October 15, 2009

News (or mad?) scientist won't workship at local-local-local altar

Glynn Wilson's comments about the Newhouse's Advance Publications dominating media in Alabama caused
The Locust Fork News-Journal's entry on How the Internet Changed the World, For Good and Bad to turn up in must-reads this week.

I was thankful for a reminder to look at this man's effort to create a "wide open independent weblog for big news and the big picture."
"It is my educated opinion that most newspapers will never get past the ink, paper and delivery truck economic model and figure out the Web economy, so new news organizations will have to be built to replace them. That’s one of the reasons I started the Locust Fork News-Journal four and a half years ago, to start experimenting with how to do this. It is still a work in progress."
Unlike many who are experimenting with news, Wilson does not see hyperlocal, or even local, as a key to success. Instead, he suggests we think about this:
"The Web has the potential of a global audience. But you can’t build national and international traffic by spending more time covering local news and sports and by forcing people to sign up to read your site. It just won’t work. That’s why I have kept my site open and free and focused more on national news."
Visit the post for more on how he got to that attitude and a quick review of Internet's role. Visit the site to see how his experiment is going. Feel generous? Donate a "road trip," "tank of gas," "carton of ACLs, " "3 month server bill" or just pick up the tab for a 12-pack Yuengling Black and Tan. OK, I admit there are sponsorships and ad placements possible.

October 14, 2009

Ann Arbor News building listed for $9 million

Looks like the building that once housed Ann Arbor's daily newspaper is ready for the market. The newspaper's successor, AnnArbor.com posted a piece today:Ann Arbor News building listed for $9 million

The Ann Arbor News building goes onto the market today, creating a high-profile development opportunity in the form of a rare downtown listing combination that includes two buildable lots and a historic office building.

The listing with the local office of Colliers International sets a price of $9 million for the building, adjacent parking lot and nearby parking lot with Ann Street frontage.
Continue reading Ann Arbor News building listed for $9 million...

Politics in the press: West Michigan newspapers wrapped up in politics

Muskegon Chronicle editor Cindy Fairfield says a conservative voice will join Opinions page in her latest Sunday column.

The decision means another former Chronicle writer returns to the fold. Steve Gunn, who the editor says "currently advocates for conservative issues, is a fantastic writer, a knowledgeable journalist and a person who embraces a point of view similar to many conservatives in our area."

Gunn's weekly column starts Thursday.

(By the way, she also shared that a "good news" column .... a collection of items and tidbits that show Muskegon area people doing good things" is coming soon.)

Meanwhile, over in Grand Rapids, Press editor Paul Keep tells readers "We report the news, not political agendas" by sharing conversations with two readers with opposing viewpoints of what the daily newspaper does. One was a sometime subscriber, upset with not seeing his liberal viewpoint often enough in the newspaper. Another saw the paper as too liberal, set off this time by an article about Michael Moore's latest film.

Now some would take the opposing characterizations as indications that the paper is balanced. Keep uses it to remind readers that
"A newspaper isn't doing its job if it makes decisions about what to print based on whether its editors agree with the person being written about. We are not pushing agendas. Our job is to tell readers what is going on in the world, as best we can. That may well stir some people up from time to time."

Of course, not all agree that all voices are represented in mass media. Isn't that one reason for Reporting Michigan's debut to ensure a conservative voice. The former Ann Arbor News reporter Tom Gantert is doing a good job of frequently updating his site and Facebook.

One last thought from Paul Keep:
"When did people start wanting to read only what they agree with in their daily newspaper? Like him or hate him, isn't it legitimate news when a famous filmmaker like Moore turns out a new movie? As a conservative, don't you want to know what this influential liberal is up to?"
Yeah, know your enemies.

See a story about Michigan media moves? Bookmark it in the Publish2 Michigan News about News  newsgroup.

October 13, 2009

Newhouse news: Star-Ledger needs 50 to go via buyouts or layoffs

An expected memo went out to another batch of employees working for companies in the Advance Publications fold. Today's recipients are the employees of the Star-Ledger in Newark, New Jersey, where editor Jim Willse recently announced his retirement.

It follows an offer made to employees at The Oregonian and the Times Picayune in New Orleans.

To: Full-Time Employees
From: George Arwady
Subject: VOLUNTARY BUYOUT OFFER

Consistent with my updates to you, the revenue situation at our newspaper has worsened this year, and we expect a further significant revenue decline next year.

We are working on the budget for Y2010, and it is clear that we must reduce our staff significantly to offset the continuing steep decline in revenue. My best estimate is that the full-time workforce must be reduced by at least 50 people.

Accordingly, we are announcing another voluntary buyout offer. Full-time, non-represented employees can apply to receive 2 weeks’ pay for every year of completed service, capped at 26 weeks’ pay, along with medical coverage for the severance period. The newspaper reserves the right to reject applications based upon business needs.

We sincerely hope that we meet our staffing goals through this voluntary buyout offer. If we do not, we will need to resort to other ways of reducing our employee costs, which could include involuntary layoffs.

Catching up - Cleveland Plain Dealer newspaper finally jumping into online conversation

Whoa. The Cleveland Plain Dealer took a giant step on the Internet today in its attempt to make the conversation at its place more civil. 

"But we're also doing something we should have done earlier: We're joining the online conversation. For too long, we at The Plain Dealer posted stories on cleveland.com and then turned away to focus on the next day's news. Now, we're encouraging our reporters and editors to pay attention to what you're saying, to answer your questions and respond to your complaints."
Hip, hip hooray. But what took you so long?

Reading your news organizations web site, or at least comments generated by the stories you write, should be just as natural as picking up the print newspaper and reading the letters to the editor. Knowing what people or organizations you cover are doing online should be as normal as knowing what they do in "real life."

Is there a reporter in the world who would walk away with nary a word to someone who spoke to them at a public meeting or in a public place? Why does it become to OK to ignore what's being said just because it is online.

John Kroll, director of training and digital development for the Advance Publications newspaper in Ohio, tells us he been working to improve the   Plain Dealer's handling of online comments on our stories. He mentions how the Ohio staff plans to follow AnnArbor.com's "We don't tolerate jerks" policy.


Read John's column for more about the policy and encouraging signs that more people involved with the newspaper side of the organization are getting the ways of the Internet.

I wish I could be in the Ohio newsroom the first time a reluctant reporter discovers a story via the comments.

I thought all of the newspapers in the Advance Publications were further along but the recent system wide - system being Newhouse newspapers such as the Syracuse Post-Standard in New York, The Oregonian, Times-Picayune in New Orleans, Birmingham News in Alabama, Grand Rapids Press in Michigan, etc. - upgrade of software that now allows people to develop profiles, recommend stories, and track comments has shown me how few people at these newspapers are online.

It is especially irritating to me that people who carry some responsibility for the online links haven't posted anything about themselves, much less shared a photograph.

