Tag Archives: Newspapers

Bay Area News Group Combines Papers

Move ends 137-year run of the Oakland Tribune

by Brian Leubitz

In another sign of the struggling nature of the journalism business, the Bay Area News Group is combining 11 East Bay newspapers into just two.  In the process, they’ll be laying off 120 production workers and up to 40 editorial staffers.  I suppose it won’t shock you that it is all about the money and falling subscriptions:

“After many months of research and planning, we are taking a strategy of re-branding,” said Mac Tully, BANG president, in an interview. “We are trying to gain efficiencies through streamlining. A lot of positives are being added: a local section seven days a week, a stand-alone business section every day and the successful technology section from the South Bay being brought up to the East Bay.”

BANG will shift more of its print dollars to digital offerings, its iPad and iPhone apps and upcoming products, he said.

Starting Nov. 2, the Oakland Tribune, Alameda Times-Star, Daily Review, Argus and West County Times will appear under the name East Bay Tribune. Tully said it will primarily serve the Interstate 880 corridor.  Also, the Contra Costa Times, Valley Times, San Ramon Valley Times, Tri-Valley Herald, San Joaquin Herald and East County Times will be re-branded as the Times to serve the Interstate 680 corridor and east, Tully said.  In addition, the San Mateo County Times will be branded under the Mercury News title. Tully said it’s still under discussion whether the Mercury News will keep San Jose in its name.(SF Chronicle)

BANG has some great writers who do some yeoman’s work covering local and state politics, including writers regularly featured here like Josh Richman and Steven Harmon.  Journalists are often stretched to incredible lengths, and more work than ever is expected out of them.  And don’t expect to see any skyrocketing salaries from the industry either.

With any luck, these moves will keep BANG stable for a long time as we continue to feel our way out in the new information economy.  

The San Diego Union-Tribune’s War On Public Employees

The San Diego daily newspaper makes no bones about its position on labor unions and public employees.  A casual reading of the Union Tribune will reveal an anti-union bias that harks back to the early days of the trade union movement.

This week the paper has been presenting a “special three part Watchdog Report” about city employees in San Diego.  Never mind that the report’s numbers are skewed by the fact that the reporters chose to use a Calendar year in stead of the City’s fiscal year to make their comparisons.  Or that city employees received pay in 2007 and 2008 resulting from labor disputes in previous years.

The point of the report is to reveal that city employees are overpaid, union-lovin’ cancers that are sucking the taxpayers dry. To make that point, the paper ran the names and salary information for the City’s entire payroll.

City librarian Anna Daniels retired last week.  It wasn’t something she wanted to do.  But, facing cuts in benefits that would have left her without health insurance coverage if she’d stayed on with the City, she “cashed out”.

She’s written a rather powerful letter to the editor about how the Union-Trib’s decision to publish names and salaries has impacted those employees that have remained with the City of San Diego.

Here are excerpts from the letter, originally published in the OBRag news blog:

The U-T has presented a special three part Watchdog Report about the City’s payroll obligation.  I have spent close to three decades in my public service position answering questions and informing the public.  If someone were to ask me how to find information on this topic I would refer that individual to annual budgets, IBA reports, and labor agreements on line or in our document section.

I would also provide context for that search- that the City operates on a fiscal year beginning July 1; there is a general fund budget which includes departments that undergo annual public review and city council approval; there are quasi-independent authorities and  recovery departments that are not subject to the same policies, restrictions and review as the general fund departments; there are unclassified and represented employees; and there are four unions with different negotiated contracts.

In short, I would inform the individual that a thorough understanding of the topic would take into account these general distinctions.  Unlike the U-T, we respect and do not underestimate the intelligence of our customers.

