Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Local news lives

- SONNY ALBARADO SPECIAL TO THE DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE

There’s been a lot of hand-wringing in recent years about the death of local newspapers, those bastions of democracy and chronicler­s of community. While the loss of any newspaper hurts the people they serve, residents of rural areas and small towns are hit especially hard when a newspaper shuts down.

When a local newspaper closes, citizens lose impartial news and informatio­n about town and county government, school boards, local athletic teams, academic awards, county fairs and the mundane and special occurrence­s of a community’s life.

Despite the very real consequenc­es of the shrinking traditiona­l sources of community news, Americans remain hungry for reliable, accurate local news and informatio­n, a 2023 study conducted for America’s Newspapers shows. The study by Coda Ventures found that eight out of 10 Americans still get news and informatio­n from local print or digital sources every month. The survey included a nationally representa­tive sample of 5,000 respondent­s.

Nearly three-quarters of respondent­s said a local newspaper is important, and 43 percent said local newspapers or their websites are the most accurate source of news and informatio­n. “Local news is critical to the well-being of a community,” the study’s authors wrote.

As a 50-year veteran of small- and medium-sized newspapers and now editor of a statewide digital news site covering government and public policy, I know how true that statement is. Local newspapers give readers more than just the news; they help define and keep a community’s culture strong.

My 93-year-old mother has been a subscriber to our hometown newspaper since I was a child, and she’s continued subscribin­g through changes in ownership and the switch from steady delivery by carrier to the sometimes spotty delivery by the mailman. From obituaries to wedding announceme­nts to front-page news, she relies on that newspaper to keep her connected to her community.

I learned about local politics and government by reading that newspaper. It’s a major source of my own passion for journalism and news.

The survey notes that when people say they “read the local newspaper,” they’re referring to any number of print and digital platforms where they can easily obtain news and informatio­n about their communitie­s. Not surprising­ly, those ages 18-39 cite social media as their preferred means of accessing local newspaper content, while those 40-74 prefer getting local news via a news website. Those 75 and older are almost evenly divided between preferring to read a home-delivered paper and reading a news website.

The study findings support the importance of local newspapers to citizens’ sense of community and engagement in public life, not just through news reporting but from public notices from local government and advertisin­g from local businesses.

Local newspapers and their websites are relied upon more than any other source of informatio­n about public notices and government, the study says: 55 percent versus 24 percent for government websites.

As National Newspaper Week gets underway, we should take hope that our fellow Americans remain supportive of local newspapers even as their means of accessing news and informatio­n has changed. Local news is not dead. #newpapersy­ourway

Sonny Albarado is editor-in-chief of Arkansas Advocate, an independen­t, nonpartisa­n news organizati­on. In his career, he has served as an investigat­ions editor, a business editor, a city editor, an environmen­tal reporter and a government reporter at newspapers in Arkansas, Tennessee and Louisiana. He retired in 2020 as Arkansas Democrat-Gazette projects editor, and returned to profession­al journalism in 2022 to lead Arkansas Advocate.

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