Los Angeles Times

L.A. Times Guild calls for one-day walkout

The union-led strike, a first for the 142-yearold newspaper, is in protest of looming staff cutbacks.

- By Meg James

Los Angeles Times newsroom guild leaders called for a one-day walkout Friday to protest planned cuts to offset steep financial losses that owner Dr. Patrick SoonShiong and his family have absorbed since acquiring the paper nearly six years ago.

The Times disclosed Thursday that substantia­l layoffs were coming due to a widening budget deficit. The one-day strike represents the newsroom’s first unionorgan­ized work stoppage in the paper’s 142-year history.

Management has not publicly disclosed the number of newsroom positions that will be eliminated, but knowledgea­ble people said the plan is to lay off at least 100 journalist­s, or about 20% of the newsroom — the largest staff cut since the paper was owned by Tribune Co.

The looming cuts have sparked widespread anxiety in a newsroom already shaken by last week’s abrupt departure of Executive Editor Kevin Merida, who stepped down amid tensions with Soon-Shiong, in large part, over Merida’s fears that the magnitude of the proposed cuts would hamper the paper’s progress toward strengthen­ing its journalism to become a sustainabl­e enterprise, according to the knowledgea­ble people.

The proposed layoffs will mark the third round of cuts since June, when more than 70 positions, or about 13% of the newsroom, were trimmed.

“The company and the Guild are currently in discussion­s about how to proceed,” newsroom managers said in a message sent to the newsroom Thursday. “We believe our shared goals are to preserve as many jobs as possible and maintain areas of coverage that better represent the communitie­s we serve and that our readers have shown us are vital to the business.”

This week, Soon-Shiong and other managers asked the union’s bargaining unit to relax provisions in its contract intended to protect journalist­s with seniority from layoffs. If the union agreed to that, the company would offer affected employees a buyout package in advance of any layoff, managers said.

Soon-Shiong wants to make cuts while also retaining diverse staff members who have joined the paper in recent years as the organizati­on has prioritize­d its efforts to boost the number of journalist­s of color to better reflect the community that it serves.

“After so many decades of falling short, we are finally making real strides toward accurately ref lecting our city and region,” L.A. Times Guild Caucus leaders wrote in a letter to Soon-Shiong and his wife, Michele Chan Soon-Shiong, earlier this week. The group includes caucuses representi­ng Black, Latino, Asian American, Middle Eastern, South Asian and LGBTQ+ staff members.

“As you navigate financial pressures in our industry, we urge you to avoid undoing the diversity that we’ve worked so hard to build,” the Guild Caucus leaders wrote. “Layoffs would be catastroph­ic, eliminatin­g new and essential voices and diminishin­g the gains we’ve made under your family’s leadership.”

Managers have told the staff that relaxing seniority rules in the contract would save 50 newsroom jobs out of an undisclose­d number. Managers would like the ability to spare more recent hires from the cuts and instead pull from a pool of more veteran staffers.

Union members were furious that they were, in effect, being asked to make an “impossible choice” to suspend seniority protection­s to make it easier to lay off people.

“Management is trying to pit colleagues against colleagues to execute a plan that will be detrimenta­l to the long term success of the L.A. Times and a blow to the free press in the second largest city in America,” the Guild’s Black Caucus cochairs, Erin B. Logan and Erika D. Smith, said in a statement.

The one-day work stoppage — described by the union as an “unfair labor practices strike — was envisioned as a way to demonstrat­e unity and extract concession­s from managers.

Guild members did not vote on the action. Leaders said a vote wasn’t necessary because the strike was not open-ended and guild members were told it was their decision whether or not to participat­e.

“We need to show them that this place does not exist without workers,” L.A. Times Guild Unit Chairman Brian Contreras told more than 300 journalist­s who joined an emergency union meeting, held by Zoom, on Thursday.

Some union members emphasized that seniority was “a bedrock principle” of any union contract and allows staff members to put down roots in the community and develop sources.

The union’s contract expired more than a year ago, but the terms are still in effect.

Soon-Shiong has told managers that although he’s willing to continue to subsidize the operation in the future, cuts are necessary to offset declining revenues. The company lost $30 million to $40 million last year, said two sources familiar with the matter who were not authorized to comment.

Union members were frustrated that the company has not disclosed how many jobs will be cut.

“The Bargaining Committee is not allowed to say how many Guild members the company wants to lay off. But folks: This is the Big One,” Media Guild of the West President Matt Pearce told fellow colleagues in an email calling the emergency meeting.

Soon-Shiong and his family acquired The Times and the San Diego UnionTribu­ne for $500 million in June 2018 from Tribune Co., restoring Los Angeles’ 142year-old institutio­n to local ownership after more than a decade of turmoil and endless waves of cost-cutting that prompted an exodus of talented journalist­s and a withering of ambition.

The newsroom is currently being managed by a committee of top editors after Merida departed Friday. He cited several reasons for his exit, including difference­s of opinion with his boss over his role and “how journalism should be practiced.”

A source of friction erupted over Merida’s response to a letter signed by three dozen staffers decrying the deaths of Palestinia­n journalist­s and Israel’s actions.

Citing the company’s newsroom ethics policy that forbids involvemen­t in political causes, Merida swiftly removed those journalist­s from all coverage of issues that were directly or indirectly related to the Middle East conflict for at least three months.

Soon-Shiong said he was “disappoint­ed” that Merida had not informed him before making the decision, although he cited other factors for Merida’s exit, including a lack of progress toward meeting readership goals.

The Times has faced setbacks brought by the COVID-19 pandemic, a rapidly shifting news environmen­t and financial head winds that have stymied his goal to make the organizati­on self-supporting. Last summer, the Soon-Shiong family sold the San Diego paper to an affiliate of Denver-based MediaNews Group, which is owned by Alden Global Capital.

“We need to reduce our operating budget going into this year and anticipate layoffs,” Times spokeswoma­n Hillary Manning said Thursday in a statement. “The hardest decisions to make are those that impact our employees, and we do not come to any such decisions lightly.”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? THE L.A. TIMES reportedly plans to lay off 20% of its newsroom staff. Above, its El Segundo offices.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times THE L.A. TIMES reportedly plans to lay off 20% of its newsroom staff. Above, its El Segundo offices.

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