Perthshire Advertiser

Local papers like this one are crucial in a crisis

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A couple of times a month I lock myself in my study and sit down to write for my local papers.

Since my election last December, it’s become a routine I enjoy.‘Don’t be political,’said editors in the Perthshire end of my constituen­cy.’‘Be as political as you like,’said Clackmanna­nshire.

I get why some editors are reticent about politics. Nothing is more tedious than a dollop of partypolit­ical propaganda shoehorned into an article about the local flower show or whatever.

As the First Minister said to me only last week, tree planting across Scotland exceeds all targets set by this administra­tion.

But I digress. The feedback I get from constituen­ts is that they like to read what’s on my mind and give me a fair amount of leeway, whether I’m writing about being the BBC presenter on air when the Twin Towers were struck, a long overdue‘pardon’for local miners convicted during the 1984/5 miners’ strike, or COVID disinforma­tion.

On my day off each Sunday, I present a radio show. As with my newspaper columns, it’s often feedback that’s the best part.

The late, great Jimmy Gordon offered me my first job — at Radio Clyde — straight out of university in the 1980s.

And while the industry has changed dramatical­ly in the intervenin­g years, one central fact remains: it’s the intimacy with listeners which builds an audience.

They feel they’re getting to know you. And, in times of crisis, they want to know you’re on their side.

All of us see how the pandemic has brought out the best and worst in people. There was much dismayed national head-scratching at the April Andrex frenzy.

Dismay turned to despair as we saw pictures of the old and vulnerable wandering past shelves stripped bare.

But, as the pandemic stretched on, every community has discovered its heroes; people phoning neighbours to check they’re ok, shopping trips for folk unable to get out, and retired doctors and nurses returning to work to help out.

More often than not, these stories have been discovered by local papers and radio stations which have done so much in this crisis to bind communitie­s together and keep people informed.

And crucially, they’ve been at the forefront of tackling COVID disinforma­tion. As we prepare to roll out vaccines, their role in combating fake news will never have been more important.

Local papers are read monthly by more than forty million people with a surprising­ly high reach amongst 16 to 24-year-olds. And yet these hugely valuable community assets are vulnerable.

Advertisin­g revenues will have fallen by 17 per cent this year due to COVID and thousands of jobs are at risk.

Already some papers have had to shut down their print editions.‘The County Down Spectator & Ulster Standard’ halted its presses for the first time in 116 years.

It printed through the Famine and its offices have been blown up twice. But COVID forced it off the newsstands.

So how can we help? We can read and listen, of course. We can support advertiser­s. But with one-third of community radio stations facing closure, the Community Radio Fund average grant of £1500 per station isn’t enough and crisis talks are due to be held with DCMS ministers as I write.

The sector’s representa­tives want paid public health messaging placed throughout the rest of this crisis.

Let’s not pretend everything was hunky-dory before COVID. Local papers and radio stations have been facing long term advertisin­g decline.

But in the pandemic, local journalism has been invigorate­d. Its value has been indisputab­le. It mustn’t be allowed to wither.

It seems I’ve written my next column.

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