Even amid affluence of tech capital, local news struggles
Even amid affluence of tech capital, local
news struggles
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — The cities and suburbs on the eastern
side of San Francisco Bay are home to 2.7 million people, a world-class
University of California campus and bedroom communities for Silicon Valley that
produce median incomes 50 percent higher than the national average.
What they no longer have is a thriving landscape of local daily
newspapers.
Gone is the Oakland Tribune, the Contra Costa Times, The Daily
Review of Hayward, The Argus of Fremont and the Tri-Valley Herald, among
others. All had tens of thousands of readers during their heyday and served
communities populous enough to be among the largest cities in many other
states.
Ownership changes and consolidations have left the region known
as the East Bay with just a single daily newspaper. The East Bay Times, based
in Walnut Creek, attempts to cover a region nearly the size of Delaware with a
fraction of the staff of the former dailies.
The growing number of places across the country with dwindling
or no local news options has been associated with mostly rural and lower-income
areas, places that have little resilience to counter the trend among readers
and advertisers to go online. But the East Bay — among the wealthiest and
highest educated regions in the country — shows that no place is immune to the
struggles of the traditional news industry.
“It is really shocking that the place with the demographics and
the business and the universities and the progressiveness, that this is a news
desert ... ” said U.S. Rep. Mark DeSaulnier, a Democrat who represents a
significant part of the East Bay.
The former small business owner started his political career on
the Concord City Council nearly three decades ago, where he recalls seeing at
least one reporter in the front row of every meeting. DeSaulnier is so
concerned about the state of local news that he has backed legislative action
in Congress to support it.
One of those bills targets what he and others believe is a main
culprit of the industry’s woes — the big tech and social media companies that
profit from the content news outlets produce without adequately sharing the
profits.
Facebook and Google, among the most prominent of those targets,
say they are not to blame for the news industry’s downfall and have pledged
hundreds of millions of dollars to boost local news and help develop new
business strategies. That includes backing for news sites in the East Bay,
where many of the tech giants’ employees live.
But some wonder if that philanthropy is too little, too late. In
Fremont, Dan Smith used to have two copies of The Argus delivered daily, one to
his family’s funeral home for the obituaries placed on behalf of clients and
the other to his home, where he turned to sports and comics.
But Smith, 60, no longer subscribes to a daily newspaper, after
The Argus turned into a weekly insert to cover a community of nearly 240,000
people, where one of the local employers is electric car maker Tesla.
“Where does one go for local coverage, high school sports?
What’s going on with the city and the politics, and what’s happening around the
community?” he said. “How can I be part of my community if I don’t know what’s
going on?”
___
Former journalists, civic leaders and others in the East Bay
lament the loss of the community coverage that was once the staple of local
dailies, many of which competed for scoops in towns where coverage areas
overlapped.
In Richmond, a working-class city of 110,000 dominated by
Chevron and its oil refinery, Mayor Tom Butt recalls a time when two reporters
were posted full-time in the press room in the basement of City Hall.
“And everything that happened in the city of Richmond showed up
in the newspaper the next day or two, a detailed, blow-by-blow account of every
city council meeting, every planning commission meeting,” Butt said.
Today, coverage of Richmond falls largely to two online
publications. The graduate journalism school at the University of California,
Berkeley staffs Richmond Confidential, which goes on hiatus during summer and
winter breaks.
The city’s largest employer, Chevron Corp., runs the other
through a public relations firm. The Richmond Standard posts stories about
crime, high school football and community events. It also provides “a voice for
Chevron Products Company on civic issues.”
The website has posted stories about a Chevron workforce
program, its employees and philanthropy, including an article about Chevron
taking kids to an Oakland A’s game.
A few miles down Interstate 80, Martin Reynolds gazes up at the
22-story Tribune Tower that defines the Oakland skyline and was home to the
Oakland Tribune for decades before the paper was sold and its headquarters
moved. The Tribune’s nameplate with fancy gold script remains over the
building’s main entrance.
The 142-year-old Tribune was the first African American-owned
major metropolitan daily, and its staff took pride in its deep connection to
the racially mixed city of over 400,000. The newspaper won a Pulitzer Prize for
its coverage of the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.
Its reporters scoured the city’s neighborhoods and institutions,
and they filled the front page with Oakland-based stories, said Reynolds, who
started as an intern and became editor in 2008. They also tried out new ideas
in the digital age, such as blogging about life inside one of the city’s most
dangerous zip codes.
“We were just out there covering stuff all the time,” said
Reynolds, 51. “We even had a Berkeley bureau.”
But ownership consolidated and newsrooms shrank. The Digital
First-owned Bay Area News Group eventually announced it would collapse the East
Bay’s daily papers into one.
“There was a time when newspapers were so powerful and so
meaningful and so influential to the community,” Reynolds said. “To have lost
that is a shame.”
Digital First has a record of consolidating newspapers and
trimming staff, but it also has said that its business model keeps local
journalism alive. The company staffs reporters throughout the region and has separate
regional sections on the East Bay Times’ website.
The East Bay Times won its own Pulitzer in 2017 for its coverage
of a fatal warehouse fire in Oakland. Even then, it wasn’t long before cutbacks
resumed.
