Friday, February 19, 2010

Appeal Being Filed on MORRIS PUBLISHING Bankruptcy and Declining Quality of Journalism Here in Our Nation's Oldest City

Thomas Jefferson said, "I have sworn before the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind" of humankind.

We're filing an appeal of the Southern District of Georgia Bankruptcy Judge's February 10, 2010 and February 16, 2010 orders declining to hear an intervention petition from newspaper readers challenging the MORRIS PUBLISHING Bankruptcy.

The Judge took 20 minutes to approve a prepackaged bankruptcy, one in which MORRIS PUBLISHING said there would be "no change" seen by newspaper readers, whereby bondholders agreed to accept 36 cents on the dollar.

Here is laid-off former Albany, NY Times-Union business editor Marlene Kennedy's story about our petition from her blog, "One in 13,000" (link at left):

Here's a novel way to get your point across if you think your local newspaper has suffered too many cutbacks: Take it to court.

Keith Hempstead, a lawyer in Durham, N.C., did that in 2008 when he sued The News & Observer, alleging the Raleigh daily had breached its contract with him as a subscriber when it cut staff and pages soon after he renewed.

He later dropped the suit, but not before making headlines for his approach, which he said all along was designed to get the attention of an industry relentlessly cinching its belt.

Indeed, the Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism that same year underscored his quality concerns in a study titled "The Changing Newsroom: What Is Being Gained and What Is Being Lost in America's Daily Newspapers."

Now a complaint about cutbacks and quality has surfaced again, this time brought in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Georgia by a pair of subscribers in the case of Morris Publishing Group LLC. The two sought to make their point by gaining standing in the Chapter 11 case, whose reorganization plan is headed toward expected approval this week.

But the pair, Judith Seraphin and Ed Slavin, was turned back when a judge ruled they could not intervene as subscribers, readers or third-party interests in the case....

Morris, publisher of 13 daily newspapers in the South and Midwest, filed for bankruptcy protection last month. At the time, one of its lawyers said he expected the case "will be one of the fastest newspaper reorganizations in U.S. history."

But Seraphin and Slavin, who describe themselves as "local community activists" and "longtime readers and subscribers" to Morris' St. Augustine Record in Florida, asked to be let into the case last week, at the deadline for objections to the reorganization plan.

According to court documents, the pair says they are "horrified" at a perceived drop in the quality and quantity of news in the paper. And since Morris foresees no change in operations under the reorganization plan, other than relief of long-standing debt related to acquisitions in the 1990s, they predict disaster: that its smaller papers will head into "a death spiral of declining interest in newspapers" due to inadequate resources to report the news.

The judge, however, ruled that only the bondholders affected by the rejiggering of debt in the Morris case should have a say in the reorganization. And he said the pair's claims of lost quality and quantity in the Morris papers aren't relevant to "the purpose of this Chapter 11 case, which is to give the debtors the breathing space necessary to accomplish their financial rehabilitation."

Late Friday, it was reported that Seraphin and Slavin asked the court to reconsider.

No matter the outcome, it's heartening to see subscribers like Hempstead, Seraphin and Slavin -- anyone other than affected journalists -- show interest in the industry and what the ever-continuing belt-tightening is doing to the country's newspapers.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

Who are these idiots :) I imagine the statement made "no change in operations" was boiler plate lanquage used to satisfy the anxiety of Morris' existing employees and the vendors who sold to the papers on credit. If you read the indepth reports about what innovations and improvements Morris has made to the newsroom, these goofballs claims would without merrit. I think newspapers realize they have to provide quality local news and stories to remain competitive for their readers and advertisers.

Unknown said...

Bogus Web site blog on Morris....you must have been disbarred or something and desparate for sensationalization.

you didn't post my response. Are u a pansy too? Hank Whetstone said you were.

Ed Slavin said...

Dear Unknown: Objection, whining. I did publish your post. I've since met Hank Whetstone. I don't believe you. Anonymice: inauthentic, unkind, uncouth cognitive misers? Secretive reflexives defenders of the Establishment, "aginners," posting hatred. Please identify yourself. Pray for "Unknown," whose supercilious, cant opinions are emetic, emotional and ad hominem. We deserve local news. Events since this blog post have proved the truth of what we told the Georgia federal court. "Sensationalization?" Huh? As Pope Francis would say, "Who are you to judge?" How do y'all like GANNETT's dumbed-down version of the St. Augustine Wreckord, which we predicted more than a decade ago!? Cordially, Ed Slavin