Tucson CitizenTucson Citizen

Newspapers keep cutting costs, print editions

The pall looming over U.S. newspapers grew even darker Monday as Gannett Co. informed most of its employees that they will have to take another week of unpaid leave this spring, while a Michigan daily unveiled plans to close its print edition after 174 years.

And The Plain Dealer, Ohio’s largest newspaper, also ordered pay cuts and 10-day furloughs for nonunion employees Monday to cut costs as advertising revenue drops.

Gannett announced Jan. 16 it was putting the Tucson Citizen up for sale and would shutter the paper March 21 if no buyer came forward.

But on March 17, Robert J. Dickey, president of Gannett U.S. Community Publishing, told employees the Citizen would continue to publish until at least March27 because of continuing negotiations with two interested buyers.

The moves were just the latest sign of the distress afflicting newspapers across the country as they try to cope with a dramatic shift in advertising that is forcing publishers to figure out how to survive with substantially less revenue.

Signaling it doesn’t see an upturn anytime soon, Gannett wants virtually all of its U.S. employees to stay at home and forgo at least one week’s pay before July. About 6,600 workers outside the United States won’t be affected by the furloughs.

Executives and many workers making more than $90,000 annually will sacrifice two weeks pay in hopes that Gannett — the owner of USA Today and more than 80 daily newspapers — will be able to avoid more layoffs after jettisoning 4,000 jobs last year.

This will mark Gannett’s second round of furloughs this year. The company, which employs about 41,500 people, saved about $20 million by imposing one-week furloughs during the first three months of this year.

“We are about to begin the second quarter without any real relief in sight from this unprecedented economic downturn and its challenge to our company,” Gannett Chief Executive Craig Dubow wrote in a staff memo. “Despite all of your truly remarkable efforts to reverse the trend, our revenue numbers continue their downward slide and we have been faced with more difficult decisions.”

Based on his annual salary of $1 million, Dubow will lose more than $38,000 of his pay in the second quarter.

The Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J., owned by the Newhouse family’s Advance Publications, also told its 530 full-time workers they will have to make a similar sacrifice by taking 10 unpaid days off this year.

On the other side of the country, The Oregonian in Portland is reducing employee wages by up to 10 percent and requiring full-time workers to take four unpaid days off between May and September as its publisher tries to reverse a 2008 operating loss of more than $10 million.

Other newspapers are simply concluding that daily editions no longer make financial sense in some markets.

That’s why privately held Advance Publications plans to replace The Ann Arbor News with an online-focused operation that will publish only on Thursdays and Sundays beginning in July. The publisher is betting a more Web-centric newspaper will thrive in Ann Arbor, a college town that has a more tech-savvy population than many other parts of Michigan.

“We felt it was better to invest resources into building a new sustainable product for the community rather than keep cutting back on The Ann Arbor News,” Steve Newhouse, chairman of Advance’s Internet arm, told The Associated Press.

Without providing specifics, The Ann Arbor News’ management warned that the shift from print will trigger significant job cuts. The newspaper, which has an average weekday circulation of about 45,000, currently employs 272 employees.

The transformation of the News was the most significant of the cost-cutting measures announced at Advance Publications’ eight daily Michigan newspapers.

The Flint Journal, The Bay City Times and The Saginaw News will go from daily publication to three days a week — Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays — starting June 1. It’s similar to a move that the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News will make next week when they curtail the home delivery schedule for their print editions to the same three days.

Advance Publications also plans to combine page design and production jobs at The Grand Rapids Press, the Kalamazoo Gazette and The Muskegon Chronicle so more of the work can be handled in Grand Rapids. The Jackson Citizen Patriot will take on copy editing, page design, ad production and other functions of the AnnArbor.com print newspaper.

Terrance C.Z. Egger, publisher and president of Advance Publications’ The Plain Dealer, said Monday the newspaper has no plans to cut publication dates or change to a Web-only product. But the newspaper, which previously reduced staffing by layoffs and buyouts, did order pay cuts of 8 percent of full- and part-time employees’ first $50,000 and 10-day furloughs for nonunion full-time workers in an effort to cut costs.

The paper said its ad revenue fell twice as much as expected in the first quarter.

Meanwhile, the Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader and The Charlotte (N.C.) Observer separately disclosed plans to lay off more than 130 employees between them. The purge is part of 1,600 job cuts disclosed earlier by the newspapers’ owner, McClatchy Co.

Like most businesses, newspapers have been hard hit by the deepest recession since the early 1980s. But the blow has been especially devastating for newspapers because they were already losing readers and revenue to the Internet, where news can be easily found for free and the advertising rates are substantially lower.

The Internet’s allure, coupled with the punishing recession, have caused annual advertising revenue to shrivel by 20 percent to 30 percent at some newspaper publishers since 2006.

The double whammy resulted in the closure of the 149-year-old Rocky Mountain News in Denver last month and prompted the Seattle Post-Intelligencer to go online-only last week.

Citizen Online Archive, 2006-2009

This archive contains all the stories that appeared on the Tucson Citizen's website from mid-2006 to June 1, 2009.

In 2010, a power surge fried a server that contained all of videos linked to dozens of stories in this archive. Also, a server that contained all of the databases for dozens of stories was accidentally erased, so all of those links are broken as well. However, all of the text and photos that accompanied some stories have been preserved.

For all of the stories that were archived by the Tucson Citizen newspaper's library in a digital archive between 1993 and 2009, go to Morgue Part 2

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