Monday, April 06, 2020

30 days of Hell by America’s newspapers

In less than 30 days Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, Florida (one of my stops in my 43-year newspaper career was at Poynter’s St. Petersburg Times) reported this cutbacks, print suspensions because the coronavirus and normal attrition that has been going on for years now collided:

On March 9, The Cleveland (Ohio) Plain Dealer announced it would cut 22 newsroom employees.

On March 13, The Stranger in Seattle temporarily suspended print and laid off 18 staffers.

On March 14, the Portland (Oregon) Mercury announced it was temporarily cutting print and had temporarily laid off 10 staffers

On March 16, DigBoston suspended print publication.

on March 17, salaries were cut at the Phoenix New Times, Denver’s Westword, Dallas Observer, Houston Press and Miami New Times.

On March 18, the Tampa Bay Times, which Poynter owns, laid off 11 journalists

on March 18, Monterey County Weekly in California announced it had laid off seven employees. Three other staffers had salaries reduced

Texas’ San Antonio Current laid off 10 employees.

Riverfront Times in St. Louis laid off seven.

Shepherd Express in Milwaukee suspended its print edition.

The Pulse in Chattanooga, Tennessee, suspended publication.

CityBeat in Cincinnati, Ohio, had furloughs and pay cuts.

MetroTimes in Detroit laid off eight staffers. 

Creative Loafing in Tampa laid off seven employees.

Cleveland Scene in Ohio laid off five staffers.

Orlando Weekly laid off 13 people. 

Oklahoma Gazette in Oklahoma City paused print publication.

On March 19, Isthmus, a weekly in Madison, Wisconsin, announced it had to “go dark for an undetermined amount of time.”

On March 20, Austin Chronicle in Texas went to an every-other-week print schedule.

Mountain Xpress in Asheville, North Carolina, laid off seven and had pay cuts.

On March 23, Trent Stephens reported for The Durango (Colorado) Herald that it had laid off five people

on March 23, Trib Total Media in Pennsylvania combined two print editions and laid off staff

The Times-Picayune/nola.com/The Advocate in New Orleans announced a temporary furlough of 10% of its workforce.

On March 25, The Warwick Beacon in Rhode Island cut one publication day to become a weekly and had eight layoffs

On March 26th, the 13-year-old Waterbury (Vermont) Record reported it printed its last edition.

on March 30, the Times Leader in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, announced it’s cutting print on Saturday, Monday and Tuesday.

The Henrico Citizen in Henrico County, Virginia, announced it was stopping its twice-monthly print edition for April “and possibly beyond.”

Adams Publishing Group, which operates dailies and weeklies in 20 states, announced a cut in workforce hours

on March 31, The Capital Times in Madison, Wisconsin, announced furloughs and pay cuts.

San Francisco Examiner and SF Weekly announced cuts in hours and pay to staff.

On April 1, 22nd Century Media, which published community newspapers in the Chicago suburbs, went out of business,

On April 2 and 3, newsrooms that are part of Alden Global Capital’s MediaNews Group learned of layoffs and furloughs. Newsrooms include The Denver Post, the Boston Herald and several in California.

On April 6, Poynter’s Tom Jones reported temporary pay cuts at The Dallas Morning News.

This is just the Cliff’s Notes version. If you want to read the entire sorry report by Poynter, click on

My advice to college journalism students: Not a good time to look for a newspaper job. Duh!

No comments: