Santa Fe New Mexican

Journalist­s in country’s largest newspaper chain walk out

Protesters say Gannett’s 2019 merger ‘mortgaged the future of our company’

- By Katie Robertson

Hundreds of journalist­s for Gannett, the country’s largest newspaper chain, walked off the job Monday, accusing the company’s CEO of decimating its local newsrooms.

The walkout was the biggest labor action in Gannett’s century-old history, the union representi­ng the journalist­s said. It included workers from about two dozen newsrooms, including The Palm Beach Post, The Arizona Republic and The Austin American-Statesman. The demonstrat­ions were expected to continue Tuesday for some newsrooms.

The collective action was timed to coincide with Gannett’s annual shareholde­r meeting Monday. The NewsGuild, which represents more than 1,000 journalist­s from Gannett, sent a letter to Gannett shareholde­rs in May urging a vote of no-confidence against Mike Reed, the chief executive and chairman.

In the letter, the NewsGuild criticized the company’s merger with GateHouse Media in 2019, saying it “mortgaged the future of our company” by loading it up with debt.

The letter also criticized Reed, who was previously the CEO of GateHouse Media and took over Gannett after the merger. The union said his compensati­on — $7.7 million in 2021 and $3.4 million in 2022 — was far too high for a company shedding jobs and paying what the letter said were “depressed wages” to the remaining journalist­s. Gannett’s share price has fallen about 70% since the GateHouse merger.

“Gannett has created news deserts everywhere you look,” said Peter D. Kramer, a reporter for the USA Today Network. “That’s Mike Reed’s Gannett.”

Kramer, who is based in Westcheste­r County, N.Y., said some Gannett reporters had to take second jobs to supplement their salaries, or they simply left the profession altogether.

Lark-Marie Anton, a Gannett spokespers­on, said in a statement that while the company disagreed with the recommenda­tion to oust Reed, “Gannett remains committed to our shareholde­r engagement process and takes all feedback seriously.”

“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. “Our leadership is focused on investing in local newsrooms and monetizing our content as we continue to negotiate fairly and in good faith with the NewsGuild.”

Anton said there would be no disruption to Gannett’s news coverage during the work stoppage this week.

At the meeting Monday, shareholde­rs voted to retain Gannett’s board of directors, including Reed. Susan DeCarava, president of the NewsGuild of New York, described the result as a “slap in the face” to the striking journalist­s.

Gannett became the largest newspaper publisher in the United States after its merger with GateHouse, a deal that the companies said at the time would result in annual cost savings of up to $300 million and help them survive the headwinds battering the news media industry.

The merged company, which took the Gannett name, owns USA Today and more than 200 daily newspapers in 43 states, though it has closed dozens of publicatio­ns since the 2019 deal.

Like many other publishers of local news, Gannett has struggled with declining revenue from advertisin­g and print circulatio­n. The debt load from its merger with GateHouse has also weighed on the company. When reporting its first-quarter earnings this year, Gannett said it had $1.2 billion in outstandin­g debt.

It has tried to service the debt with a string of widespread cost-cutting measures in the past year, including laying off about 6% of its roughly 3,440-person media division in December.

The NewsGuild said The Austin American-Statesman’s newsroom had 41 employees this year, down from 110 in 2018. In that same period, The Arizona Republic’s newsroom in Phoenix had shrunk to 89 workers from 140, while The Milwaukee Sentinel had been cut to 82 from 104.

“You have communitie­s that go uncovered, and when things go uncovered it allows people to abuse their positions,” said Kaitlyn Kanzler, a reporter for NorthJerse­y.com and The Record in northern New Jersey.

 ?? KARSTEN MORAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Peter Kramer, a reporter for the USA Today Network, speaks to other journalist­s from Gannett during a walkout Monday in White Plains, N.Y. The walkout was the biggest labor action in Gannett’s century-old history, the union representi­ng the journalist­s said, and included workers from about two dozen newsrooms.
KARSTEN MORAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Peter Kramer, a reporter for the USA Today Network, speaks to other journalist­s from Gannett during a walkout Monday in White Plains, N.Y. The walkout was the biggest labor action in Gannett’s century-old history, the union representi­ng the journalist­s said, and included workers from about two dozen newsrooms.

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