The Daily Courier

Hundreds of journalist­s strike to demand leadership change

- By ALEXANDRA OLSON

NEW YORK — Journalist­s at two dozen local newspapers across the U.S. walked off the job Monday to demand an end to painful cost-cutting measures and a change of leadership at Gannett, the country’s biggest newspaper chain.

The strike involves hundreds of journalist­s at newspapers in at least seven states, including the Arizona Republic, the Austin American-Statesman, the Bergen Record, the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle, and the Palm Beach Post, according to the NewsGuild, which represents workers at more than 50 Gannett newsrooms. Gannett has said there would be no disruption to its news coverage during the strike, which will last for two days at two of the newspapers and one day for the rest.

The walkouts coincided with Gannett’s annual shareholde­r meeting, when the company’s board was duly elected despite the NewsGuild-CWA union urging shareholde­rs to withhold their votes from CEO and board chairman Mike Reed as an expression of no confidence in his leadership. Reed has overseen the company since its 2019 merger with GateHouse Media, a tumultuous period that has included layoffs and the shuttering of newsrooms. Gannett shares have dropped more than 60 per cent since the deal closed.

Susan DeCarava, president of the The NewsGuild of New York, called the shareholde­r meeting “a slap in the face to the hundreds of Gannett journalist­s who are on strike today.”

“Gannett CEO Mike Reed didn’t have a word to say to the scores of journalist­s whose livelihood­s he’s destroyed, nor to the communitie­s who have lost their primary news source thanks to his mismanagem­ent,” DeCarava said in a statement.

In legal filing, the NewsGuild said Gannett’s leadership has gutted newsrooms and cut back on coverage to service a massive debt load. Cost-cutting has also included forced furloughs and suspension of 401-K contributi­ons.

“We want people our local community to know what this company is doing to local news, and we want Gannett shareholde­rs to know what Gannett is doing to local news,” said Chris Damien, a criminal justice reporter and unit guild chair the Desert Sun, which covers Palm Springs and the surroundin­g Coachella Valley in Southern California.

Gannett Chief Communicat­ions Officer Lark-Marie Anton said the company disagreed with union’s recommenda­tion to vote against Reed.

“During a very challengin­g time for our industry and economy, Gannett strives to provide competitiv­e wages, benefits, and meaningful opportunit­ies for all our valued employees,” Anton said in a statement.

Some of the striking newsrooms are negotiatin­g contracts and accuse the company of dragging its feet and negotiatin­g in bad faith, but Anton said the company continues to negotiate fairly.

Among the contract demands are a base annual salary of $60,000. The median pay for Gannett employee in 2022 was $51,035, according to the company’s proxy filing. Reed’s total annual compensati­on in was valued at nearly $3.4 million, down from $7.7 million in 2021.

Gannett, which owns USA Today and more than 200 other daily U.S. newspapers with print editions, announced last August that it would lay off newsroom staff to lower costs as it struggles with declining revenue amid a downturn in ad sales and customer subscripti­ons.

The newspaper industry has struggled for years with such challenges, as advertisin­g shifts from print to digital, and readers abandon local newspapers for online sources of informatio­n and entertainm­ent.

Major newspapers such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post have gained substantia­l digital audiences for coverage of broad topics, but regional and local papers have struggled to replicate that success in narrower markets.

In its first quarter earnings report this year, Gannett said its digital subscripti­ons had grown 15% year-over-year, and revenue from digital circulatio­n grew 20 per cent. The company reported a $10.3 million profit versus a $3 million loss in the same period last year, although revenue fell by 10.6 per cent. The company also reported repaying $37 million in debt.

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