March 12, 2009

As Cities Go From Two Papers to One, Talk of Zero
By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/12/business/media/12papers.html?em=&pagewanted=print


The history of The Seattle Post-Intelligencer stretches back more than two 
decades before Washington became a state, but after 146 years of 
publishing, the paper is expected to print its last issue next week, 
perhaps surviving only in a much smaller online version.

And it is not alone. The Rocky Mountain News shut down two weeks ago, and 
The Tucson Citizen is expected to fold next week.

At least Denver, Seattle and Tucson still have daily papers. But now, some 
economists and newspaper executives say it is only a matter of time — and 
probably not much time at that — before some major American city is left 
with no prominent local newspaper at all.

“In 2009 and 2010, all the two-newspaper markets will become one-newspaper 
markets, and you will start to see one-newspaper markets become 
no-newspaper markets,” said Mike Simonton, a senior director at Fitch 
Ratings, who analyzes the industry.

Many critics and competitors of newspapers — including online start-ups 
that have been hailed as the future of journalism — say that no one should 
welcome their demise.

“It would be a terrible thing for any city for the dominant paper to go 
under, because that’s who does the bulk of the serious reporting,” said 
Joel Kramer, former editor and publisher of The Star Tribune and now the 
editor and chief executive of MinnPost .com, an online news organization in 
Minneapolis.

“Places like us would spring up,” he said, “but they wouldn’t be nearly as 
big. We can tweak the papers and compete with them, but we can’t replace them.”

No one knows which will be the first big city without a large paper, but 
there are candidates all across the country. The Hearst Corporation, which 
owns The Post-Intelligencer, has also threatened to close The San Francisco 
Chronicle, which lost more than $1 million a week last year, unless it can 
wring significant savings from the operation.

In a tentative deal reached Tuesday night, the California Media Workers 
Guild agreed to less vacation time, longer workweeks and more flexibility 
for The Chronicle to make layoffs without regard to seniority. Union 
officials say they have been told to expect the elimination of at least 150 
guild jobs, almost one-third of the total, and management is still trying 
to negotiate concessions from the Teamsters union.

Advance Publications said last fall that it might shut down The 
Star-Ledger, the dominant paper in New Jersey, but a set of cutbacks and 
union concessions kept the paper alive in much-downsized form.

The top papers in many markets, like The Star Tribune in Minneapolis, The 
Philadelphia Inquirer and The New Haven Register, belong to companies that 
have gone into bankruptcy in the last three months.

The owners insist they have no intention of closing publications, but the 
management making those assurances may not be in charge when the companies 
emerge from reorganization.

Other publishers, like the Seattle Times Company and MediaNews Group, owner 
of The Denver Post, The San Jose Mercury News and The Detroit News, are 
seen as being at risk of bankruptcy. Many newspapers — from The Miami 
Herald to The Chicago Sun-Times — have been put up for sale, with no buyers 
on the horizon.

Ad revenue, the industry’s lifeblood, has dropped about 25 percent in the 
last two years (by comparison, automotive revenue for Detroit’s Big Three 
fell about 15 percent during the same period, although it has accelerated 
recently), and that slide, accelerated by the recession, shows no sign of 
leveling off in 2009.

Web sites like Craigslist have been to classified ads what the internal 
combustion engine was to horse-drawn buggies. The stock prices of most 
newspaper publishers have dropped more than 90 percent from their peaks.

And magnifying the problem, for many chains, is a heavy burden of debt that 
they took on, mostly in a spree of buying other newspapers from 2005 to 
2007, just before the bottom dropped out of the business.

The Tribune Company, for instance, owner of The Chicago Tribune, The Los 
Angeles Times and other papers, filed for bankruptcy in December, largely 
because of its debt load. The reality is that even though the economic 
climate is hard for newspapers, without their debt payments the publishers 
in bankruptcy would still make money, as do most newspapers around the country.