Bay Area News Group Executive Editor Frank Pine said he
understands the loyalty people have for the newspapers they grew up with, but
said there is no way to turn back time.
The East Bay Times has collaborated with other publications in
efforts to beef up local reporting, including a recent in-depth project about law enforcement
officers with criminal convictions. The news group also
received a grant from Google to test a premium, ad-free service for
subscribers.
“Our business — the business of news — continues to be
distressed, and we’re doing our level best to stabilize that business and make
it sustainable into the future,” Pine said.
___
The loss of so many daily news outlets in this relatively
well-to-do region has a ring of irony: Much of the East Bay’s wealth and growth
is due to tech giants — Apple, Facebook and Google — whose headquarters are a
mere bridge crossing away on the other side of San Francisco Bay.
The dominance of Facebook and Google, which rake in the majority
of digital ad dollars, is a key reason the traditional news business has been
struggling through a period of layoffs and readership decline.
Apple’s iPhone conditioned people to abandon print and seek
information with a swipe of a screen. Since the iPhone debuted in 2007,
employment in U.S. newspaper newsrooms has dropped by nearly half, according to
the Pew Research Center.
David Chavern, president and chief executive of the News Media
Alliance, said Google and Facebook can solve the crisis affecting the news
industry by paying more for content and sharing more data about the people who
click on it.
“The fact of the matter is that both Google and Facebook control
everything about the news experience, and yet they don’t want to compensate the
people who create that content,” he said.
Newspaper ad revenue was $50 billion in 2005, according to the
Pew Research Center. Today, it’s $14 billion.
Representatives of Google and Facebook reject the suggestion
that their companies are responsible for the decline of newspapers, saying
business models, readership and the way society operates changed dramatically.
They say they are making it easier for people to subscribe and
are offering grants, partnerships and training programs to boost local news,
but draw the line at sharing digital revenue at the levels news executives
want.
“It’s not about providing artificial props to models that
frankly are no longer valid,” said Richard Gingras, vice president of news for
Google. “It’s not a healthy thing if you’re dependent on other sources for
revenue to allow you to do your journalistic work.”
Google drives an invaluable amount of traffic to news sites, he
said, and shares revenue with publications that use its advertising technology.
Campbell Brown, a former television journalist and current head
of global news partnerships at Facebook, said publishers she talks to want to
be less dependent on platforms such as Facebook.
“We have to find new business models,” she said. “But it has to
be something that’s sustainable over the long term.”
___
Both companies are putting money behind attempts to build
different business models and resuscitate local news. In announcing an array of
initiatives and partnerships, the companies have also said they understand that
strong local journalism is critical for a healthy democracy.
Each has pledged $300 million to boost journalism across the
country, much of that at the local level where newsrooms have suffered the
most; a University of North Carolina study found that more than 2,000 weekly
and daily papers have closed in the U.S. during the last 15 years.
Facebook sees promise in its accelerator program, which brings
leaders from various news outlets together to brainstorm over flash sales,
e-newsletters and other tools to boost revenue and attract subscribers.
Josh Mabry, Facebook’s lead for local news partnerships, said
publications need to remind people why local journalism matters — and why they
should pay for it.
“Asking goes a long way,” he said. “And I think, frankly, a lot
of the publishers that we work with are learning how to market themselves in a
way that maybe they haven’t done in a while.”
The program has helped several news outlets in the San Francisco
Bay area, including a hyper-local website in Berkeley that used what it learned
last year — along with grant money from Facebook — to sign up 343 members
during its year-end membership drive. The previous year had seen just 23 new
members during the same period.
“The program really injected a lot of discipline into what we
were doing,” said Tracey Taylor, co-founder and managing editor of the site,
Berkeleyside.
Founded in 2009 by three journalists, Berkeleyside is a beacon
in a bleak local news landscape. The site has a staff of seven and an annual
operating budget of $800,000, with just under half of its revenue from
advertising, Taylor said.
Most of its readers live or work in the relatively wealthy and
famously liberal college town, and they send tips and shape coverage, Taylor
said.
Habits have changed, said Gingras, the Google vice president.
Consumers no longer need the local newspaper for national news or movie show
times. Berkeleyside is smart in doing exactly what publications need to do to
thrive in the digital age, he said: connect with readers.
Berkeleyside isn’t the only local outlet attempting to fill the
news void created by the loss of the East Bay’s dailies. Political bloggers,
community volunteers and others have started their own sites, determined to
inform their communities about schools, town councils and crime.
In a major boost for local journalism, Berkeleyside announced
recently that it was branching out to cover Oakland with $3 million in backing
from Google and the American Journalism Project.
The two newsrooms will team up to cover the Alameda County Board
of Supervisors and regional transportation, said Lance Knobel, Berkeleyside
co-founder and CEO of the new non-profit that will oversee both sites. He is
hoping that a combination of philanthropy and dedication to covering
communities creatively will usher in a new era for local news. Knobel said he
sees the hunger for that all around him.
“If we bring that sort of passion and caring and ability to tell
stories and do deep reporting, there are a lot of people in the city who will
say, ‘Wow, I didn’t know that about the place that I live in,’ and will take an
interest,” he said.
The Associated Press has received grant funding from the Google
News Initiative for its AP Verify and AP Story Share projects.
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