Let's hope the rest of the newspapers follow The Plain Dealer's lead and get talking with their villages. Then, perhaps we can teach 'em how to put hotlinks in and with articles.

(By the way, John did a great job yesterday jumping in, collecting comments, and answering many of the concerns that cropped up in the 245 comments posted as of 12:30 a.m. Oct. 13.

He's been jumping in - answering readers' questions by giving specific links, or background information or clarifying a writer's reporting for a few months now. Hip, hip, hooray.)

Jealousy over blog post leads to reflection

I don't know. Except that I do know Louis Gray inspired guilty feelings with his latest explanation of what he does when he does what he does. See, my question is how does he know that. No, that's wrong. My question is more personal: Why don't I know that?

Gray takes a global approach to what he shares online, mindful of his audience, careful to not overload with too much or to stray from a particular path whether he is blogging or pointing to other posts via Google Reader.
"Every time I hit a "share" button, or I hit "post", it is calculated."
I think I'm jealous that he knows his audience, while I'm still searching for what it is that I have to say that someone will want to hear. What is it that I can talk about that anyone wants to listen to? Or what is it that I want to talk about day after day after day?

Meanwhile, I pull together posts I might want to look at later,posts that collect more about the why and the how in an attempt to understand this or that, or grab onto the success of others who left the newsroom and survive, or better yet, thrive.
 
I forget sometimes that humans are reading this, much in the same way that the people who pulled the "best" pages for the State News 100 years  book featured the page highlighting a staff walkout as the one for my year as editor. That, of course, ignores events like the time Ohio State University football coach Woody Hayes grabbed a State News reporter's neck, upset over the printed allegations that Ohio State University alumni were illegally funding his recruitment efforts. Now, that story made it into Sports Illustrated. and papers like the Milwaukee Journal. Or an investigation that led to the true story about a shooting by police, or ... so many highlights that could have been chosen. Oh well, I enjoyed the 263 other pages.

The walkout, by the way, came because the board of directors chose me to be editor while the editorial staff's recommendation was for another candidate. It was not the first time or the last time the board and staff disagreed. It was not the first walkout.

But the walkout that followed my selection also came while I was in Florida, vacationing with my former husband and in-laws for the first time. I had delayed the start of the vacation so I could face the board for a grueling interview. I ended the vacation days early, listening to those who said a return was necessary for the success of the newspaper as the current editor decided enough was enough and wanted out early.

Ah, how early I began putting work before family. That thought hits me hard, illustrating why I write still. It's a path to understanding because sometimes I sweep through things and forget to reflect.

So back to this online personality thing, this what do I blog about, or what do I share, or why, or ....  Also, back to remembering those in college are there to learn and that learning does not need to happen at their expense. Besides, have you ever seen an Advance Internet site that is easy to navigate?

More on those Michigan newspaper changes

Guess I should have waited to tell you about some of those promotions and changes at Michigan newspapers.

Quick. Head over to mlive.com and catch Giddy up: Look who's back in the saddle again
It is especially good news for those who follow the Flint Generals.

An article in Sunday's Flint Journal also announced Bruce Gunther is returning to The Flint Journal as sports coordinator. He was the former sports editor for The Bay City Times and The Flint Journal. He left as sports editor of The Journal at the end of May after accepting a buyout earlier in the year.

Bryn Mickel's promotion to assistant community editor also was noted.

Readers reminded me I overlooked some folks in the update, including Jason Christie, who joined The Journal as a sales consultant in May 2008. He had been a regional sales manager for ISource Worldwide and web services manager for AlliedMedia.

 By the way, I noticed the beat page for The Journal was recently updated.The contact page now has Marjory Raymner as Community Editor, the top ranking editorial position in the new scheme of things, among other changes. The Community Newspapers beat page and one for the advertising staff  look like they were recently updated although the update tags still reads 2008. Alas, the page listing editors and the general contacts page still needs work.

See a story about Michigan media moves? Bookmark it in the Publish2 Michigan News about News  newsgroup. 

October 12, 2009

Writer moved out of Newhouse bureau, into own business

Michigan jack-of-all-trades Joe Grimm continues his upbeat look at journalists who find success after buyouts and bootouts by interviewing Katherine Reynolds Lewis, who once wrote "feature articles and news analyses on work, money and business for the Newhouse newspaper chain" from 2003-2008.

Now, as Joe says, Former National Correspondent Creates Two Sites for Working Moms
The first is CurrentMom.com, a Web site for entrepreneurial mothers, and the other is About.com site for working moms."

But that's not all that this mother is doing now that the Newhouses have closed the Washington Bureau and the National News Service. She's a freelance writer and editor, writing about work, personal finance and parenting for magazines, newspapers and Web sites.

She's also indirectly continued working with the Newhouses - a piece about curbing the abuse of prescription drugs was in the Oct. 4 Parade, which is in the Advance Publications fold.

Head to Poynter for some advice on creating a new career, becoming your own boss and recognizing your value.


I've written before about journalists with jobs post buyout and bootout. Joe Grimm, who worked for the Detroit Free Press as a recruiter and now blogs, freelances and teaches at Michigan Sate University, has a lot of helpful posts on career transitions.

October 10, 2009

Police reporter moving into editor role; other changes at Michigan newspapers

waving hand

Michigan newsrooms

Bryn Mickle wrote his last Offbeat column as he leaves the police beat he's nurtured for 10 years at The Flint Journal to become an assistant community editor. It's a new position, where he'll be editing copy and helping guide news coverage for online and print.

Reporter Laura Angus, who has covered the Grand Blanc area after graduating from Oakland University and Holly High School, moves into his police beat. She's also collecting the zany police happenings for her version of Offbeat, a column started by the Jim of L-Town (despite my name there) before he moved onto Free From Editors.

Eric English, 43, of Bangor Township, also is a newly named assistant community editor, according to an article about Michigan Press Association awards. English's new job is for the Saginaw News and The Bay City Times, also part of the Booth Mid-Michigan group with The Flint Journal. His LinkedIn profile says he's been a business reporter for both newspapers and the Great Lakes Business Review. He started at the Bay City Times in 1988.

While I"m on the subject of Michigan Press Awards, the Kalamazoo Gazette is the newspaper of the year. 
You can find the complete results on the Michigan Press Association site. The advertising contest results also are online.

Jessica Standen, a sales representative since 2008 at The Flint Journal, left last Friday to become development director for the Birch Run Chamber and Convention and Visitors Bureau.
That's the same day there was a farewell party on Friday for some circulation people working for Valley Publishing, which delivered the Saginaw News and Bay City Times. The last three full-time employees of the circulation at the Flint Journal recently had their farewell party.

I'm late on these:
  • Laura Leigh Lenter, a recent Michigan State University graduate and State News alumni,  became an inside sales representative in June at The Flint Journal.
  • Shannon Murphy, a reporter at The Flint Journal, moved up to Bay City to cover city and county government, in September.
  • Dean Bohn, 49, of Chesaning,  worked for the Saginaw News and is now at The Flint Journal.
  • Jean Johnson, a design intern at the Reading Eagle Company, also joined The Flint Journal. The Wayne State University journalism graduate is a reporter.
While over at Linked In creating some recommendations for job-hunting writers, I noticed that
Karen Koziel says she became the Advertising Director of The Flint Journal  three months ago. She worked with publisher Matt Sharp  at the Michigan Business Review.

The Times Herald in Port Huron published a number of promotions: 
  • Daren Tomhave, the new  executive news editor, and Mandy Burton, the new news editor, will lead a regional copy desk, based in Port Huron, that is responsible for preparing the Times Herald and the Battle Creek Enquirer pages for publication every day.   
  • Michael Stechschulte, a 2009 graduate of the University of Michigan-Flint, is the assistant news editor on the regional copy desk. 
  • Paul Costanzo is now a  senior sports reporter
  • Liz Shepard is a senior news reporter.
  • Pamela Ford is now senior advertising sales manager
  • Meagan Hustek is the new advertising supervisor. 
Some of the changes are prompted by the reorganization that followed the Times Herald publisher becoming president and publisher of Gannett's Courier-Post in Cherry Hill, N.J, in August.  The first change was the decision to not name a publisher, instead promoting the ad director to manager. Lori Driscoll kept her advertising position while taking on some of Tim Dowd's responsibilities.She now reports to Brian Priester, president and publisher of the Lansing State Journal, who will oversee all Gannett community newspapers in Michigan.

A former Detroit Free Press reporter (and newlywed)  is returning to Michigan after reporting on Coke for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, saccording to Talking Biz.

Joe Guy Collier, who joined AJC in February 2008,  last day is Oct. 15.   He told Talking Biz he'll continue as a blogger and freelance reporter covering the food and beverage industry.His wife  works in public relations at Ford Motor Co. in Michigan, according to Talking Biz.

Updated 10/12/09: More Michigan comings and goings Plus, see a story about Michigan media moves? Bookmark it in the Publish2 Michigan News about News  newsgroup.

October 9, 2009

Advance's New Orleans site partners with local TV station

A New Orleans TV station will provide breaking news, sports and weather video for NOLA.com, the online home for the Times-Picayune newspaper. Both win - WDSU-TV gains web audience and NOLA adds more video to its Advance Internet web site.


WDSU-TV, which announced the agreement, effective Oct. 9, on its web site said it also will contribute health reports and investigations from its I-Team. The station, however, will keep and run its own web site.

NOLA general manager Mark Rose said the partnership helps supplement content provided by the Times-Picayune and the NOLA staff.

Meanwhile, bloggers are reporting that all Times-Picayune staffers were offered buyouts,  No details were published but the possibility has some, like Karen Gadbois, worried folks will "watch the Times Picayune sink into irrelevance" as the staff shrinks.

Employees at The Times-Picayune, like the other newspapers in the private Advance Publications, face the likelyhood of layoffs when the company ends its job pledge in February.

Oregonian public radio station focuses on 'future of journalism'

What do you see as the future of news? Is print media dying, or is it merely in a state of transition? What do you think about the major changes at the largest newspaper in the state? Where are you getting your news?

Those are just some of the questions asked in Thinking Out Loud: Future of Journalism
a radio broadcast on Oregon Public Broadcasting.

Read the post and follow the comments for more interesting discussion, including some comments on the structure of OregonLive

Oh yes, the invited guests include:

Oregonian editor tells newsroom new arrangments, new journalists needed

Journalists hoping to continue working at the Oregonian got clear orders Thursday: If you're staying, you're going to interact with the community, know the community, and help the community.

The print operation will take on more responsibility for the web, developing more topic pages, generating more content 24/7 and interacting with the people previously known as the audience.

The safety net of multiple edits will give way to "one-touch editing" as the news organization strives to streamline and change its main focus to delivering news from printing a newspaper.

You can read the plan via Oregon Media Central which shares an Oregonian memo that says many current news teams will 'cease to exist'"

A careful reading, though, shows the real changes focus on the type of journalists wanted: Flexible, Internet smart, independent, and willing to foster community. And don't forget the traditional values and skills of journalists.

Oregonian executive editor Peter Bhatia's memo outlines a reorganization that replaces many teams in favor of three teams: Local Expertise and Enterprise Reporting, another called Community and an editing/production team. Community, by the way, is more then geography as the reorganization recognizes communities form around topics. The production team is more then just print - it is a universal desk for web and print, all web and all print.

It is great to see newspapers that are part of Advance Publications spell out plans as employees decide if they should take offered buyouts.

The Oregonian memo refers to the buyout offer made last month.



I've written about The Oregonian before, including the retirement of its publisher, an ad wrapping its front page and other topics.

October 8, 2009

Catching up: Blame the numbers in Alabama, Detroit

In Alabama, Lagniappe's Rob Holbert looks at the Mobile Press-Register's circulation numbers in his latest speculation on why its publisher was forced to retire early.

Numbers are not adding up to the desired financial picture so that means more layoffs are coming at the Detroit "daily" newspapers. Crain's Detroit reported about a meeting and Joel on the Road published a memo from the union, giving more information for those curious about what's up at the Detroit Free Press and the Detroit News. Ad sales in 2009, for instance, are down 30 percent.

(Updated 10-9-09 to link to comment)

To be or not to be a journalist .... first, though, find your blog?

A college instructor on the east side of the United States is requiring students in his Writing for the Web class to post in several blogs frequently.

What caught my eye was two posts from the students: Sending out a search party for our masslive.com blog and Confusion.

One of the journalists-to be asks:
"Seriously, if I’m stuck rummaging through my backpack to find that random sheet of paper from class with the web address for our blog, instead of finding it easily on the site’s own search feature, what makes Masslive think anyone else will accidentally pluck the blog out of obscurity? "
Perhaps the instructor, who also is executive editor for AdvanceInternet, parent company of MassLive.com, needs to add to the class syllabus.so the students learn how to use bookmarks or the site's new recommendation feature to easily find their blogs.

Or perhaps more work on the the search function is needed. I've noticed some improvements in search on the AdvanceInternet sites like mlive.com, oregonlive.com and nola.com - you can limit the dates searched, for instance, - but more are needed as often better results come from off-site searches.

(Side note: I like how one profile works across the multiple AdvanceInternet sites. I also like that following someone pulls in their posts, recommendations, comments, photos and videos. So far, though, it looks like posts are limited to staff. Let's hope that opens up to so more can post. Also, I'm still waiting for a way to merge personalities.)

By the way, the instructor, Scott Brodeur, has pulled together some thought-provoking posts, including one under the headline "To Be or Not to Be a Journalist: " and The Story Behind the Story Behind the Story.

