barack Obama's campaign logo.

I'd have taken a picture if A. I had had a camera in my car and B. I wasn't fighting traffic on my way to work. If I get one, I'll post it.

Speaking of Echo Park-based Fairey, he has turned his artistic talents to the cause of mutts, according to The Eastersider LA blog.

Jan 10, 2009

Al Martinez signs off

Los Angeles Times columnist Al Martinez bids farewell in an e-mail to his fans:
Just so you'll know, my column in the Times will end Jan. 19. I'm not sure why: too old at 79? no space for me? I don't fit the hip, cool, Hollywood demographics? All of the above? Ask them. They did say they couldn't afford me, but since I was "downsized" the first time and hired back as a freelancer, my salary has been halved and I've had no medical coverage, no vacation time, no expense account and generally no staff perks. I haven't been THAT expensive. But I've never been a whiner, and I won't be now. This is just to show my readers the respect I've always felt toward you by giving you advance warning. It isn't likely to do much good this time, but by making your feelings known to the editor, publisher, readers rep or anyone else you can think of, it may guide their decisions in the future. Meanwhile, my blog goes on and I'll pop up now and then in non-column form in the Times and elsewhere
LA Observed first reported Martinez's re-departure last Wednesday and posted a memo from Times Editor Russ Stanton here.

A link to Martinez's blog is here.

Saturday shorts

Cops create zone of silence around Scientology retreat in Riverside

This town ain't big enough for the two of us

Reason magazine's Matt Welch rants about whining newspaper journalists (warning: several straw men were harmed in the writing of this column)

City life causes attention deficit disorder

Question of the day

Has the pool of the talented disillusioned grown deep enough, and the existing structures weak enough, that new life is possible in Southern California journalism?

Jan 9, 2009

Courier blog

The Claremont Courier, where I got my start in newspapers, has a new blog.

Sobbing in Seattle

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer today reports on its own uncertain future now that it's been put up for sale:
...and if after 60 days it has not sold, it will either be turned into a Web-only publication with a greatly reduced staff or discontinued entirely...
The P-I is owned by Hearst Corporation, the same company that owns the San Francisco Chronicle - the same San Francisco Chronicle that's rumored to be losing $1 million a week.

Hearst is also the largest holder of MediaNews Group debt, a fact MediaNews came to rely on when its debt rating slipped and rumors of a Tribune Co.-style bankruptcy were bandied about. From Editor and Publisher:
"By far, the largest debtholder of MediaNews is our partner, which is a lot different than Tribune," the [MediaNews] spokesman said, referring to Hearst Corporation, which holds a stake in some 115 MediaNews newspapers published outside of California.

Daily News publisher out

LA Observed has reported that Los Angeles Daily News Publisher Doug Hanes has "left the company."

Given the consolidation within the group, will the Daily News still have a publisher position when this all shakes out? As it stands, there are four publishers for the nine newspapers of LANG - one for the Inland Division, one for both the Daily Breeze and Press-Telegram, one for the Redlands Daily Facts and one for the Daily News.

Rumors from the north

It's rumored that layoffs will next hit Dean Singleton's Bay Area News Group, starting Wednesday. BANG is the Northern California version of the Los Angeles Newspaper Group, which suffered a round of layoffs this week.

Off a cliff

This New York Times graphic paints a grim picture of the economy. Over 2.6 million jobs were lost in 2008, most of them shed in the last four months. The accompanying story is here.

What does it all mean? Justin Fox at Time gives a little background here on how to read an unemployment report.

Blago impeached

The Illinois House has voted 114-1 to impeach Gov. Rod Blagojevich. Now the case heads to the state Senate for trial.

Jan 8, 2009

Shaken L.A.*

The Southland is quaking again. Initial reports say a magnitude 5.0 earthquake centered in San Bernardino hit at 7:49 p.m.

*Update: Downgraded to a 4.5-magnitude quake, with a 3.3-magnitude aftershock.

