Tag: daily record
Journalists’ Union Drive Involves Much More Than Jobs

Journalists’ Union Drive Involves Much More Than Jobs

Reprinted with permission from Portside

As destiny would have it, just days after Amazon used illegal tactics to derail a drive by warehouse workers in Bessemer, Alabama to unionize, journalists in northern New Jersey who work for Gannett are voting on whether or not to form a union. They are affiliated with NorthJersey.com, the Bergen Record, the Daily Record and the NJ Herald.

In both cases the workers putting so much at risk to form a union are like David facing off with Goliath. Armed only with their courage to stand up for their own collective sense of right and wrong, they face multi-billion-dollar corporate behemoths that are the very engine of the wealth concentration and radical income disparity that have come to define the global economy.

As multiple economic studies have documented, since the 1970's workers saw their wages flatline or decline, even as technology saw their productivity, the wealth their labor generated, grow exponentially.

Nowhere is this more evident than in the newspaper business which I entered through the loading dock door decades ago at the Ridgewood Newspapers in Bergen County, when I started in the typesetting and composition department.

As a reporter, I watched as technology reduced the number of people it took to produce the newspaper, but those labor savings never found their way into the paychecks of those of us who continued to produce the newspaper.

Rather it went to the capital interests that swallowed up local newspapers which permitted those Wall Street types to corner the entire industry.

We were told we were lucky to have a job, which is a mantra that has only gotten louder as the corporate titans like Gannett, which now owns one in five of America's newspapers, has gutted the staffs of the local newspapers it has devoured in an unrelenting squeeze play that put profits over people.

"Since 2016, we have seen more than half of our colleagues lose their jobs, with cuts of over 250 people at The Record, the Daily Record and the NJ Herald," wrote the Gannett employees seeking union representation in their mission statement. "Staffers who were unceremoniously laid off include a reporter nearly nine months pregnant and a 30-year-veteran reporter who was forced to take a buyout after missing a single email to opt out of the process."

Their statement continued. "By forming a union, we are taking a stand for respect and dignity, and greater protections against unjust terminations and reductions in force. We are uniting with NewsGuild members around the country in a movement to save local news and ensure a seat at the table when decisions are made that affect our paper and the news coverage we provide. There is no journalism without journalists."

But Gannett is hardly alone.

According to the Pew Research Center's analysis U.S. newspapers "have shed half of their newsroom employees since 2008."

"From 2008 to 2019, overall newsroom employment in the U.S. dropped by 23 percent, according to the new analysis," Pew reported. "In 2008, there were about 114,000 newsroom employees – reporters, editors, photographers and videographers – in five industries that produce news: newspaper, radio, broadcast television, cable and 'other information services' (the best match for digital-native news publishers). By 2019, that number had declined to about 88,000, a loss of about 27,000 jobs."

With the contraction of authentically reported local news what filled the void was social media click bate and propaganda as the nation lost the vital sense of situational awareness that comes from a vibrant local press. It's not hard to track the devolution of our national circumstance to the Jan. 6 insurrection where thousands were ready to overthrow our democracy in their own cyber bubble where they were convinced the 2020 election was stolen.

After all, they heard it on the "news."

What's happened to the news gathering workforce played out across every other industry and has only accelerated since the early 1980s when President Reagan fired more than 11,000 air traffic controllers who were on strike. He also banned them for life from federal employment. His scorched earth approach got traction with private employers who adopted similar tactics.

Before Reagan's mass firing, close to one in four Americans were represented by a union. Today, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics just 10.8 percent are, a .5 percent increase from the year before.

In transportation, where crews on trains and ships have been slashed, the results have been calamitous for people and the planet. Consider the runway oil train that was unattended when in 2014 it leveled a Quebec community's downtown killing 47 residents. Maritime fatigue, the result of short staffing, has produced oil spills visible from space.

