Miami Herald

Miami Herald names new executive editor

- BY DAVID SMILEY dsmiley@miamiheral­d.com

Monica R. Richardson, senior managing editor of the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, will be the new executive editor of the Miami Herald, el Nuevo Herald and the Bradenton Herald, and will serve as McClatchy’s Florida regional editor. She begins Jan. 1.

The Miami Herald’s parent company named a new executive editor on Monday to lead its newsrooms in Florida — a 30-year veteran of the news business, with expertise in Metro reporting and a specializa­tion in digital news.

Monica R. Richardson, currently the senior managing editor of the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, will join the Miami Herald Jan. 1 as its top editor, according to a McClatchy news release.

Richardson will be the first Black executive editor in the Herald’s 117-year history.

“We are thrilled to welcome Monica to Miami,” Kristin Roberts, McClatchy’s senior vice president of news, said in a statement. “She has a strong record of leadership in local journalism at one of the great metro newsrooms in the country. Now, she brings her commitment to accountabi­lity journalism and a track

record of successful digital innovation that serves local audiences.”

In an interview, Richardson said she is excited to lead the Miami Herald.

“I’m pleased to be working in a newsroom where journalism is the core mission of everything. That’s what drives me in my career. It’s the passion,” she said. “I wouldn’t be coming to Miami if I didn’t see that passion for journalism.”

Richardson, 50, will focus on growing the media company’s audience and digital subscripti­ons, according to

McClatchy, and promote the journalism produced by the newspaper’s awardwinni­ng newsrooms. She will also oversee el Nuevo Herald and the Bradenton Herald, and will serve as McClatchy’s Florida regional editor.

Richardson, originally from Charlottes­ville, Virginia, is a veteran journalist and editor. She has worked at the Charlottes­ville Observer, Florida TimesUnion, and Lexington Herald-Leader over her nearly 30-year career.

She has spent the last 15 years at the Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, where she was the paper’s digital managing editor before her promotion in 2018 to senior managing editor.

Richardson has been named among the Atlanta Business League’s Top 100 Women of Influence in consecutiv­e years and has served as a juror to the national Pulitzer Prize board.

Richardson succeeds Aminda Marqués González, who last month ended a 10-year run as the Miami Herald’s executive editor to join Simon & Schuster, the book publisher.

Richardson joins the Miami Herald at a challengin­g time for journalism, with the pandemic disrupting revenue streams and forcing employees to work remotely.

In a press release announcing her appointmen­t, Richardson said “the impact of the pandemic, racial reckoning and the country’s political divisivene­ss” make the Herald’s mission “more important now than ever before.”

Richardson said she intends to use her digital experience to help accelerate the Miami Herald’s online transforma­tion. She said one of her first goals as executive editor is also “to build strong relationsh­ips in the newsroom, strong relationsh­ips in the community, and make sure our newsroom and community are heard.”

Richardson, a graduate of Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, is a single mother, raising an adopted 8-year-old daughter. On Monday, Dorothy Tucker, president of the National Associatio­n of Black Journalist­s, applauded her hiring, noting that Herald management had recently committed to adding a high-ranking Black executive to its team.

“We congratula­te Monica and are pleased that the McClatchy-owned Herald is taking this important historic step to diversify its management ranks,” said Tucker. “It’s a good business decision that will benefit Herald consumers through the production of additional content that appeals to a broader audience.”

Richardson’s hiring, as the Herald’s first Black executive editor, is an “important milestone” for the paper, Roberts and Miami Herald President Nancy A. Meyer wrote in an email to staff announcing her appointmen­t.

“I don’t take that lightly,” Richardson said. “It means a lot to me. It means a lot to my family. It means a lot to my ancestors. I’ll step into those shoes and work hard.”

 ??  ?? Monica Richardson, originally from Charlottes­ville, Virginia, is a veteran journalist and editor. In her new job, she’ll focus on growing the newspapers’ audience and digital subscripti­ons.
Monica Richardson, originally from Charlottes­ville, Virginia, is a veteran journalist and editor. In her new job, she’ll focus on growing the newspapers’ audience and digital subscripti­ons.

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