Web traffic up at SGVN

Frank Pine, senior editor at SGVN, which consists of the San Gabriel Valley Tribune, Pasadena Star-News and Whittier Daily News, sent out a memo today praising the three newsrooms for their good work in 2008 and noting a rise in Web traffic.

From the memo:
Everyone deserves credit for a year of strong online growth. In 2008, combined traffic to all three SGVN Web sites was up by more than 30 percent. Tribune's Web site was up more than 40 percent (up 122 percent in December over last December) year over year. Pasadena and Whittier also had respectable jumps in traffic. The trend for all three sites is increasing gains: In the early part of 2008, growth was sluggish, picking up in the middle of the year, and accelerating significantly at the end of the year.

Online standouts include Fred Robledo, who writes our most popular blog. Miguel Melendez, who took over the Pasadena preps blog in August, is also racking up impressive numbers. Frank Girardot's CrimeScene and Leftovers from City Hall (Jennifer McLain and Tania Chatila) are also driving significant traffic. Photo galleries continue to be a major draw with readers, consistently ranking at the top of our "most popular pages" stats.
SGVN is part of LANG's Inland Division. LANG is part of Dean Singleton's MediaNews Group.

A tough year for LANG

Singleton's Los Angeles News Group has had a difficult 2009. A brief recap of the first eight days:
A universal copy desk
A universal copy desk will lead to job cuts
Job cuts hit LANG's Inland Valley and San Gabriel Valley papers
Job cuts hit the Daily News, Daily Breeze and Press-Telegram

Post-Intelligence on the block

Hearst plans to put the Seattle Post-Intelligencer up for sale (via Romenesko).

What does this mean for the San Francisco Chronicle?

Humor

CJR's layoff mad libs, via Romenesko:
As you may have heard (in the newsroom; at Caribou Coffee; on somebody’s blog), John P. Zenger will be leaving his role as (chief investigative reporter; TV critic; ombudsman) at this newspaper.

-snip-

John has what all the truly great newspaper folk possess – (low self esteem; deep-seated class resentments; a cluster of unfinished screenplays), and a passionate desire to (stay out of the line of fire; crib good stories from colleagues; have the Salisbury steak at the Royal three times a week). Many’s the time I’ve strolled through the newsroom on the way to a meeting with the marketing department and heard John (sobbing quietly; screaming at his accountant; talking about the time he had a beer with Mike Royko).

KPCC heading to DC

Kitty Felde is heading to Washington, DC to open a new bureau for public radio station KPCC. LA Observed has the press release - which, somewhat bizarrely, quotes local congressmen saying it's a swell idea.

Romero drops out*, **

The pathway to Congress just got a little easier for Judy Chu - or a little harder, depending on how you view it.

According to the Sacramento Bee, state Sen. Gloria Romero has pulled her name from contention in the coming race to replace Rep. Hilda Solis and will instead support the candidacy of fellow state Sen. Gil Cedillo.

Romero said she'll move ahead with plans to run next year for state Superintendent of Public Instruction.

With Romero out, Cedillo presumably will have an easier time unifying the Latino vote in the heavily Latino district. Politico.com had a story yesterday that Romero and Cedillo might split the Latino vote and throw the election to Chu.

Chu, who chairs the state Board of Equalization, might still have the advantage in the district. She has has the endorsement of a couple important Latino electeds and has represented portions of the 32nd Congressional District in the Assembly.

All of the aforementioned politicians are Democrats, by the way. CD 32 is a safe Democratic seat.

Solis, by the way, is President-elect Obama's nominee for Secretary of Labor.

*Note: Solis is scheduled to go before the Senate for her confirmation hearing tomorrow (Jan. 9).

**Update: Sen. Cedillo confirms what everyone already knew, that he's running for the Solis seat. Read the press release here.

Cuts at the Daily Breeze*, **

Here are the cuts I've heard about at the Daily Breeze thus far:
Bruce Hazelton, photographer
Andrea Hayashi, administrative assistant for features
*I'm told a sports writer and a features writer also lost their jobs today. I'll update with names when I get them.

