Las Vegas Review-Journal

L.A. Times editor steps down

Joined paper in 2021; helped publicatio­n to three Pulitzers

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LOS ANGELES — The executive editor of the Los Angeles Times announced Tuesday that he is stepping down after a 21/2-year tenure at the newspaper that spanned the coronaviru­s pandemic and three Pulitzer Prizes, as well as a period of layoffs and contentiou­s contract negotiatio­ns with the newsroom’s union.

Kevin Merida’s last day will be Friday. He and Dr. Patrick Soon-shiong, the paper’s owner, “mutually agreed” on the departure, according to statements released Tuesday.

“Today, with a heavy heart, I announce that I am leaving The Times,” Merida wrote to the staff. “I made the decision in consultati­on with Patrick, after considerab­le soul-searching about my career at this stage and how I can best be of value to the profession I love.”

The Times won three Pulitzer

Prizes under Merida’s leadership. The journalism veteran joined the storied newspaper in June 2021 after leading an ESPN unit focused on race, culture and sports.

The L.A. Times Guild, the paper’s union, released a statement wishing Merida well, calling him “a smart and thoughtful leader under extraordin­arily difficult circumstan­ces.”

The union’s leadership group, the Unit Council, informed members it would work with Soon-shiong to find a successor who “can bring vision and clarity to The Times in the months and years ahead.”

The news organizati­on has fallen well short of its digital subscriber goals and needs a revenue boost to sustain the newsroom and its digital operations, the Times said.

Soon-shiong acknowledg­ed “persistent challenges” facing the Times and said “it is now imperative that we all work together to build a sustainabl­e business that allows for growth and innovation of the L.A. Times and L.A. Times Studios in order to achieve our vision.”

Soon-shiong and his family acquired the Times nearly six years ago from Tribune Co., restoring the 142-year-old institutio­n to local ownership after more than a decade of cost-cutting and staff exodus.

Merida, who turns 67 this month, spent three decades in traditiona­l newsrooms, including 22 years at the Washington Post, where he rose to managing editor in charge of news, features and the universal news desk.

Merida’s departure comes after a rocky year and a devastatin­g round of layoffs last summer that eliminated 13 percent of newsroom positions.

“I am proud of what we accomplish­ed together during my tenure here, and grateful to Patrick Soonshiong and family for the opportunit­y to help transform The Times into a modern, innovative news media company for a new generation of consumers,” Merida wrote. “We’ve made tremendous progress toward that goal, and I am hopeful that progress will continue.”

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