Seventeen more editorial
staffers were let go by the Chicago
Sun-Times last week, in a bloodletting that was
characterized by
Michael Miner as a relief that things weren't worse. What
wasn't so bad, after all, about telephone calls to 17 editorial
staff members, telling them that they were being let
go?
Over at OpEdNews.com Martha Rosenberg wondered what
had happened to Chicago's tradition of reading newspapers. She must
take a different train than I do, as she describes cell phones and the personal angst of
twenty-somethings. All I see are MP3
players and Red Eye on my commute.
But I digress. As bad as I
feel for the released editorial employees at the Southtown/ Star,
LA Times, former Pioneer Press and soon at the Chicago Tribune too, where is the discussion of
the others let go? If the Internet crisis has proved anything to
me, it is that writers do not earn revenues. They earn readers, and
those readers are migrating to other news
sources.
But we live in a
vacuum.
If the newspapers are
releasing newspaper advertising sales people, it is not obvious
from the local news. Consider the heft of the Chicago Tribune in the day. Free standing
inserts, help wanted ads, real estate ads, ad infinitum it seemed.
And at the Sun-Times what about those skilled single-copy
circulation people, the ones that put salespeople on every corner?
Zero coverage.
There's not much ever
written about these people. I guess they don't count. Last year the
Sun-Times Media Group contracted
with the Chicago Tribune for much
of its distribution. Read
the company's plan here. It is part of a plan to reduce
operating expenses by $50 million this year. Yet, the company lost
$194 million in continuing operations last quarter. It closed
distribution centers, closed printing centers, closed offices. That
euphemism means people were put out of work at one of the most
visible local companies. Yet outside the 17 staffers let go last
week and the 18 let go before that how many people are left over
there? What happened outside the editorial offices? And, what good
is just $50 million?
Back in the day, which wasn't that long ago at the Chicago Sun-Times, everyone worked in the same building. Editorial was on four, the advertising department had offices on one, the truck drivers and printers were somewhere on one down that long corridor to Billy Goats.
Now the Sun-Times
journalists are at 350 N Orleans, the press guys are on
Ashland somewhere with the drivers
and god knows where the Ad department went.
The escalator, the
famous escalator shut down to save pennies by David Radler, was
once a meeting place for people from all the departments of the
Sun-Times. I doubt they ever meet as a group. I doubt the
journalists understand how their fates are intertwined with that of
the pressman and the truck driver.
And the Ad sales people? Please. There's a Chinese wall between editorial and advertising. Editorial has always kept its distance from those people.











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