Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

As Gannett, GateHouse merge, newspaper cost-cutting persists

- Tali Arbel and Alexandra Olson

NEW YORK – Just a week after announcing its $1.4 billion acquisitio­n of Gannett, GateHouse Media was again laying off journalist­s and other workers at its newspapers, possibly foreshadow­ing the future for employees of what will become the largest U.S. newspaper company.

GateHouse and Gannett say the merger will allow GateHouse to accelerate its newspapers’ move to digital while paying down huge sums GateHouse borrowed in order to fund the acquisitio­n. But it’s unclear exactly how that will happen.

Last week, more than two dozen newsroom employees and other workers were reportedly laid off at 10 newspapers, from Providence, Rhode Island, to Brockton, Massachuse­tts, to Oklahoma City. The Associated Press confirmed several of these layoffs with the affected employees, others in their newsrooms or union representa­tives. GateHouse did not announce the workforce reductions, and neither the company nor its owner, New Media, had any comment for this story.

Gannett also declined to comment, but pointed to previous public statements by New Media CEO Mike Reed in which he said the merged company would “not only preserve but actually enhance quality journalism.”

GateHouse also reportedly laid off dozens of employees in May and this past winter. Its earnings reports show that revenue is declining when the impact of acquisitio­ns is stripped out.

Further newsroom cuts show that “GateHouse doesn’t have a vision for growing revenue, only cutting costs,” charged Andrew Pantazi, a reporter at the Florida Times-Union, a GateHouse paper in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, and the head of a union chapter there. “Eventually they’ll run out of costs to cut.”

Many in the newsrooms and the communitie­s that depend on those newspapers are mourning the changes wrought by previous GateHouse cuts and bracing for more. Others, noting that both readers and advertiser­s have been deserting newspapers for more than a decade, argue that being part of a larger chain is the only route to survival for smaller papers often still struggling to migrate their publicatio­ns online.

Over the past 15 years, GateHouse has closed five daily newspapers and closed or merged dozens of weeklies, according to “The Expanding News Desert,” a University of North Carolina study on the state of the local news coverage.

GateHouse, whose leadership includes current and former Associated Press board members, is trying to reassure employees and investors. It says that bringing together the two companies will lead to about $300 million in annual cost cuts, and promises multiple sources of digital revenue to sustain the combined company and continue its commitment to quality journalism.

Some argue that such consolidat­ion is key to saving local journalism, which also competes for people’s attention with TV and Facebook. “They’re ultimately giving support to hundreds of individual publicatio­ns that wouldn’t have a chance of standing on their own,” said David Chavern, CEO of the news publisher trade group News Media Alliance.

But first, GateHouse has to pay down debt, including $1.8 billion borrowed from private equity firm Apollo at a high interest rate to get the Gannett deal done. It has also promised to continue a shareholde­r dividend and said it expects that to rise.

GateHouse has lagged competitor­s in adapting to a post-print world. Digital business accounts for just 12% of its revenue, compared with 36% for Gannett. Such digital revenue includes online subscripti­ons and ads on newspaper websites as well as income from separate businesses such as online marketing and productivi­ty tools for small companies.

While the company says it will invest in digital, such investment­s will probably be in the new lines of business, not necessaril­y in its newsrooms, said Reed Phillips, managing partner at investment bank Oaklins DeSilva + Phillips.

Newsroom staffing at U.S. newspapers has fallen 47% to 38,000 people in 2018 from 72,000 in 2004, according to Pew Research. Circulatio­n has plummeted in tandem. Pew estimates weekday circulatio­n fell almost 48% over the same period to 28.6 million.

While a few national publicatio­ns like The Washington Post, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal have successful online operations, the situation is very different at smaller local papers across the country.

After GateHouse buys a newspaper, cost cuts typically follow. Functions like page design and copy editing are shifted to remote hubs that handle the work for several newspapers. (Other newspaper chains, including Gannett, also have hubs for editing and page design.) Critics say media companies backed by financial firms, like GateHouse, are especially aggressive about closing or selling off newspapers in decline.

The Worcester Telegram & Gazette, which has been publishing in Massachuse­tts’ second-largest city since 1866, has been through four owners in the past decade, including GateHouse, which purchased it in early 2015.

The newsroom has shrunk to 25 reporters, copy editors and photograph­ers from 47 during its four years under GateHouse, said Rick Eggleston, a copy editor and head of the local union. “The mantra at GateHouse is doing more with less.”

Having fewer reporters from outside Boston asking questions of state officials “hurts the rest of the state,” said Tim Murray, president of the Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce and a former lieutenant governor of the state. “It’s hard to hold people accountabl­e.”

 ?? RICHARD DREW/AP FILE ?? GateHouse and Gannett say their merger will allow them to accelerate the digital transforma­tion of their newspapers.
RICHARD DREW/AP FILE GateHouse and Gannett say their merger will allow them to accelerate the digital transforma­tion of their newspapers.

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