**Here's the memo to staff from Editor Phillip Sanfield:
All,

I'm very sorry to report that we experienced more newsroom layoffs today. Unfortunately, four journalists were laid off in the Breeze newsroom due to the continued economic tailspin we find ourselves in. There were also layoffs in the advertising department, as well as at some our sister LANG papers. We lost dedicated, talented employees. I'm deeply saddened by it, both personally and professionally.

Between these departures and last Friday's announcement of the likely move toward a consolidated newsdesk, this has been the most challenging time in my tenure at The Breeze. Certainly 2009 is starting on a difficult note at our newspaper, in our industry and for our nation's economy. While I can't say when things will improve, I do pledge to work hard to keep us focused on producing the top-quality local content that you all do so well. Try not to minimize the great things we do here, even with a reduced staff.

Toni and I plan to meet with you by section starting either Friday or early next week to update you further.

Phillip

Cuts at the Press-Telegram

Here are the names of those laid off at the Press-Telegram:
Joseph Dickson, online content manager
Brenda Duran, general assignment reporter
Scott Smeltzer, photographer
The Stress-Telegram has a little additional background on each.

Layoffs at the Daily News*, **

Here's the newsroom cut list for the Los Angeles Daily News:
Tyrone Harris, editorial assistant
Gregg Miller, graphics
Roger Vargo, photo/pre-pressing
Patrick O'Connor, editorial cartoonist
Steve Dilbeck, sports columnist
Jammie Salugabang, features copy editor/online
Stewart Slavin, copy/slot editor
Simone Trimm, editorial assistant in features
Roger Vargo, picture editor
I'm also told that assistant city editor Aron Miller, who is taking a job with Rep. Fran Pavley, stepped up to take the buyout, but lost out on his severance package because L.A. Observed had reported that he'd already accepted the job. He loses two weeks pay for every year of employment.

*Updated with additional names.

**As Kevin Roderick at LA Observed points out, Miller did confirm to Roderick that he was taking a job with Pavley before Roderick posted the information on his site. I should have made that clearer.

Layoff update

Los Angeles Daily News sports columnist Steve Dilbeck got the word last night that he was fired. Paul Oberjuerge confirms the news.

Jan 7, 2009

Cuts today, more tomorrow*

I'm trying to get a full accounting of the cuts today in LANG's Inland Division. Here are the names I've heard thus far:
San Bernardino Sun/Inland Valley Daily Bulletin photographers Eric Reed and Jeff Malet
Inland Valley Daily Bulletin reporter Mark Petix
Daily Bulletin/Sun sportswriter Darin McGilvra
Daily Bulletin news assistant/receptionist Cathy Martin

San Gabriel Valley Tribune sportswriter Doug Padilla
San Gabriel Valley Tribune advertorial writers Karen Webber and Clarice Prittie
Additionally, LA Observed has posted a memo from the Southern California Media Guild alerting guild members of impending cuts at Los Angeles Daily News and Long Beach Press-Telegram - seven at the DN, three at the P-T.

*Updated with additional names.

Cooper the Prosector

Marc Cooper details what's gone wrong at the L.A. Weekly. Some of it might sound familiar to other Southland journalists.

A short excerpt:
Perhaps the most iconic moment in the Weekly’s descent was the forced move last year from its birthplace town of Hollywood to a sterile warehouse-like building next to a 405 off-ramp in Culver City. This would be tantamount to moving the New York Times across the river to Hoboken. I'm no softie on the counter-culture, but the uprooting of the paper from its nest on Sunset Boulevard was a clear sign from management that it had absolutely no interest in the ethos, tradition or soul of the paper. It had become nothing more than a widget.

The results of all this? Fairly catastrophic, I would say. And that’s with the full-on debacle yet to come. The L.A. Weekly press run is currently down about 30% or more from its peak of 210,000. That means they can't even give away as many copies as in the past. The weekly number of printed pages has fallen to just above 100 when in the past it hovered at and beyond 200 (once even touching 352 pages). Even special editions, ones that carry years of tradition and loyalty, like the recent restaurant edition, are but shadows of the past. One of the most savvy of long-time New Times watchers once told me -- years ago-- "the guys who run these newspapers run them like they already know the shut-down date." It seems they now might finally get their wish.