In that first post, Scott is talking about the popularity of journalism as a major despite the cutbacks in the field. He includes a quote from Dean Mills, the head of the Missouri School of Journalism:
The days when you climbed onto the best newspaper you could and looked forward to doing the same thing for 40 or 50 years are over. People who want security or lack ambition probably should not be in journalism schools these days.
Scott finishes the post with:
That sounds like a challenge. You up for it?
Their first challenge, though, is finding their blogs.




I've written about teaching journalists before, like in these posts:
What would you tell a college student today?
Rookie professor: Jumping from newsroom to classroom

October 7, 2009

Pink spreads: Gannett launches companywide anti-breast cancer effort

The cross-platform campaign targets broadcast, print, online and out-of-home properties, according to the company press release.

The campaign runs through the month of October, and includes front-page spadia advertisement in the Cincinnati Enquirer; home delivery in a pink plastic bag wrap with National Breast Cancer Foundation's message; ads in community papers plus full-page ads in USA Today and USA Weekend; pink-shaded elevator screens in the 763 hotels and office buildings using the Captivate Elevator Network of elevator news and information; and home page and subfront ads on USAtoday.com, the top five Gannett Broadcast sites and the top five U.S. Community Publishing sites.
Gannett said it topped the initial campaign by donating an additional 20 percent  in advertising and production.



Related posts:

Stolen thoughts: Love for journalsim continues beyond buyouts

It's a shame this comment made over on Free From Editors is anonymous because there's so much I love about it that I'd love to credit the source.

The words come in reply to Beth Macy's Hunkering down in the April/May issue of AJR that Free From Editors linked to in September.  She explains why some journalists are not grabbing life preservers or jumping into lifeboats to escape the newspaper business. She's staying in the business because " I still get excited when I happen onto a great story."

I remember the article, which quotes someone who opted to stay at the Newark Star-Ledger. I recognized Beth's optimism, but think she skipped a few beats  in not recognizing love of journalism is not enough.

The commenter on Free From Editors expands eloquently:
"Great article, unfortunately as much as I love reading about those who continue to believe in journalism, those who still write from the trenches despite salary decreases and plummeting readership, my heart belongs to those who had to leave journalism not because of the lure of a magnificent buy-out offer, but because they had given their life to the career and made too much money to be allowed to stay."
I can guess where the commenter worked from this comment:
"Sure you can go into PR or marketing and write the press releases we all loved to make fun of, and you can probably find two or three low-paying jobs to make up the income, but how do you ever find a position that gives you the sense of accomplishment that old-fashioned newspaper work used to give?"
And from previous posts, you know I believe that there are places to use skills acquired in 25-plus years of journalism, including " how to conduct in-depth research and work on tight deadlines"and others that let makes it possible to reveal "corruption beneath shiny exteriors ... question motivation and ...  know the difference between spin and truth."

Still, as noted, there are a lot of the same people vying for the same jobs in the region. It's not easy starting an alternative news source - look at the struggles with starting Reporting Michigan or The Rapidian. or the effort in Kalamazoo. Getting donations - ask Reporting Michigan - or grants takes energy and time.

October 6, 2009

Undercover journalists checking out covers

A new website is offering journalists with good reporting and writing skills the chance to go undercover, actually under the covers. Yes, there are more journalists  bed blogging.


So, let's go to New Jersey this time where Star-Ledger reporter Leslie Kwoh writes about the 20 undercover reporters writing about the covers as part of their hotel ratings for a new web site. in Hotel reviews, with a little investigative journalism

She talked with Elie Seidman, the co-founder and chief executive of the Oyster Hotel Reviews and with journalists like the 48-year-old Richard Linnet who had been jobless for nearly a year before landing this gig.
  
Kwoh tells us the hotel visits are done anonymously, reporters "travel on average two weeks out of five and follow a 65-page manual as they hunt for sofa stains, take stock of the minibar, try out the room service, and even note the brand of each mattress and shampoo. Using a $4,000 Nikon camera and lenses, they snap hundreds of photos that eventually appear, undoctored, alongside a 2,000-word review"

The competition is stiff for a job that requires reporting experience:: An ad for six job openings drew 1,500 resumes.

Here's part of Richard L's bio from the review site:
Richard L. has been knocking around for a while, from Southeast Asia to South Central LA. He's done Hollywood (onset carpenter to screenwriter) and Madison Ave. (agency executive) and has no regrets. He's lived on both Coasts and points in between, as well as Paris and a village in Charente Maritime. He hopes to eventually retire to a pokey Shasta trailer parked alongside a sulfurous hot spring.
The site also notes he's written for Media Magazine, Cineaste, Ad Week, Advertising Age, Penthouse, Hustler,among others.

So head over to NJ.com for a quick read.  For more inspiration, come back for posts about JWJ - Journalists with Jobs, especially people formerly employed in newsrooms:
I list more in Writing about Jobs for Journalists

Or maybe you remember G.D. Gearino, mattresses and a dream blog.

October 5, 2009

Online-only effort launches in Holly


Two journalists with Flint Journal ties recently launched an online effort, the Holly Express.

Vera Hogan, who started in January 2008 as an editor for the Community Newspapers and left May 31, has teamed up with freelance writer Amy Mayhew to start the new effort that focuses on what's happening in the small town in Oakland County.

The two met five years ago and say they would have loved to continue working for a newspaper. But this effort, launched about two weeks ago, is going so great that they had to come with a plan for advertising sooner then expected, Vera said. Still, she expects it will take longer for the two to draw a salary as they plan to pump the money back into the operation for now.

Read more on  the about us page. Originally, the two planned to also cover nearby Fenton but decided to pull back and focus on one community for now.Read more about that in welcome column, where Amy and Vera also introduce two columnists.

Their slogan: Keeping you on track with local news

October 4, 2009

Pink Power: Black and white and pink all over in Huntsville, Alabama


Pink should be everywhere in one Alabama town during Breast Cancer Awareness Month.

Every day in October, the Huntsville Time in Alabama will feature one story connected to breast cancer. It kicked the month off by printing on pink paper, and putting a pink ribbon and pink lights on its building.

The Advance Publication also will add to its Think Pink page online throughout the month.

Plus the newspaper plans to donate to breast cancer fighting efforts a share of any October print ad that includes a pink ribbon.

A local Huntsville car dealer is distributing pink ribbon car magnets. A local hospital helped pay some of the extra costs of printing on pink paper.

A similar effort by the Augusta Chronicle in Georgia inspired the project, editor Kevin Wendt said.

Check the Think Pink page for a daily story about a breast cancer survivor as well as articles on events, advances in treating breast cancer treatment, and related subjects.

An entry in the Perfect Moment Project blog congratulated the paper for making such a bold move.