But profits are shrinking fast; taken together, major chains had an 
operating profit margin of about 10 percent in 2008, down from more than 20 
percent as recently as 2004, according to research by John Morton, an 
independent analyst.

The recent closures and threatened closures point to an ominous new trend. 
For The Chronicle, The Rocky, The Star-Ledger, The Citizen and others, debt 
was never the problem and they belonged to solvent companies, but still 
they have been losing money.

Analysts say that many other major papers have also slid into red ink 
recently, including The Washington Post and The Boston Globe (which is 
owned by The New York Times Company).

The steady trickle of downsizing that sapped American papers for almost a 
decade has become a flood in the last few years. The Los Angeles Times 
still has one of the largest news staffs in the country, about 600 people, 
but it was twice as big in the late 1990s. The Washington Post had a 
newsroom of more than 900 six years ago, and has fewer than 700 now. The 
Gannett Company, the largest newspaper publisher in the country, eliminated 
more than 8,300 jobs in 2007 and 2008, or 22 percent of the total.

On Wednesday, The Miami Herald, once the celebrated flagship of the Knight 
Ridder chain, said it would trim an additional 19 percent of its already 
diminished staff.

Nearly every large paper in the country prints fewer pages and fewer 
articles, and many have eliminated entire sections. Bureaus in foreign 
capitals and even Washington have closed, and papers have jettisoned film 
criticism, book reviews and coverage of local news outside their home markets.

Many papers are sharing coverage with former competitors in an effort to 
save money. (The New York Times has also suffered from declining revenue, 
but has been able to avoid serious newsroom cuts so far.)

For more than two centuries, newspapers have been the indispensable source 
of public information and a check on the abuses of government and other 
powerful interests. And they still reach a vast and growing audience. Daily 
print circulation has dropped from a peak of 62 million two decades ago to 
around 49 million, and online readership has risen faster, to almost 75 
million Americans and 3.7 billion page views in January, according to 
Nielsen Online.

But no one yet has unlocked the puzzle of supporting a large newsroom 
purely on digital revenue, a fact that may presage an era of news 
organizations that are smaller, weaker and less able to fulfill their 
traditional function as the nation’s watchdog.

“I can’t imagine what civil society would be like,” said Buzz Woolley, a 
wealthy San Diego businessman who has been a vocal critic of the paper 
there, The Union-Tribune, and the primary backer of an Internet news site, 
VoiceofSanDiego.org. “I don’t want to imagine it. A huge amount of 
information would just never get out.”

Not everyone agrees. The death of a newspaper should result in an explosion 
of much smaller news sources online, producing at least as much coverage as 
the paper did, says Jeff Jarvis, director of interactive journalism at the 
City University of New York’s graduate journalism school. Those sources 
might be less polished, Mr. Jarvis said, but they would be competitive, 
ending the monopolies many newspapers have long enjoyed.

A number of money-losing papers should “have the guts to shut down print 
and go online,” he said. “It will have to be a much smaller product, but 
that’s where we’re headed anyway.”

Industry executives who once scoffed at the idea of an Internet-only 
product now concede that they are probably headed in that direction, but 
the consensus is that newspapers going all digital would become drastically 
smaller news sources for the foreseeable future.

Until then, papers have turned to measures that would have been unthinkable 
just a year or two ago, including many that are weighing whether to begin 
charging readers for online access, as The Wall Street Journal does.

Starting March 30, the major Detroit papers, The Free Press and The News, 
will deliver to subscribers only three days a week, to save money on 
printing and trucking. The Christian Science Monitor will print its last 
daily edition on March 27, becoming primarily an online operation, with a 
printed weekly paper.

“It’s not so much that everyone has a great plan,” said John Yemma, editor 
of The Monitor. Rather, he said, “everybody is so desperate, they’re 
looking at every possibility.”


=================================================
George Antunes                    Voice (713) 743-3923
Associate Professor               Fax   (713) 743-3927
Political Science                    Internet: antunes at uh dot edu
University of Houston
Houston, TX 77204-3011         

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