Layoffs in the works*

LANG does appear to be trimming its ranks on the business side. I'm told four people working in the classified ad department at the San Gabriel Valley Tribune were laid off today.

Update: I'm told two photographers, Eric Reed and Jeff Malet, were laid off at the San Bernardino Sun/Inland Valley Daily Bulletin.

Update II: An anonymous comment says the receptionist at the Daily Bulletin did not lost her job after all, so I've removed that line from an earlier update. Since most of the information I have about layoffs is sketchy right now - and some of it is conflicting - I'll wait to update again until I have more solid information.

UPDATE III: San Gabriel Valley Tribune sports reporter Doug Padilla was laid off.

*This is an updated version of an earlier post.

Politico looks at Solis seat*

David Mark, former political reporter at the Pasadena Star-News, now writing for Politico, takes a look at the race to replace Rep. Hilda Solis, who is President-elect Obama's pick for Labor Secretary. Mark thinks Judy Chu, chair of the state Board of Equalization, will benefit from a split in the Latino vote.

From the story:
In the special House election to succeed Rep. Hilda L. Solis (D-Calif.), who was recently tapped to become the Obama administration’s labor secretary, former Monterey Park Mayor Judy Chu stands to gain from a potentially crowded field of prominent Latino officeholders that could divide the Hispanic vote and enable her to capture the solidly Democratic, East Los Angeles-based seat.
*Update: Assemblyman Ed Hernandez, once considered a possible candidate for the Solis seat, has decided not to run. Instead he has thrown his support to Chu. This should help her with voters on the eastern side of the district.

Rocky Mountain muzzle

The Rocky Mountain News refused to run a column asking if the Justice Department should intervene to ensure the paper isn't closed, the Colorado Independent reports.

Jan 6, 2009

Daily News newsroom shrinks by one

Daily News staffer Aron Miller, who did time as interim city editor, has announced he is leaving to work for state Sen. Fran Pavley, according to LA Observed.

Celebrity doctor-in-chief

ABC News reports that CNN's Dr. Sanjay Gupta has been tapped to be Surgeon General under President Obama.

Crime and publishing

Mob movies aside, many people tend to like justice doled out with conviction, with good guys doing good and bad guys getting caught red handed. It gives them a sense of control and clarity - even when transmuted through one of the dozen or so CSI and Law and Order spinoffs.

No surprise then that struggling newspapers rely ever more on crime stories to keep local readers interested. Police blotters and crime briefs, along with prep sports and obits, are perennially popular with readers.

"The Slammer" in North Carolina takes this to fetishistic levels and seems to be enjoying success because of it. From the Christian Science Monitor via Romenesko:
“You look at this paper, and you’re amazed by the amount of illegal stuff going on in what you thought was a sleepy little city,” [says Publisher Isaac Cornetti], referring to Raleigh. “The appeal is voyeurism and schadenfreude, and it has some redeeming qualities, too, like helping people protect themselves, their families, and their businesses.”
Then there's the tendency of newspapers to "help out" when the good guys ask for it - especially if the crime involves a child. Romenesko links to a story in the Albany Times Union in which the paper's editor says he will consider withholding the names of witnesses in a murder trial at the request of the DA:
"Because we're talking about children as witnesses, the standard that we would apply is raised," [Editor Rex] Smith said. "We will review, on a case-by-case basis, whether there is an overriding public interest in identifying the witnesses. My sense is that our stories will not be compromised by withholding these names."
The paper has named the defendant, who is 16.

The new taxes

California law prohibits law enforcement agencies from setting quotas for how many traffic tickets they write, but weak budgets further weakened by not-so-clever borrowing schemes will, I predict, turn many California cities into speed traps in 2009. It should also be a lucrative year for privately run parking enforcement companies, which promise to "maximize revenues" for cash-strapped cities.