I want one more bold move - at at least one of the featured survivors is under 40 so that more people learn that breast cancer can happen to that age group so that no other woman needs to go four months before the doctor will test a breast lump. I'm sure the Young Survival Coalition can help identify someone in that age group.



Related entries
The Oregonian's series on breast cancer
My daughter's story

Checking a list: Newhouses still on Forbes richest list

The writer behind  Freefromeditors:  came back from a well-deserved vacation in Hawaii and reminded us Someone in the Newhouse chain is still doing well  though not a well as they once were.

The 400 Richest Americans, according to Forbes , has Si Newhouse is #52. I can't tell if he's down $3.5 billion or $4.5 billion as the facts box says one thing and the paragraph says another. Donald Newhouse is at #65, with net worth down $4 billion.

Another Flint connection is on the list, Tom Gores at #147. His worth is down and he lost a three-year battle to get Delphi. I wrote about him in Flint connected: Union Tribune's, Delphi plants' new owner. Guess my post headline overstated things.

October 3, 2009

October too pink for me

Pink is the wrong color for breast cancer. There's nothing soft about breast cancer, its treatments or its effects. Color breast cancer ashen or bloody or the tint of skin scabs. Color breast cancer the bright red or clear - the color of the chemo drugs pumped through your veins. Color breast cancer white for the sea of white coats that parade endlessly by. Color it silver, or black or ...

Yet, everywhere I look during the next 29 days, I'll see pink as the United States acknowledges October as Breast Cancer Awareness Month. A sea of pink ribbons sets the theme.

Even before my daughter was diagnosed with breast cancer, I disliked the commercialization of the fight to eliminate breast cancer. Collect yogurt lids or buy this or ... and the company will donate to this organization or that.

Some agree with me, some don't. The writer of the My Cancer Blog, sees it as a way to heighten awareness.

For another viewpoint, visit Think before you pink. The site also offers some questions to ask before you buy:
  • How much of your purchase will go to fight breast cancer?
  • Did the company put a cap on its "donation"?
  • Will buying the product spur a donation or do you need to do something more like buy something, visit a web site, etc.?
  • Is the money going to the right place? You know, one that spends more money on research or helping then raising money?
The explanation about the pink ribbon is a good read too.

October 1, 2009

'Bait & Switch? Retirees sue news company for unexpected health care changes

Bait and switch - that's what some former newspaper employees who retired early claim is happening in Ohio. They say they exchanged a lifetime job guarantee for lifetime health care benefits that now are disappearing dollar by co-pay.

Some Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal retirees and their union filed a federal class action suit in U.S. District Court in Cleveland saying they gave up lifetime job security in contract negotiations in exchange for an early retirement incentive program that guaranteed lifetime supplemental health care benefits, including "prescription-drug benefits requiring only minimal co-payments." Instead, their health care costs are increasing.

One person said the suit was necessary as her family's co-pays went from $100 a year to $6,000 a year.

BJ Alums, a blog about former employees of the Beacon Journal in Ohio, gives the details in Retirees sue BJ  Black Press over health care coverage. and includes a Cleveland Plain Dealer article about the suit and a press release with the title "Retirees Sue Akron Beacon Journal for "Bait-and-Switch" Scheme."

A Beacon Journal representative said the company is honoring the original agreement that enticed many to leave the newspaper when it was owned by Knight-Ridder.

A judge set the first hearing for Oct. 26 (Interesting comment on why the loss of benefits for on segment hurts many.). BJ Alums also collected comments and reposted them as a blog entry to encourage discussion.

September 30, 2009

Twitter tool makes it easy to follow a group


I've fallen in love with another Twitter application. Like Twibes, 
the application TweepML lets you pull together groups, then subscribe to the group with one click.

But TweepML pulls in the bio of each user and gives you the option to click on or off  the Twitter account you want to follow.  Plus, you can add Twitter names one by one or add a web address and TweepML will scan the list and pull out the Twitter names and bios for you.

It was the Almighty Link that showed it to me first when put together a list of people who frequently Twitter about journalism.
 
My first lists are for Girl Scout councils and another for Girl Scouts. I'll be adding more.If you're looking for another good list of folks to f

Will Michigan get its act together?

The annual Sept. 30 dance has begun in this household where one person works for the state of Michigan. You know, the state with a budget that begins on Oct. 1 every year, the state that can't get its act together enough to pass a budget so that my husband doesn't have to monitor the news to know if he works tomorrow.

No budget means no funding for employees. A layoff notice in mid-September warned that a no work day or two might be coming. A letter today tells employees to check the state web site or call a number to see if a last-minute deal got a budget, or at least enough money to jump start state government.

I'm 99.8 percent sure that something will happen between now and midnight. Yet, my husband worries his paycheck won't be automatically deposited tomorrow and an agreement won't be reached.

Me? I'm thinking the state legislators need to get their act together and quit wasting all the money and energy that goes into making these contingency plans, that goes into emptying our state parks and other facilities deemed non-essential. I wonder who updates the state web site or records the phone lines that employees call to see if the office is open. I worry that my husband worries.

Beyond my control: Mom with wheels watches daughter in cancer conflict


Today was a day of regrets, silent screams and tears. It was a day to give thanks that I use an electronic calendar, gas is cheaper then a year ago and someone invented heated car seats and blankets, medicines for allergies and multiple sclerosis, and cell phones with mapping and txting.

Medical staff confuse me with the push for a medical treatment and the back pedaling when circumstances steer us to another set of drugs or stopping treatment.. It's a full-court press when you are wanted in a drug trial, followed by assurances that being in the control group is OK too when required randomness places you in the non-treatment set..

Today, I learned that some medical test numbers are like statistics - you can make them say what you want. Last month, a score of 54 halted my daughter's chemo treatments. This morning, a 53 is good enough to resume chemo..Today becomes a day to do the chemo and add another drug to the arsenal, so we rearrange calendars, booking more tests and doctor visits in December, in March, in May in Michigan and others in Tennessee.

The same flakiness of the numbers is echoed in what my daughter wants me to do - listen or advise; drive or ride,sit in the lobby or wait with her in the doctor's office, fetch warmth or chase the bad guys, grab a bagel or make it a muffin. Choices on a day when I would prefer no decisions, no movement, no breathing, even. Yet, even in pain of heart and body, I want every minute possible with her as if it will make up for the time spent working when I could have been playing dolls or building castles.

I'd already started wondering at what point do all the drugs and the tests to monitor the drugs cause more harm then the cancer in a woman's body. The waiting room Time magazine on the progress of cancer treatment deos little to fix my fears.

The odometer keeps rolling, rolling, rolling - more then 230 miles today - as we add a new, but available, infusion center into today's lineup to fit in a chemo treatment and flu shot before she heads back to her job 600 miles away. We arrange routes on the fly as we bounce into detours, laughing when the multiple sclerosis mush makes it impossible for me to remember, much less distinguish directions. As the hours slip away, I rearrange my plans and send a silent prayer of thanks for the heated seats, portable ice packs and steroids.

