150 Editorial Staffers Cut At LA Times

by Jarrett Martineau | July 2, 2008 at 10:55 pm | 285 views | 11 comments

Chop chop chop, off with their heads! So falls the guillotine blade, this time upon the editorial news staff of the LA Times. And what's to blame for the choppy-chop? You guessed it -- this is all "thanks to the Internet".

The Los Angeles Times announced 150 editorial layoffs—on both print and Web, according to a memo just sent by Russ Stanton. The layoffs will be complete by Labor Day. The memo follows.
From: Stanton, Russ
Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2008 2:05 PM
To: yyeditall
Subject: Newsroom job cuts

Colleagues:

You all know the paradox we find ourselves in: Thanks to the Internet, we have more readers for our great journalism than at any time in our history. But also thanks to the Internet, our advertisers have more choices, and we have less money. Add to that a poor economy, particularly for us in the California housing market, and you quickly see why a wave of cutbacks has swept through newsrooms this year from New York to Santa Ana.

We are not immune. As David Hiller mentioned in his memo last week we are embarking on another round of cost cutting. I deeply regret to report we will be reducing the size of our editorial staff, both print and Web, by a total of 150 positions, and reducing the number of pages we publish each week, by about 15%.

These moves will be difficult and painful. But it is absolutely crucial that as we move through this process, we must maintain our ambition and our determination to produce the highest-quality journalism in print and online, every day.

Through all of our changes, we continue to give readers terrific coverage, whether it's the continuing collapse of the housing market, public pools that have been taken over by gangs, or the controversy surrounding liver transplants at one of our most prestigious hospitals. We've provided insight into the historic presidential campaign, and we've delivered exclusive, on-the-scene looks at the brutal repression in Zimbabwe and the continuing war in Iraq. The future of The Times, in print and on the Web, depends on that kind of journalism -- exclusive, original, excellent. We will not retreat from that commitment.

I don't yet have all the details on the reductions to come, but we expect to complete these moves by Labor Day. We'll provide more information, including the severance terms, as soon as we can. As part of this process, we will be combining the print and Web staffs into a single operation with a unified budget.

I appreciate your patience, understanding and cooperation during this difficult time. John, Davan and I, and the rest of the senior editing team, will be available to answer your questions. With more than 700 people, we will remain one of the largest and best newsrooms in the country. And we will continue to be a strong and formidable presence in the business we so dearly love.


Russ Stanton
Editor
Los Angeles Times

Add a comment Comments (11)

René
good stuff:

Ouch!

Sanjay Jha
good stuff:

Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.

zichi

I guess they'll be posting here soon!

everchanging
good stuff:

Jarrett Martineau, At least they had a weeks warning and few months to go before its complete.

 Interesting to note "you quickly see why a wave of cutbacks has swept through newsrooms this year from New York to Santa Ana."

Well there goes my thought of Journalism school for me, now.

jayr_patron

I still do think though that trained journalists are at an advantage over what would eventually become "traditional" bloggers and citizen journalists.

link

They should have seen this coming. It's not like they didn't have any warning signs.

bradski
good stuff:

Tragic to see the Tribune Company crumble like this. 

gerrypopplestone
good stuff:

Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. I say sack all those people who write for internet sites and smash all their computers!

Heritage
good stuff:

Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Same thing just happened to a major daily newspaper here in Taiwan.

The Future of Journalism

In future there will be advertising, it won't be enough to fund huge staffs as there are now, but we'll have a core of professional journalists. We can fund them and then, in company - in participation with citizen journalists, bloggers, user-generated content, however you want to describe that, amateur journalists - that in company with them - crowd-sourcing, mash-ups, however you want to do it - that you will form a different kind of approach to journalism.

                       Roy Greenslade (Media Columnist, The Guardian)

Because the business model is largely funded by classified advertising, by these vast revenues - the rivers of gold as they're called - from classified advertising in newspapers. So an average page in The Age or the Sydney Morning Herald on a Saturday brings in 40-thousand dollars, and there's a hundred of them, and that's 4 million dollars a week. And that pays for all the journalists' salaries. That advertising is moving to the internet.

...there's no obvious substitute for the newspaper business model when it comes to funding quality journalism. ...even websites that are owned by newspapers make much less money per ad than the classifieds in print used to do.the 40-thousand dollars that advertisers pay for a classified page in a newspaper becomes something like 4-thousand dollars on the internet.

Eric Beecher (Publisher, Crikey & Business Spectator)


Rhonda J Mangus
good stuff:

Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.

michelle.sundvick
good stuff:

Jarrett Martineau, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Add a comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

July 2, 2008 at 10:55 pm by Jarrett Martineau, 285 views, 11 comments

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from