Don't think cities would do anything so egregious as boost ticket writing to offset falling revenues? Ask a scientist (emphasis mine):
Thomas A. Garrett, an assistant vice president at the St. Louis Federal Reserve, knew he deserved to be ticketed while on vacation in Pennsylvania a few years ago. But, he wondered, are traffic tickets purely about public safety? Or are other factors at play? Many motorists probably have wondered the same thing sitting on a highway shoulder waiting for a citation. But Garrett turned it into a scholarly pursuit. He decided to conduct a study.

What Garrett and a co-author discovered provides yet another reason to hate a recession.

Traffic tickets go up significantly when local government revenue falls, they found. Their study showed for the first time evidence of how "local governments behave, in part, as though traffic tickets are a revenue tool to help offset periods of fiscal distress."
I once uncovered a memo written by the then-police chief in Claremont that said patrol officers needed to write a minimum number of citations each month as part of their performance evaluation. That was a no-no. Most city police departments avoid stating a number, but make citation writing a part of a broader performance evaluation.

Jan 5, 2009

A call for nonprofits

Michael Rappaport, formerly of the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, argues that nonprofits are needed to fill the widening gaps in local news coverage.

Post's managing editor says farewell*

Phil Bennett plans to step down as managing editor of the Washington Post at the end of the week. Romenesko has the memo.

*More shuffling: The Post's White House reporter, Michael Abramowitz, says he's leaving the paper to join the Holocaust Museum

Jan 4, 2009

A1 ad space*

One of the last holdouts, the New York Times has begun selling ads on its front page, according to a NYT story that probably won't make A1:
The first such ad, appearing Monday in color, was bought by CBS. The ad, two-and-a-half inches high, lies horizontally across the bottom of the front page, below the news articles and a brief summary of some articles in the paper. In a statement, the paper said such ads would be placed “below the fold” — that is, on the lower half of the page.
*UPDATE: Huffington Post gets saucy with with a "Front Page For Sale" headline, prompting the New York Observer to call bullshit.

I feel like someone's following me...

When money and the government are involved, environmental consciousness quickly gives way to bad decision-making.

First Amendment goes back to high school

A new law in California protects high school advisers from retaliation for helping student journalists whose work runs afoul of administrators.

Bill Richardson steps aside

New Mexico Gov. and Pasadena native Bill Richardson has withdrawn his name from consideration to become Commerce secretary, citing an ongoing investigation into alleged "pay to play" funny business in the awarding state contracts.

Jan 3, 2009

Ad delivery system failure

Ezra Klein at the American Prospect gets tired of seeing "I told you so" listed as a qualification for curing what ails the newspaper industry:
Over at BoingBoing, Clay Shirky engages in a bit of self-congratulatory schadenfreude for predicting the collapse of the newspaper business model back in 1993. And no doubt: He was prescient. But like a lot of folks (many of them named Jeff Jarvis) who write these posts, there's an odd lament laced through the triumphalism: If only they'd listened.

-snip-

What's never quite explained is what would have happened had everyone treated lay Shirky's utterances like aural treasure. Because I believe in Shirky's original analysis. "The price of information has not only gone into free fall in the last few years, it is still in free fall now, it will continue to fall long before it hits bottom, and when it does whole categories of currently lucrative businesses will be either transfigured unrecognizably or completely wiped out, and there is nothing anyone can do about it," he wrote. And he was right then. There was nothing anyone could do about it. More content aggregation and web chats and transparency would not have altered the fundamental force ripping apart the industry. Newspapers were built on local advertising monopolies. The internet deprived them of those monopolies. Less important than an individual's ability to access the BBC's news feed was his ability to access Craigslist's classifieds. In the internet age, midsize newspapers are an inefficiency. And they are being eliminated.

Jarvis had no answer for this, and nor, so far as I know, does Shirky...

Quick out of the gate

Newspapers have cut over 210 jobs in the first three days of 2009, the blog Paper Cuts reports. The largest number comes from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, which will shed 156 jobs as it drops nearly two dozen counties from its circulation area.