Even the rest break - sandwiches and warm soups on this unexpected cool day - turns stressful when I see the overwhelming fatigue in my daughter's face and realize she's about to spend the next eight hours alone in airports and on roads on her way home. She gets mad when my eyes glisten with tears.

On the way to her first airport of the day, I'm shocked by spots and flushing on her face, too tired to mask my face so I scare her. By the time we reach the airport, her face is improving but the post-chemo fatigue kicks in. Still, it makes no sense for me to do more then drop her off - I can barely walk today and wouldn't be allowed past the security check. She plans to find the gate and rest. I promise to call, or at least txt her, to make sure she boards this plane and the next.

I hit the highways - more detours again. I pull off for txt breaks, but finally home.

Today, I regret deciding medical school was impossible. At times, I regret being a mother. All day, I regret being a mother whose daughter has/had breast cancer. Each regret pushes the refrain from Tom Rush's "No Regrets" through my brain. .
"No regrets. No tears goodbye
Don't want you back, we'd only cry, again
Say goodbye, again."
Over and over, I have to say goodbye to our daughter, let her grow up, let her be when I want to protect, make her whole, make her well. Through the evening and through the night, I txt until finally the one that says "I'm home" dashes across my screen. The 22-hour day ends.

Scary report looks at on how newspaper pensions doing

Mark Fitzgerald publishes a frightening look at pension plans of U.S. newspapers in his latest special report on Editor & Publisher.

Reading the report re-emphasizes why the Newhouse newspapers froze its defined pension plan in May, opting for contributions to employees 401k plans instead.

Fitzgerald explains why publishers are worried about the pension plans and why that has been a backburner issue.



Related posts:
Why May for pension changes?
Pension is frozen, not terminated

E&P follows New Jersey's decision to retire

Trade magazine Editor & Publisher talks to a Newhouse about Jim Willse's retirement from the Star-Ledger in an article following Monday's announcement.

There's information on the timing and the selection of his replacement. It leads a number of bloggers to conclude what this post claims: "buyouts, cutbacks didn't push Wilse into retirement."

Agreed - no one pushed or forced Jim out, but I think he could have worked much longer if the past year wasn't so painful or the upcoming one looked to be one that allowed an editor to concentrate on journalism, not numbers. The fact that he helped select a replacement and lined up the journalism course to teach shows the plan has been in the works for awhile.

Willse told Editor & Publisher he always intended to stay for another year past the 2008 buyout cuts:

I think it's healthy for an editor not to stay too long at the party. Considering the economics of the business, it is a time to have a change in leadership."

September 29, 2009

Site claims link to next editor of Star-Ledger in Newark, New Jersey

The "local" web site jumped in with a different message on upcoming changes at the New Jersey Star-Ledger by telling all new editor Kevin Whitmer grew up in the coverage area of Lehigh Valley Live. The site did a quick turnaround so neighbors of the new guy could learn more about Jim Willse's replacement.

The article contains this nugget:
"He began his career answering phones in the sports department at The Courier-News in Bridgewater, N.J."

showing someone remembers or knows how to use the archive system.

Does Star-Ledger editor retiring mean less news coming?

Another goodbye at an Advance Publications was announced to staff Monday at noon and I don't think it's the last one.

Jim Willse, editor of the Star-Ledger, announced today he's retiring in October - a quiet sendoff, please - and that managing editor Kevin Whitmer, 42, will take his place.

I'm surprised Willse has stayed as long as he did, yet grateful that he did. The 65-year-old editor told staff he plans to travel - I hope he gets to sample more of his favorite jazz, Celtic and world music, and Celtic first hand. He also said he will continue teaching, becoming a visiting professor at Princeton University where he's taught and spoken numerous times since coming to the New Jersey newspaper in the 1995.

Willse is a great Scrabble opponent so I hope there's time for that too.

It's been a painful year for Willse who came to the Star-Ledger when hiring was possible and watched about 200 people leave his newsroom in the past year. At a Princeton University symposium on Newspapers in Crisis in May, Willse recalled how Dec. 31, 2008, the day 150 walked away with buyouts, was one of the worst in his professional career, almost a "mass funeral."

Some wrote off any hope of the news organization recovering from losing so many experienced reporters, editors and employees. Yet as noted on his DNA2009 bio, the organization has morphed into surviving organization. It has taken changes, including revising the Ledger Live video program, hiring replacements at a  wage that even Willse agreed was not good and sharing political coverage with other New Jersey newspapers.

I think you get a hint that more bad times are coming if you listen to what Willse says to editorial interns, at symposiums, in video, on podcasts, and online. There's always a cautionary intro that no plans are made, are solid but I think the three-days-a-week publishing schedule of the Advance Publications in Bay City, Flint, and Saginaw, Michigan, is likely to happen in New Jersey and other cities with Newhouse newspapers.

At a  lunch with interns, Willse echoed what he said at the Newspapers in Crisis symposium: Nearly all of the advertising revenue at the Star-Ledger comes from three days -- Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays. He drops hints that a news company could still effectively inform its readers by  printing three days a week and relying on a news website on other days.

In May, he warned that newspapers need to get out of the printing and distribution business and restructure the newsroom. One report quotes Willse saying
“Of our 330 journalists, half were involved in processing the news as opposed to generating the news. We have to concentrate on journalism that matters, and on good writing.”
You know that's why he was pleased to bring back a political reporter in time for the governor's race.

Willse, who grew up with a father who shared what he read, always knew the type of news organization he wanted - shocked that when he came the Star-Ledger did not have its own photography department, pleased with the Pulitizer Prize that came once it did. (See After the Fire. a project that Willse credits with helping to build morale in the newsroom in his interview with The Digital Journalist.)

Willse carried the torch for watchdog journalism.

“Newspapers find things that people don’t want the public to know," he said at the May symposium. "It’s hard. Sometimes you get a story, sometimes you don’t.” 
A dogged reporter like Dustan McNichol (who also speaking that day), “would read stuff that no one else would read.” With the buyout, Willse said, “all that went away.”"

That same day, Willse related that he had just hired 24 reporters at $700 a week, prompting an audience member to ask where Willse thought those reporters, making $36,000 a year, might live — in a pup tent?

After the laughter stopped, Willse agreed that the new hires are “clearly not a long-term solution. We can’t survive by indulging in child exploitation.”

He has many ideas for the 400-level course, Inside the News Business, on the spring 2010 schedule. The description promises to help students to understand where news comes from; why it matters; the digital revolution, citizen journalism; the economics of news; and where it is headed.

Willse can teach that because he hasn't stopped learning, recently a fellow for the Knight Foundation's Transforming news organizations for a digital future, on Jeff Jarvis's Guardian Media Talk USA podcast discussing the CUNY New Business Models for News recommendations, and elsewhere.

He thinks about possibilities - and is willing to discuss them, then change his mind. Remember a joint community guide? Or these projects?

It is not surprising that he's returning to Princeton, where he has been a short-term fellow at Princeton, including in 2001-02 when he taught "Documentary Journalism" as the Harold McGraw '40 Professor of Writing and the current Ferris Professorship of Journalism and Public Relations.
  
A video of the presentation, Newspapers in Crisis in the Region, is still available at Princeton. Or watch the video below, when Willse talked with The Star-Ledger's Brian Donohue about the future of the paper in October 2008.

Meanwhile, I'm hoping Jim will have time to drag out the virtual Scrabble game once more.

Ledger Live - 10-08-08


I've written about the Star-Ledger before.

Some want to go and cannot

It's a hypothetical story that rings true ... an employee who wants to leave but doesn't get the buyout offer while some who want to stay get the offer.

September 28, 2009

Oregonian employees weighing new buyout offer

A week after employees at The Oregonian said farewell to its publisher, many employees received a buyout offer and warning of layoffs.

A story with a byline of Peter Bhatia, executive editor, was posted on OregonLive.com early Friday afternoon, with a copy of the  letter and the buyout agreement sent to employees posted on Oregon Media Central.

The buyout, less generous then previous offers, was offered to all news employees and some employees in the advertising and circulation departments. The offer gives employees two weeks of pay for each year of service, plus health care for an equivalent period, capped at six months. Employees also will get compensation for unused sick and vacation time. In August 2008, about 100 employees took a buyout that offered up to two years of pay and health benefits.

Among the position eligible are sales assistants, prepress systems operators, dispatch messengers, and imaging specialists in the advertising department and circulation zone managers, The positions and age of the person now in the positions are listed in the buyout document,   but the company can reject the agreements if too many accept by the Nov. 9 deadline. Interim publisher Patrick Stickel also warned that if enough people do not accept, the likelihood of layoffs increases when a longtime company pledge of no layoff due to technology or a bad economy ends Feb. 5, 2010.

(I can't figure out if The Oregonian employee who wanted a buyout in 2008 and sued is eligible. Can you?)

Any employee who the company agrees can go will be gone by Dec. 26, 2009, although the last date of employment is up to The Oregonian. Most people expect they would be asked to stay through mid-December as the weeks leading up to Christmas are among the busiest for most newspaper advertisers.

Those offered the chance to take a buyout won't be replaced directly. Instead, Stickel said the work will be reassigned or done in a way that will save the company money

The company froze its defined-benefit pensions in May and reduced most Oregonian employees' pay up to 10 percent this year. Also, the company began using unpaid furloughs - now 10 days - as a way of controlling expenses. Editor Sandy Rowe's pay was cut 15 percent, the same cut that the two Stickels, Fred and Patrick, said they were taking.

The Oregonian is part of Advance Publications, owned by the Newhouse family.


I've written about The Oregonian before.

Catchup: More on the Newhouse job pledge, Alabama lawsuit, Birmingham Eccentric, The Rapidian

Let's clean out my inbox which is filing up because my daughter returned to Michigan temporarily for some cancer checkups and my friend MS decided to remind me who is boss despite my three-day booking at American Sewing Expo.

AdvanceInternet is moving closer to getting its new community features working. Still, I had to laugh when I tried to read  blogger Andrew Heller's "I'm back and that's a good thing, right?" on mlive.com. He starts:
"After a week away, like MacArthur, I have finally returned. Believe me, this mini blog vacation was not my idea. Mlive, bless their Mlivey hearts, decided to upgrade the look of its blogs, and in doing so they gave we bloggers a brand new updated upload interface. That didn't work. At least for me."
See, when I clicked on the headline in Google Reader I got an "404 Not Found" error page. I navigated my way to Andy's column, read a few more lines and then tried to get the "full story." Ha. Ha.

I noticed that a few news sites are admitting problems - see the Grand Rapids Press' Trouble logging into Mlive accounts?  - and some are writing their own versions of explaining the features. Check out how Niki Doyle, social media editor for The Huntsville Times, explains to use the new tools. Or read The Jersey Guy's "Welcome to the new, improved NJ.com" for a big picture view.

I'd comment on any of the Advance Internet sites, but still seem to run into trouble with authentication. (Update: The password recovery page is working. I think my problems are due to being a former blogger as I start at mlive.com and end up at nj.com or the blog login site.)

In 'Newhouse Pledge,' Job Security, Now Relics of Once-Thriving Newspaper Industry, a  former Advance Publications employee reacts to the soon-to-be extinct Newhouse no-layoff pledge and an ex-publisher cites the ending of the pledge in his lawsuit.

Mark Holan, now a freelance writer looking for work and working on a book says that some  Mobile Press-Register employees told him that Howard Bronson is a hero for taking on Newhouse, but others worry that they'll face more financial pain and job insecurity if he prevails.

While we are on the suit, Lagniappe had a followup post to the the suit in Bronson takes on P-R. Rob Holbert quotes Howard Bronson's lawyer, shares that some employees are expecting the Newhouse newspapers in Alabama to consolidate, and that longtime Advertising Director Larry Wooley has retired. Holbert also reviews the lawsuit again, pulling out details about Bronson's improvements during his years as head of the news organizations and plans such as reducing the size of the newspaper page.

So, how about a happier ending - a community winning its fight to keep its community newspaper going. Gannett wanted to close a Michigan weekly - The Birmingham Eccentric - but the community objected.
InVocus Media Blog has an update on the effort, which just passed another deadline. Katrina M. Randall also shares how the newspaper staff is changing its efforts as a result of the community.

Over on the west side of Michigan, a new citizen journalism effort officially launched. Thanks to Jay Rosen, who teaches journalism at New York University, there's been a healthy discussion of some of the coverage of the opening of The Rapidian. There was praise for a Grand Rapids Press editorial:
"This is an exemplary editorial from the Grand Rapids Press welcoming @TheRapidian, a citizen journalism site, to the local news scene. No snark, no hostility, no insinuation that the "only the pros know" and a sense that in the rebooted system of news such sites will be a valuable part of the ecosystem."
That followed discussion prompted by an NPR piece.  Did the piece - Take That, Citizen Journalism! - miss?

I plan to write more about The Rapidian . Meanwhile, enjoy checking out the site.

September 23, 2009

Biker babe: Blog leads us to video

Have I mentioned the Biz Newz Layoffs blog before? It was created to track layoffs at the American City Business Journals.

But there's more then layoffs - like this item:  ACBJ publisher debuts in office “bloopers” video? 
Let me help you out some -  Lisa Bormaster was named publisher of the Dallas Business Journal in Novemer 2007.