What I wouldn’t do, and again, I am speaking strictly as a professional, is refer that individual to your “Watchdog” series on the very ground that it did not provide necessary context, despite your claims otherwise, nor data consistent with the City’s fiscal year reporting process.  Therefore your information was inaccurate and as a source you are unreliable.  Ms. Winner, the U-T does not achieve the most basic library information standard of accuracy and reliability.  If you also consider yourself a professional you should be very concerned about that.  I would appreciate a response to this, as one professional to another.

Despite its abysmal failings, the Watchdog Report was not the reason I canceled my subscription.  The bias against unions and the City workforce is pretty much quotidian.  Your decision to publish City employee names and salary information however is beyond the journalistic pale.

Ms. Winner, how much time did you REALLY spend weighing the public’s right to information against individual privacy concerns?  And how much thought did you REALLY give to the fact that “Individual pay for each year can be affected by promotions, partial years of employment, leave taken, vacation payouts and other issues that can cause wide fluctuations.”?  Or to the fact that the 2008 surge was a one time occurrence due to multiple factors?   It is evident that the answer is “Not much.”

I talked with co-workers at the library this morning about your choice.  They were appalled.  Concerned.  Fearful.  Angry.  Every one of us felt that salary information by job classification, with low, high, median and average salaries would serve the public’s right to information.  We felt that making that information available by department served the public’s right to information.  But by name? The women among us felt violated.  Think about that Karin.  We are not elected officials.  Even our name badges don’t provide our last names if we don’t feel comfortable revealing that information. Whom and what purpose are you serving, Ms. Winner?  And please, we are not stupid.  We know you can legally provide this information.  The question is why should you provide this information?

Your note about the wide fluctuations of salaries was reason enough to choose not to reveal specific names.  You did not make that choice.  Here’s my very personal response to your phenomenally bad judgment, to your utterly unprofessional judgment.  I owe you absolutely nothing, but the truth should always be served.

Mickey Kaus Is An Uninformed Hack, Pt. 4,425

Mickey Kaus, last seen publishing the contents of a private email list for his own amusement, has now come up with a new idea (he gets one a year that have nothing to do with “let’s destroy teacher’s unions”); he wants to see a newspaper covering the Westside of Los Angeles.  It actually starts off rather good:

Over a million people live here. Affluent people. People semi-obsessively concerned with local issues like crime, traffic, development, city and state politics and ill-served by the magisterial L.A. Times in far off downtown, which has to cover all of Southern California and seems to think paying attention to the West Side is somehow elitist, if not racist. … You could hire five reporters–cheap, these days–and you’d have about four more reporters covering the area than the Times has. If they’re the right reporters it shouldn’t be that difficult to steal the Times’ richest readers and the advertisers who want to reach them. (Many of those readers already get the New York Times for its national and international coverage. You would be the local supplement.)

There’s no question that the LA Times is too big and too poorly mismanaged to pay proper attention to the many communities of Southern California.  And it’s also true that cuts to staff at local papers leave the country open to political trickery at the local level.  So there’s a lot to like about a niche-marketed local paper serving a fairly well-off community that would pay for the privilege.  Instead of newspaper bailouts, fostering increased competition at the local level makes sense.

Which leads us to what Mickey Kaus, a guy who is somehow a paid writer, thinks is a good use of local resources for a new newspaper:

We want to know whom Mayor Villaraigosa is dating, and we want to see her picture. And if John Edwards visits his mistress at the Beverly Hilton and gets chased into a bathroom by National Enquirer reporters–hey, you know, maybe that’s a story! (The LAT didn’t think so.) By covering politics in a way that got at least a few hundred thousand readers to pay attention, you could take the first, big step toward changing the apathetic culture of Southern California (the culture that lets Democratic interest groups fill the void and call the shots).

That’s right, Mickey’s conception of a paper that would change the apathetic culture of Southern California is one that is essentially a tabloid with a selective bias toward people Mickey Kaus hates.  Amazingly, he thinks that would be a big seller!  I’d bet they could call it “The Things Mickey Kaus Obsesses Over Tribune” and print tens of copies!  What a well-informed citizenry that would engender!  Maybe a free pair of panties (perfect for sniffing) could come with every edition!

