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Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Gannett Furloughs Workers When Readers Facing The COVID-19 Pandemic Need Them. (Forbes)
Andrew Pentazz's speadsheet of GANNETT layoffs lists two at the St. Augustine Record -- reporters assigned to cover crime and features.
I cover media companies, networks, podcasters and online streaming
Gannett, whose papers include The USA Today, Arizona Republic, The Detroit News, The Des Moines Register, and The Burlington Free Press, today announced that employees would face pay cuts and furloughs as advertising revenue dried up in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to The Daily Beast, Gannett CEO Paul Bascobert said in an email sent Monday to staff that employees need to make a "collective sacrifice" to keep the company afloat during the crisis. Pay cuts will begin as soon as this week. The Daily Beastquotes Bascobert as writing.
To avoid layoffs, Gannett employees will be furloughed five days a month through June. Top managers also will feel the pain. Bascobert won't take an annual salary while other Gannett executives will receive a 25 percent pay cut for the duration of the furloughs. A spokesperson for Gannett didn't respond to a request for comment.
Even without the pandemic, Gannett had plenty of challenges the declines in their legacy print businesses show no sign of endings.. The company sold itself last year to private-equity backed New Media Investments, the parent of GateHouse Newspapers, for $1.1 billion. The new company kept the Gannett name and publishes about 30 percent of all U.S. newspapers.
The Virginia company's situation isn't unique in the beleaguered news business.
According to Washington Post Media Columnist Erik Wemple, news organizations in about a half-dozen states and The District of Columbia are laying off workers and cutting worker's pay because of the pandemic
BuzzFeed, which struggled to stay afloat financially long before the pandemic, announced last week that its employees' salaries would be cut. Chief Executive Jonah Peretti aksi is forgoing his pay until the situation is resolved.
The timing of the cutbacks at Louisiana's Advocate newspaper is especially unfortunate since the state ranks third on a per-capita basis for COVID-19 infections.
"The growth trajectory shows Louisiana increasing its confirmed cases on the same steep angle as Italy and Spain, where the virus has become exceptionally widespread," according to The Advocate.
Online media, including sites associated with newspapers, have benefited from gains in digital subscriptions, though they haven't been enough to offset the drop in advertising revenue. Moreover, smaller publishers haven't been able to break the hold that Google and Facebook have on advertising.
The global pandemic will have a worse impact on advertising spending than the 2008 financial crisis, according to a recently released Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB) survey of 400 ad buyers and other decision-makers.
According to the IAB, a whopping 70 percent of respondents have already "adjusted or paused their planned ad spend," while 16 percent are determining their next move. About a quarter of buyers have paused all their spending for the remainder of the first two quarters, while 46 percent have indicated that they have "adjusted" their ad spending during the same period.
I have covered the media industry for major news organizations such as CBS News and Bloomberg News on and off since around 2000. My specialties include debunking conventional wisdom and breaking news. I am passionate about telling great stories and have an obsession with facts that borders on the maniacal. During my career, I have crossed paths with Howard Stern, Joan Rivers, Hugh Hefner and Sylvester Stallone. I have the rare distinction among media writers of angering both Keith Olbermann and Cap'n Crunch. During my spare time, I enjoy hanging out with my wife and son when I am not torturing myself watching Philadelphia sports teams.
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