Also, since ACBJ is part of the Advance family the Newhouse newspapers and other publications and sites get discussed. (Just in case you too need to feed an Advance Addiction.)





 Here are few other posts where I mention the American City Business Journals:
New family quietly launches Portfolio?  Aug. 13, 2009
Son folows father Aug. 3, 2009
Business journals cutting salaries? April 15, 2009
Could Advance workers tap that perk?  March 28, 2009

Writers confernce almost here

The 2nd Annual Rochester Writers' Conference on Saturday, October 3,  has presentations available for fiction and non-fiction writers. It is for both new and published authors. Hurry, and you might get the special $99 rate.


Chip St. Clair, author of The Butterfly Garden, is giving the keynote. You get to select four of 12 presentations at this Michigan event in the Detroit area.

September 22, 2009

Column on 'amazing' feat provides answer, connects Michigan and Maine

Sweet. Brad Flory of the Jackson Citizen Patriot wrote "Girlfriend's strength proves to be lifesaving,"  about a 115-pound female carrying a 160-pound male after an accident. It's a touching story that gets better with a comment left by someone else involved with this effort. The couple are from Michigan and the event took place in Maine. The Internet scores.

September 21, 2009

Advance addiction fed by Alabama lawsuit

I can't stop. It's my new addiction - following the retirement virus spreading through publications owned by the Newhouses and uncovering writers and photographers who suck me into their blogs with a lure of details on something about something related to Advance Publications and Conde Nast.

I watch the Live Traffic and the Recent Readers feeds, study the stats from Feedburner, Google Analytics, and StatsCounter, and wonder who you are. (Oh please, Spring Lake and Farmington share who you really are.)

I envy the cities with alternative news organizations or people who are keeping an eye on the big media.

Sometimes, I worry. Is this blogging erecting a barrier to future employment? Am I contributing to the ruin of my Advance Publication pension? Is this an unhealthy obsession with a former employer? How many more will run, unwilling to acknowledge a relationship on Facebook or Google?

Still, I can't stop and get almost giddy when I find that the Poynter Institute has posted a copy of  Howard Bronson's filing against the Mobile Press-Register, Advance Publications, Mark Newhouse and "fictitious defendants one through one hundred persons."

Isn't that delicious - the workings of the Newhouses and their organizations are so complex that even Bronson, who became publisher in 1992, can't name the individuals and organizations he wants to sue. Instead, his lawyers seek through the discovery process the names of people and businesses behind the decisions that led to the rescinding of a long-time job pledge, the request for his retirement, and more. For now, Bronson sues:
 "FICTITIOUS DEFENDANTS ONE )THROUGH ONE HUNDRED, persons, ) firms, corporations, partnerships, or ) other legal entities whose names are ) presently unknown to Plaintiff but who ) have participated in, have conspired with, ) and/or has aided and abetted others in ) committing the violations of law alleged ) in this Complaint."
Is that a hint that Bronson was surprised with Advance Alabama/Mississippi, which was announced when Bronson's replacement was named?  Or that Bronson's retirement was planned before Aug. 10, the day he was first asked to retire since his replacement, Ricky Mathews, left the Sun Herald July 21..)

Yet, I have to ask why Bronson is surprised after reading the details of his recruitment into the Newhouse organization. The effort lasted from September 1991 to February 1992, and designed to replace then-publisher William Hearin who was allowed to stay on with a title and some sort of job until his death in 2001. I'm reminded of the person surprised when someone who cheated on someone to be with her continues the cycle.

In a similar way, I am surprised why anyone believed the lifetime job pledge was written in stone, written in forever.

In the court filing, Howard Bronson explained why he wanted assurances that the longtime Newhouse job security pledge - "no full time, non represented employee would be laid off because of economic circumstances or technological change" - was staying if he accepted an offer to run the Mobile Press-Register in Alabama.
"Bronson was concerned that there would be a family upheaval leading to the implosion of the companies or a takeover by a public company, as he saw with the Ewing family which owned newspapers in Shreveport and Monroe, Louisiana. Bronson explained that once a family-owned company gets to the point of being run by the second and third generations (the Newhouse companies were just getting into the third generation), the estate/income taxes start to eat at these generations which leads to family friction and ultimately collapse. Donald Newhouse assured Bronson that the Newhouse family had the tax issues worked out for three more generations and that what happened to the Ewings would not happen to the Newhouses."
The filing says the pledge was important to Bronson as his family was leaving long-time roots, he was 55 years old with a career in newspapers and the pledge allowed him - not an age - to decide when to retire.

Actually, although Howard Bronson probably got a few more years out of the business by leaving Gannet for Newhouse I think Bronson was right to worry about the next generation of Newhouses as generations change priorities for businesses. Starting a business or organization takes a lot of energy, but the founders are eager to spend the time, the money and energy because they are passionate about what they have started. But as the leadership of a business or organization hands down the passion often becomes diluted.

Consider this: Do you expect your offspring to like your music enough to stand in line for tickets to a concert? (Actually, do you stand in line anymore or just hit redial on the cell or reload on the computer screen?)

In many ways, the Newhouses are stuck. There's no market to sell a chain of newspapers so the privately owned company changes to reflect want the new generation of owners.

In many ways, those who work for a Newhouse newspaper, or a CondeNast magazine or an Advance Publications unit are stuck. They will find little in the 45-page document filed in Alabama to calm the fear that more layoffs and restructurings are coming.

When I read in the lawsuit: "In fact, the Newhouses viewed Bronson as having too much integrity to be their hatchet man" I wonder if the upcoming charges with the ending of the job pledge are behind the Advance retirement virus.

Did Victor Hanson III decide to leave the Birmingham News and Fred Stickel the Oregonian rather then watch the dismantling of their products become the next Ann Arbor News or Flint Journal?

Bronson says he believes the pledge is so important to recruiting and retaining employees that when he was told in July 2009 that an Aug. 5 announcement would notify employees the pledge would be gone in February he "questioned the legality, morality and wisdom of their plan."

Bronson believes he did the right things, listing items such as changes that led to the "voluntary buyout of approximately 36 full-time positions and, with additional belt-tightening, the newspaper’s full-time employment was down approximately 51 positions compared to the same time in 2008 and 63 positions compared
to the 2009 budget; all this while adding substantial work for the Huntsville and Pensacola newspapers. For all this, the Newhouses were giving Bronson extra kudos."

The passage reminds me of words from a boss: "We'll take as much as you're willing to give" when he recognized how close I was to burning out physically and mentally far earlier then I did.



I have written about Howard Bronson before, including his lawsuit, "retirement" and some speculation about his leaving. I also wrote about him when the newspaper picked up some extra business.

Or maybe you wanted more about what's up in Advance's Ann Arbor efforts, or The Grand Rapids Press orThe Birmingham News or The Cleveland Plain Dealer or The Oregonian.  I need to index the rest of the entries.