Since Kaus apparently Googles his name repeatedly and has emailed me in the past when I’ve called him out on his nonsense (and a guy who links to random Tumblr pages on his own site seems to have a real sensitivity to this kind of thing), I’ll repeat to him what he said to Ezra Klein: “All communications are on the record.”

Web Chat about Bay Area News Consolidation

A quick heads up that there will be a web chat about newspaper consolidation in the East Bay at noon today at http://onebigbang.org. Newspapers are being hit increasingly hard, and the newsrooms are suffering for it.  These folks might be able to answer some questions about the consolidation.

Full details over the flip.

What a difference a year makes.

Wednesday, August 13 marks the first anniversary of the merger of the newsrooms of the former Contra Costa Newspapers and Alameda Newspaper Group.

The consolidation of these papers and Web sites, which include the Contra Costa Times, Oakland Tribune and Insidebayarea.com, created the Bay Area News Group – East Bay, or BANG-EB.

It also brought a fast and furious round of changes — including shrinking newsholes, skyrocketing health insurance costs and a mass exodus of talent from nearly every corner of the company. Every newspaper in the country has been struggling, and the Bay Area has been especially hard hit. In the past year alone, our newsrooms have lost nearly a third of their former staff.

Some good stuff happened too: We made new friends, got new computers, won a bunch of journalism awards and voted to join the Northern California Media Workers Guild  (a victory we’re still celebrating, even as we fight the layoff of some our most vocal supporters.)

We at the guild plan to commemorate BANG-EB’s birthday with a live Web chat moderated by unit leaders…and you’re invited.

Got questions about what you see — and don’t see — in your local paper? Wonder what the plans are for the future? Worried about whether we can sustain quality journalism amid the historic downturns of the newspaper industry?

We want to hear from you — please join the conversation:

Noon-1 p.m.

Wednesday Aug. 13

Live at www.onebigbang.org

The budget is worse than what you read…

(Cross posted from the Health Access WeBlog)

The news coverage of the budget, if anything, has downplayed the impact of the budget on health care. Let me focus on what we consider is the biggest of the cuts newly announced yesterday, that would impact the most number of people.

The San Francisco Chronicle mentions that the Medi-Cal eligibility cut would mean that “40,000 poor working parents, who now receive comprehensive Medi-Cal coverage, would have their benefits reduced if they earn more than about $12,000 for a family of three.”

Actually, these parents, who would make roughly $10,736-$17,600/year for a family of three, would lose access to Medi-Cal coverage. Some might be eligible for other programs, but many would simply become uninsured.

More to the point, the 39,000 people impacted in the first year is only the beginning. In a few years, after full implementation, the cut would deny coverage to 439,000 Californians.

The Los Angeles Times described it in this way, that the budget would “Deny thousands of impoverished parents healthcare coverage that they now have through the state’s Medi-Cal program. Under the change, a single parent with one child who earns more than $8,540 a year would no longer be eligible.” Tha was correct, but downplayed the massive scale of the cut–that the impact was eventually deny hundreds of thousands of Californians.

The Sacramento Bee has an article that doesn’t go into the specific horror of the cuts.

The sidebar that describes the budget “highlights” doesn’t even mention this cut to Medi-Cal eligibility–even though it is the health cut with the biggest impact in the May Revise. That sidebar does list some of the bad cuts, but also neglects to mention a major-dollar proposed cut from January, that would also eliminate key benefits, like dental, optometry, and podiatry, for millions of adults on coverage. It’s unclear why some cuts were included and other, bigger cuts were not.

Let’s hope that future coverage of the budget goes into the full implications of what is being proposed here. The cuts are bad enough that they don’t need embellishment, but they do need coverage, so Californians can understand the stark choices, and how they would impact our fellow citizens and our health system.