October 20, 2009

New York Times Moves to Trim 100 in Newsroom
By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA
NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/20/business/media/20times.html?_r=1&ref=business&pagewanted=print


The New York Times plans to eliminate 100 newsroom jobs — about 8 
percent of the total — by year’s end, offering buyouts to union and 
nonunion employees, and resorting to layoffs if it cannot get enough 
people to leave voluntarily, the paper announced on Monday.

The program mirrors one carried out in the spring of 2008, when the 
paper erased 100 positions in its newsroom, though other jobs were 
created, so the net reduction was smaller. That round of cuts included 
some layoffs of journalists — about 15 to 20, though The Times would not 
disclose the actual figure — which was the first time in memory such a 
layoff had happened.

Times executives said this year that they did not anticipate — but would 
not rule out — the news staff shrinking in 2009, except through 
attrition. In fact, when employees took a 5 percent pay cut for most of 
this year, it was meant to forestall any staff reductions. But hopes for 
a year-end turnaround in the newspaper business have faded.

Third-quarter results reported in the last few days by the Gannett 
Company and the McClatchy Company indicate that the industry’s steep 
drop in advertising barely slowed in the third quarter. The New York 
Times Company will report its results for the quarter on Thursday. The 
ad slump has caused newspapers to consider charging readers for online 
content, a topic of heated debate within The Times this year.

“I won’t pretend that these staff cuts will not add to the burdens of 
journalists whose responsibilities have grown faster than their 
compensation,” Bill Keller, the executive editor of The Times, wrote in 
a note to his staff. He added, “Like you, I yearn for the day when we 
can do our jobs without looking over our shoulders for economic 
thunderstorms.”

The paper has made much deeper reductions in other departments than it 
has in the newsroom, but the advertising drop pummeling the industry has 
forced cuts in the news operation as well. Besides the staff pay cut, 
the newsroom has eliminated some sections of the paper and lowered its 
budgets for freelancers.

In addition to the newsroom cuts, The Times said Monday that it would 
offer buyouts to Newspaper Guild-represented employees in other 
departments, including advertising. But the paper says it is not seeking 
to eliminate a specific number of jobs among those workers.

The Times’s news department peaked at more than 1,330 employees before 
the last round of cuts. The current number of workers is about 1,250; no 
other American newspaper has more than about 750.

Nearly all metropolitan papers have been cutting their news operations 
for years, and some have fewer than half as many people in their 
newsrooms as they did a few years ago. The Los Angeles Times has dropped 
to about 600 news employees, from more than 1,200; The Washington Post 
to about 700, from more than 900; and The Boston Globe, which is owned 
by the Times Company, to close to 300, from well over 500.

The Times will mail buyout packages to the entire newsroom staff on 
Thursday. The employees have 45 days to decide whether to apply for the 
buyout. Under the Newspaper Guild contract that covers most newsroom 
employees, buyouts generally offer three weeks’ salary for each year of 
service; nonunion employees are offered two weeks for each year.

In a question-and-answer session with Jill Abramson and John Geddes, the 
managing editors of The Times, several newsroom employees asked about 
the possibility of using another pay cut, furloughs, part-time work or 
other measures to avoid layoffs, but Mr. Geddes said such steps could 
not address the paper’s financial problems in the long term.

He said there was no plan for distributing the cuts among news 
departments or job descriptions — termination decisions, he said, could 
be largely dictated by who applies for buyouts.

The announcement and staff meeting came before the close of market 
trading. Shares in the Times Company rose 5 percent during the trading 
day and fell slightly after hours.

Also on Monday, Gannett reported third-quarter net income of $73.8 
million, down from $158.1 million a year earlier. The company’s 
newspaper ad revenue fell 28.4 percent in the quarter, an improvement 
from the 33.1 percent decline over the first half of the year. That was 
similar to the 28.1 percent drop that McClatchy reported last week.

Industrywide, ad revenue fell 28.6 percent in the first half of this 
year, and analysts and industry executives recently predicted that the 
pace of decline would slow to 25 percent or less in the third quarter. 
The reports from Gannett and McClatchy, two of the largest publishers, 
suggest that such estimates were a little too optimistic.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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