In the healthcare sector we see it in the business model of nursing homes where profiteers pay as little as they can to as few people as possible to care for our most vulnerable. More than a year into the COVID pandemic, we have seen the consequences of that business model carried on the backs of low wage caregivers who often had to work in more than one facility to make ends meet and spread the deadly virus in the process.

With the historical decline of unions, there's been an explosion in so-called gig workers, who as "independent contractors" are part of a precarious workforce that lacks the basic safety net of healthcare or access to workers compensation in the event they are injured or disabled while working.

No doubt, they too, are told they are lucky to have a job, even if they can't really call it that.

At both the state and federal level, our democracy has become captive to these capital interests that have successfully pressed for deregulation in a world where corporations can plot global domination for maximum profits subsidized by our tax policy. Meanwhile, workers are blocked at every turn from organizing collectively in their own and in their community's self-interest.

And just what has this brave new world dominated by Goliaths like Amazon and Gannett given us?

According to Forbes, in October the Federal Reserve found that the top one percent of Americans had a combined net worth of $34.2 trillion in wealth, or 30.4 percent of all U.S. household wealth, while the bottom 50 percent of the population held just $2.1 trillion, or 1.9 percent of all wealth.

Is it merely coincidental that the breathtaking concentration of corporate media power that Gannett represents comes as the well-documented concentration of wealth continues to grow and even accelerate in this country during the pandemic?

Let's hope our colleagues at The Record, the Daily Record and the NJ Herald can carry the day and form a union.

6 Newspapers: Dump Chris Christie

6 Newspapers: Dump Chris Christie

Chris Christie has long been loathed by New Jersey journalists.

At least those who sit on editorial boards.

Now that Christie has formally ended his campaign for president and — for some reason — endorsed Donald Trump, six newspapers, all owned by the Gannett chain, have called on the New Jersey Governor to resign.

As a governor, Christie’s extremely unpopular. As a presidential candidate, his bullish, pigheaded persona was overshadowed by the very man whom he now endorses — perhaps the only man on earth more bullish and pigheaded than Christie.

The newspapers — Asbury Park Press, Courier Post, Courier News, Home News Tribune, Daily Record, and the Daily Journal — cover most of the state of New Jersey, with the exception of its northeastern corner.

Assemblyman Jack Ciatrarelli also recently called for Christie to step down. “This endorsement concerns me in that it could mean he’ll be out of state a great deal again,” Ciattarelli told Politico. “If that’s the case, it’s time for him to really give consideration for what’s in the best interests of New Jersey and step down.”

Chris Christie has largely abandoned New Jersey — he spent 261 days partially or fully out of the state last year between campaigning for the Republican nomination and serving as the former head of the Republican Governor’s Association. Even before he was officially in the running for the Republican nomination, he was shoring up his out-of-state support.

The editorial calls for New Jersey residents to demand a recall election, where Christie would essentially be forced out by his constituents. According to the New Jersey Department of Elections, 25 percent of those who voted in the last election in the state would have to sign the petition to dump his ass.

The New Hampshire Union-Leader got national press in November when it endorsed Christie for president, which New Jersey Star-Ledger editorial page editor Tom Moran duly took them to task for. The Union-Leader has retracted its endorsement, telling the world that they were duped by his “Republican governor in a Democratic state” schtick:

“Watching Christie kiss the Donald’s ring this weekend — and make excuses for the man Christie himself had said was unfit for the presidency — demonstrated how wrong we were. Rather than standing up to the bully, Christie bent his knee. In doing so, he rejected the very principles of his campaign that attracted our support.

Moran himself has caught fire, first for writing a milquetoast “endorsement” of Christie’s reelection in 2013, which he then retracted a few months later after the Bridgegate scandal came to light. He was even bolder last year, when he detailed a list of lies the governor had told constituents. “He is a remarkable talent with a silver tongue,” he wrote, “but if you look closely, you can see that it is forked like a serpent’s.”

Photo: Republican presidential candidate and New Jersey Governor Chris Christie looks on at his primary election night party Nashua, New Hampshire, February 9, 2016. REUTERS/Gretchen Ertl