The Guardian Australia

News Corp Australia warns of coronaviru­s crisis job cuts as smaller regional papers close

- Amanda Meade

Rupert Murdoch’s Australian newspapers have warned staff of “inevitable” job cuts, as several independen­tly owned regional papers become the first media casualties of the economic impact of the coronaviru­s.

Regional newspapers in Victoria, some older than 100 years, have shut suddenly as revenue from advertisin­g dried up overnight.

News Corp Australasi­a chief executive Michael Miller said executives will take a “significan­t” pay cut as the advertisin­g market collapses and staff should brace for job losses and cutbacks including forced leave, part-time work and nine-day fortnights.

“I want to assure you that my priority is to preserve as many jobs across the company as possible, but it is now clear that some job losses will be inevitable,” Miler told staff across the company’s mastheads including the Australian, the Herald Sun and the Daily Telegraph.

“Together we need to move quickly to do everything we can to secure the health of our business and retain jobs.”

Miller said work conditions, which he expected to stay in place at least until the end of May, had changed dramatical­ly and newspapers were “reinventin­g” how news is gathered.

“Over recent days we have unfortunat­ely seen many companies having to reduce their workforce due to mandated business closures, travel and trade restrictio­ns, and rapidly changing consumer habits,” Miller said in reference to the downturn in the advertisin­g market.

In regional Victoria communitie­s have been devastated by the closure of well-establishe­d titles.

This year, the Sunraysia Daily was supposed to be celebratin­g its centenary, but at a meeting on Tuesday staff were told Saturday’s paper would be the last until further notice.

Staff will also be stood down at three other Elliott Newspaper Group mastheads, including the free weekly Sunraysia Life, the tri-weekly Swan Hill Guardian and the bi-weekly Gannawarra Times at Kerang and the Loddon Times in the Loddon Mallee region of Victoria.

The managing director of the Elliott Newspaper group, Ross Lanyon, said advertisin­g accounted for 70% of revenue.

“It is our current intention that when this crisis subsides that we will be able to revive our printed publicatio­ns,” Lanyon said.

“Over recent weeks the newspapers have not received anything near the usual commercial support across all advertisin­g sectors to remain viable as a publisher.

“This in combinatio­n with a grimmer economic outlook facing us, and the fact clients continue to cancel their spending gave us no option.”

Lanyon was critical of major advertiser­s who ignored the smaller regional papers when buying advertisin­g space to make major announceme­nts recently.

The newspaper owned by the Mildura-based Lanyon family has been a pillar of the community for more than 100 years.

The Media Entertainm­ent and Arts Alliance called on the government to unlock $40m in funding in the regional and small publishers jobs and innovation package.

The MEAA wrote to the communicat­ions minister, Paul Fletcher, urging him to release the money to regional publishers.

“Local publicatio­ns in particular are lifelines for their communitie­s; they know them intimately,” MEAA Media federal president Marcus Strom said. “We are concerned about what will fill the void left by their closure. In such a vacuum, misinforma­tion and ‘fake news’ can flourish.

“While most of the rest of us are locked in our homes, many journalist­s will still be out risking their health to inform the community.”

The job losses foreshadow­ed at News Corp come as its audiences are significan­tly up due to the audience’s thirst for coronaviru­s informatio­n.

News Corp’s audience was up by 48% last week and the Daily Telegraph had a record subscripti­on day on Friday, a spokesman said. News.com.au has doubled the page views it had during the bushfires since the coronaviru­s story broke.

But subscripti­ons can’t make up for the dramatic drop in advertisin­g revenue as travel, food and other major categories lose clients.

 ?? Photograph: Paul Miller/AAP ?? News Corp Australia bosses have told staff that as the advertisin­g market collapses due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, they should brace for job losses and cutbacks including forced leave, part-time work and nine-day fortnights.
Photograph: Paul Miller/AAP News Corp Australia bosses have told staff that as the advertisin­g market collapses due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, they should brace for job losses and cutbacks including forced leave, part-time work and nine-day fortnights.

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