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Thread: The future of the Freep & DetNews

  1. #1
    Glenn's Avatar
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    The future of the Freep & DetNews

    From Crain's

    Management to address Freep, Detroit News rumors next week

    Job cuts, online publication expected to be covered
    By Bill Shea

    Rumored shifts from paper to online publication and further job cuts at the Detroit Free Press and the partnership that controls its shared business functions with The Detroit News are expected to be addressed next week by the newspaper’s management.

    Free Press Publisher David Hunke, who is also in charge of the 95 percent Gannett Co. Inc.-controlled Detroit Media Partnership, sent a memo to staff today discussing the impending announcement, but did not reveal any details.

    The memo reads:

    “In the past 24 hours you have no doubt heard a lot of rumors and several news reports about significant changes at the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News. Clearly, over the past months we have been exploring various scenarios to reposition the companies for growth and to ensure two strong newspaper voices in the community. We plan to share details early next week with you, as well as with readers, advertisers, unions and the community. In the meantime, let’s continue to focus on doing the best job we can and on building the strongest relationships we can among ourselves and with our customers.”
    The rumors have centered on speculation the newspaper (and possibly both) would shift to a print edition on Thursdays and Sundays, and online publication the rest of the week. Some online speculation says a secret effort called “Project Griffin” has limited print editions available for newsstand or box sales, with full home delivery just two or three days weekly.

    Crain’s first reported about a potential online-print change in July, and Hunke has repeatedly denied that was going to happen, as late as Nov. 30.

    Calls to Hunke’s office were referred to Leland Bassett, chairman and CEO of the Detroit-based public-relations firm Bassett & Bassett Inc.

    “The Detroit Media Partnership is looking at everything right now. No decisions have been made,” Bassett said.

    He declined to address any speculation or say when the partnership hired his firm.

    Speculation also has been fueled by the launch of the digitalfreepress.com and edetroitnews.com Web sites and by mailers offering online and limited home delivery.

    The newspaper is expected to make job cuts, possibly up to 300 staffers, and other budget moves as its parent company, Virginia-based Gannett, has launched a company-wide effort to trim costs — including an estimated 2,000 layoffs in its newspaper division this month.

    The Free Press, however, is in a separate division with company flagship USA Today, and both newspapers have been expected to unveil their own cost-reduction plans separated from Gannett’s October mandate to trim 10 percent of its 30,000-person newspaper unit staff. That’s atop 1,000 jobs lost back in August.

    Hunke previously said the partnership will centralize its credit and finance staff, likely in Indianapolis and Springfield, Ill., resulted in an undetermined number of job losses.

    More than 200 staff have left 320,000-circulation Free Press, the partnership and the MediaNews-owed 190,000-subscriber News over the past year, mainly through voluntary buyouts. It’s believed about 2,000 people are left at the two newspapers and the partnership.

    Hunke told Crain’s in November that staffing levels would be addressed as part a first-quarter strategic plan, which is what next week’s announcement is expected to detail.

    The changes stem from a third quarter that saw a 17.7 percent decline in Gannett (NYSE: GCI) print ad revenue, to $977 million from $1.2 billion a year ago. Overall net revenue declined 9 percent to $1.6 billion. Its stock has tumbled to more than $90 a few years ago to $5 last month.

    Newspapers across the country have seen severe declines in advertising revenue and circulation, and layoffs and consolidations are common.

    Tracking the Gannett cuts paper by paper (along with speculation, comments from laid-off employees, links to related stories and analysis) is the independent gannettblog.blogspot.com.

    For other Gannett papers in Michigan, its running tally shows 50 of 105 jobs were eliminated from the Battle Creek Enquirer, 31 of 403 at the Lansing State Journal and five of 260 at the Times Herald in Port Huron. Some printing and copyediting functions are expected to be consolidated among those newspapers.
    Find a new slant.

  2. #2
    Yesh, but is Krista's job safe?????

  3. #3
    NOT TO BE FUCKED WITH Uncle Mxy's Avatar
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    Her hubby works in the newspaper field as well IIRC, so if he gets hit, she may have to move too.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Uncle Mxy
    Her hubby works in the newspaper field as well IIRC, so if he gets hit, she may have to move too.
    This is good for Glenn. Economic struggles often lead to internal marital strife.

    This is Glenn's hole-shot.

  5. #5
    Glenn's Avatar
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    Union: Detroit papers plan job cuts, less delivery

    By Ed White
    Associated Press Writer

    (AP) -- Detroit's newspapers plan to cut 9 percent of their work force and offer fewer days of home delivery at a time of slumping revenue industry wide, a union official said Tuesday.

    It's unclear where the cuts will fall at the Detroit Free Press and The Detroit News, Teamsters' Local 372 secretary-treasurer Ron Renaud said. He spoke after a meeting Tuesday morning with Detroit Media Partnership executives.

    "They took a long hard look," said Renaud, whose union represents drivers, district managers and mailers with the Detroit Media Partnership. "They feel they need to do something to maintain two newspapers."

    A message seeking comment was left with a Detroit Media Partnership spokeswoman.

    Renaud said the Free Press will be delivered Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays starting in March, while The News will be delivered Thursdays and Fridays. The News doesn't publish a Sunday paper.

    Renaud said the papers still will be printed and sold at newsstands every day. Readers also will be able to get the papers in a digital edition.

    The Detroit Media Partnership, which runs the business operations of the papers, has said it would make an announcement Tuesday about "sweeping" changes "designed to better meet advertiser and reader needs in an era in which digital delivery is revolutionizing how people get information."

    Detroit would be the largest metro area to undergo a major media makeover.

    The changes include "a focus on more robust and more engaging digital delivery methods, and support the continued publication of two daily newspapers in Detroit," the partnership said in a statement Monday evening.

    The Free Press is owned by Gannett Co. and the News by MediaNews Group. William Dean Singleton is chief executive officer of MediaNews and chairman of the board at The Associated Press.

    Lou Mleczko, president of Local 22 of the Detroit Newspaper Guild, which represents 350 newsroom employees at the papers, said newspaper executives told union leaders "their current business model is unsustainable."

    "They say they're losing money," Mleczko said. "They didn't say how much."
    Find a new slant.

  6. #6
    Glenn's Avatar
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    I'm not sure if anyone else is interested in this kind of stuff, but here are more details.

    http://www.crainsdetroit.com/article...812169989/1069
    Last edited by Glenn; 12-16-2008 at 04:30 PM.
    Find a new slant.

  7. #7
    Langlois Insider Vinny's Avatar
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    I'm reading.

    I'm reppin' Jesus Christ and Conservative views....



    Quick piece by VINNY which was a logo style of his. VINNY also did two letter throw up's by the name of FI 2.



    GO WHITE!

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  9. #9
    Update... Krista still employed.

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