AB 323 gives support for local papers
A brand management and crisis communication professor we know at a leading university contends that brands reside in the minds of customers, not at company headquarters.
So, when crisis strikes, he argues, protecting the brand boils down to this: protecting your customers.
The California News Publishers Association is charged with protecting the “brands” of more than 450 newspapers in the state. We’ve been fighting against a rising tide of newsroom closures as the COVID-19 wave breaks over our member businesses.
We’re advocating for passage of Assemblywoman Blanca Rubio’s (D-Baldwin Park) AB 323 to get relief and prevent job losses, small business failures and threats to freedom of the press. All valid and prescient rationale, of course. But we suspect that some see the arguments as self-preservationist, as if it’s just business trying to protect its profits.
In truth, however, our advocacy is a plea to protect our readers, the people who rely on news reporting to inform their daily lives as citizen-activists, consumers, foodies, artists, travelers and sports fanatics, to name a few.
We tend to take news — and free press — for granted in our country. It is in our constitutional DNA, so we rarely consider life without it. But we may have to. Due in large measure to the financial impact of the pandemic and the increased costs of new employment laws in California, the death knell is sounding for dozens and dozens of community and ethnic newspapers.
Imagine Marin County with no source of reliable information on tax increases, zoning changes, public health and criminal justice. Think of decisions on school safety, elder care, homelessness and property development being made without a newspaper to cover the stories and gauge, monitor and track community consensus or dissent.
What if Marin didn’t have a watchdog on public corruption, law enforcement and the latest internet scam? What if voters had to go to the polls not knowing what candidates really stand for? And try to imagine morning coffee without an opinion page to get the blood running (or boiling); or letters from neighbors to express agreement and joy, dismay and disappointment?
To some, losing these newspaper-delivered information assets may seem inconsequential. There are plenty of other news outlets, but readers hardly find them adequate. They want the credible — and more expansive — coverage provided by working journalists at local newspapers.
According to the Pew Research Center, “an overwhelming majority of adults say it is at least somewhat important for journalists to understand their community’s history (85%) and to be personally engaged with their local area (81%).”
Pew’s research describes the relationship between readers and reporters that is at the heart of our free society. With as many as 20% of the state’s newspapers on the financial cliff, the relationship is in jeopardy in many communities.
But the relationship doesn’t have to end. Together, readers and newspapers can save local journalism by telling representatives in Sacramento that we strongly support AB 323. Passing it will bolster local news outlets by granting greater access to state advertising and more time to adjust to independent contractor laws.
Just email, text, or call your assembly member and senator today and say, “Vote for AB 323 to save local journalism in my hometown.” You can also post on their Twitter and Facebook pages. Contact Assemblyman Marc Levine at (415) 479-4920 or assemblymember. levine@assembly.ca.gov and Sen. Mike McGuire at (707) 576-2771 or senator.mcguire@senate.ca.gov.
When we take things for granted, the things we are granted get taken. Our association is working very hard to make sure it doesn’t apply to local newspapers in this case.
In the meantime, we know the Marin Independent Journal will do what it has been doing every day: keep you abreast of the news and in touch with events that affect your daily lives.