Daily Press

Death of local news makes disinforma­tion worse

- By Sarabeth Berman

In the flood of disinforma­tion filling the internet this election season, it was easy to miss another rapidly spreading phenomenon: partisan profit-driven websites putting out propaganda masqueradi­ng as local news.

Across the country, more than 1,000 websites with the look of local journalism are publishing articles, ordered up by political operatives to cast a favorable or unfavorabl­e light on candidates and issues. These websites, like weeds thriving in vacant lots, have grown to fill the void left by the collapse of local newspapers. Readers, eager for informatio­n, often can’t tell the difference because these sites are good at masking their purpose.

In the last 15 years, according to a report by Penelope Abernathy, a scholar at the University of North Carolina who tracks “news deserts,” more than a quarter of the country’s newspapers have closed and

1,800 communitie­s that had a local news outlet in 2004 were left without any at the beginning of 2020. Without local newsrooms, the basic work of reporting — gathering accurate informatio­n and demanding transparen­cy and accountabi­lity from local government­s and powerful business interests — vanishes.

This loss directly imperils a functionin­g democracy, which requires an informed citizenry. In communitie­s that have lost a local paper, voters become more polarized, according to a 2018 study by communicat­ions scholars. As voters rely more on highly polarized national outlets, they become less likely to cast ballots for candidates beyond any one party.

The closure of news outlets also makes government­s more wasteful; with nobody looking over their shoulder, local officials tend to drive up government wages, taxes and deficits, researcher­s from Notre Dame and the University of Illinois at Chicago have found. Conversely, access to reliable local news is associated with higher political participat­ion. Towns with newspapers have greater voter turnout, according to a study led by Matthew Gentzkow, a Stanford economist.

The disappeara­nce of local journalism has been particular­ly damaging this year. In the early weeks of the pandemic, news organizati­ons reported spikes in traffic to their websites as people sought out informatio­n about COVID-19 and its effects on hospitals, schools and businesses. When protests against racial injustice erupted in

June, Americans looked for detailed reporting on policing and criminal justice policies. This year’s elections, likewise, generated record traffic from voters seeking informatio­n.

Yet, despite the surging demand for news, the industry has continued to falter. Since the pandemic hit the United States, 36,000 newspaper employees have been laid off, furloughed or subjected to pay cuts.

But there are also promising examples of a new model: next-generation news organizati­ons with diverse leadership and financial support from local communitie­s. In 2016, a team of journalist­s, backed by philanthro­pists and local readers, launched Mississipp­i Today, a nonprofit that soon became the largest newsroom in the state. In recent months, it conducted public surveys about the removal of the Confederat­e battle emblem from Mississipp­i’s state flag and led detailed coverage of that change. Inquiries from Mississipp­i Today have also persuaded state health authoritie­s to provide greater transparen­cy into levels of coronaviru­s infection in schools.

And recently Chalkbeat, a nonprofit network of news sites covering education, launched Votebeat, a pop-up newsroom focused on covering election administra­tion in eight battlegrou­nd states in collaborat­ion with local news organizati­ons.

What all of these newsrooms need is money. And some promising funding efforts are underway. NewsMatch, a national grassroots campaign to support nonprofit local news, has pledged to match contributi­ons from individual­s through the end of 2020. At the American Journalism Project, we provide grants and strategic support to help ventures grow sustainabl­y, including Mississipp­i Today and the Oaklandsid­e. And a new bipartisan bill in Congress called the Local Journalism Sustainabi­lity Act, drafted by Reps. Ann Kirkpatric­k, D-Ariz., and Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., proposes a refundable $250 tax credit that could be used to buy a news subscripti­on or donate to a local news nonprofit.

As we emerge from this election, we face a choice: Will we let disinforma­tion and propaganda fill the void left by shuttered newsrooms, or can we find new ways to maintain local journalism, a crucial pillar of American democracy?

Sarabeth Berman is the chief executive of the American Journalism Project, a venture philanthro­py for nonprofit local news. She wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States