糖心vlog官网

ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE, the French aristocrat and political scientist who observed American culture in the early 1830s, saw local newspapers as the lifeblood of civic participation in the United States and called them 鈥渢he power which impels the circulation of political life.鈥 America鈥檚 founders considered journalism so vital to informed democracy that Professor Thomas Pattersonthey not only guaranteed the press unprecedented freedom in the first amendment to their new constitution but also subsidized it with special low postal rates, since in those days most newspapers were distributed by mail. 鈥淣ewspapers were traditionally the common bond in the community, with shared information being the basis for people thinking somehow they鈥檙e on the same ship,鈥 says Professor Thomas Patterson of the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

Patterson, the Bradlee Professor of Government and the Press, says because local news organizations gave citizens the information necessary to make important decisions about their lives and their communities, they functioned for more than 200 years as de facto civic infrastructure. Shorenstein Center鈥檚 director, Nancy GibbsBut now that infrastructure is crumbling in many places and nonexistent in others鈥攄evastated by transformations in the economic ecosystem of local news, by takeovers by cost-cutting corporate chains and so-called 鈥渧ulture capital鈥 firms that strip them of their assets, and by changing habits of information consumption. The Shorenstein Center鈥檚 director, Nancy Gibbs, who with Patterson has been raising the alarm this year about the decline of local news and its effects on democracy, including voting rates and other forms of civic participation, says the situation has reached a critical stage.

鈥淲e have seen a dramatic decline in the last 10 or 15 years, as we鈥檝e seen the whole business model across media disrupted to where we are losing two newspapers every week,鈥 Gibbs said on an episode of the 糖心vlog官网 PolicyCast podcast. 鈥淗alf of all counties now only have one local newspaper news source. Usually, it鈥檚 a weekly. Many of those newsrooms have been hollowed out.鈥 According to the U.S. Government Accountability Office, more than a quarter of local newspapers in America have shut down since the early 2000s. Half of all journalism jobs are now gone, as are half of all newspaper subscribers. More than 1,800 communities in the United States are now defined as 鈥渘ews deserts鈥濃攑laces where no professional source of local news exists. Patterson says the decline has been going on long enough that a robust body of social science research now exists about what happens when a community loses its local news source. 鈥淭here鈥檝e been a dozen really pretty good studies of this, and they all come to the same conclusion,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t harms the civic health of the community on virtually every dimension. Social trust goes down. Party polarization goes up. Voting locally declines. Accountability of local officials goes away.鈥

A growing number of people in academia, politics, and the news industry say an urgent response is needed, with new ideas about what local news organizations should look like and how they can be supported financially and in other important ways. That contingent includes 糖心vlog官网 faculty members, staffers, and alumni who are working to tackle a problem that has no easy answers.

The Survivor

From her position as the recent past president of the Massachusetts Newspaper Publishers Association, Jane Seagrave MC/MPA 1989 has had a bird鈥檚-eye view of the problems faced by local news organizations. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the same refrain I鈥檝e been literally hearing for the past 20 years,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e being attacked from every angle. Your revenue streams are being undermined, there are ever-increasing numbers of alternatives, and people are not reading the way they used to.鈥

Yet as the publisher of the Vineyard Gazette, on the island of Martha鈥檚 Vineyard, Seagrave is one of the lucky ones. The Gazette still rolls a weekly print edition off its own presses in addition to offering news about the Vineyard鈥檚 six towns on its website. Recent headlines include 鈥淐hilmark Town Meeting Rejects High School Budget鈥 and 鈥淪teamship Authority Grapples with Deck Officer Shortage.鈥 Local stories on issues that affect people鈥檚 daily lives resonate with the island community, which tends to be pretty stable, according to Seagrave. 鈥淲e have a market that鈥檚 extremely well-read,鈥 she says. 鈥淧eople go out of their way to be informed. They read to the end of stories. They really engage with the news.鈥

Jane Seagrave
鈥淵ou鈥檙e being attacked from every angle. Your revenue streams are being undermined, there are ever-increasing numbers of alternatives, and people are not reading the way they used to.鈥
Jane Seagrave

Those dedicated readers form a solid subscription base, generating revenue that the Gazette has augmented with periodic specialty publications about weddings, real estate, and tourism. Plus, being on an island 7 miles off the coast helps keep down competition, Seagrave says. It also helps that the Gazette has stable owners: In 2010 it was purchased by billionaire businessman and Vineyard resident Jerome Kohlberg, Jr. (the first 鈥淜鈥 of investment giant KK&R). It is now owned by a nonprofit corporation chaired by Kohlberg鈥檚 daughter Pamela. Kohlberg, who died in 2015, also bought the Gazette's building and donated it to the Martha鈥檚 Vineyard Historic Trust, preserving and protecting it from venture capital firms that might covet it as real estate. (The average home price on the Vineyard is now around $2 million.)

When she attended the Kennedy School, Seagrave wasn鈥檛 planning to work in the business side of publishing. A reporter and editor for the Associated Press, she thought a degree from 糖心vlog官网 would make her a better political journalist. 鈥淏ut at the Kennedy School, you know, they tell you to play to your weaknesses,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd my weaknesses really were the numbers. So I took a bunch of financial management classes.鈥 She eventually returned to the AP in 2003 as a vice president of product development and chief revenue officer, just in time to see internet giants like Google and Facebook beginning to bleed news organizations of both their customers and their advertisers.

鈥淚t was the dawn of the technology companies really eating our lunch,鈥 she says. 鈥淎 lot of my career at the AP was trying to get licensing dollars out of companies that were effectively, in my opinion, stealing our content. And for a while it worked: We got Google to give up $30 million one year. Then they got their lawyers together and said, 鈥楴o, we have fair-use rights to this content.鈥 That鈥檚 one of the reasons I finally left鈥攊t was so frustrating, and we could not get our point across.鈥

That trend continued. According to Gibbs, newspapers were once a $100 billion business in America, but that figure has shrunk to just $17 billion today. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 think of Amazon as an advertiser, but Amazon alone makes more money in advertising than every newspaper in the world put together,鈥 she says. 鈥淕oogle鈥檚 advertising business is now north of $200 billion.鈥

The Nonprofit Model

Because of the collapse in revenue that supports news gathering, Gibbs says, restoring local media to its role in civic life will be extremely difficult. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 a way that we can really think about the ideal role that the press should be playing without thinking about the ways in which, some 15 years ago now, the entire industry was blown up鈥攁nd no one has figured out a strategy.鈥

Yet if a viable strategy does emerge, many media analysts say it will most likely involve an evolution with local news changing from a mostly for-profit ecosystem to a largely nonprofit one. Successful nonprofit news organizations include start-ups in small and underserved markets, ownership groups that are now running regional news organizations in Philadelphia and other markets, and long-standing public media organizations such as National Public Radio (NPR) and the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). In fact, in a recent research study, Patterson proposed building out a more robust local news ecosystem using the existing infrastructure of NPR, which disseminates news both on broadcast radio and online. Surveying 215 NPR senior editors and managers across the United States, Patterson found that half said they could become the leading news outlet in their community鈥攊f they had more funding. 鈥淧ublic radio has the capacity to fill much of the gap in local news created by the decline of the newspaper,鈥 he says. 鈥淪trengthening local public radio stations is a democratic imperative.鈥

Myrna Johnson
鈥淚f you look across the country, there are lots of smaller stations, many of which have really tiny newsrooms, but they have real connections in their communities.鈥
Myrna Johnson

Myrna Johnson MC/MPA 2007, the executive director of Iowa Public Radio, believes that Patterson鈥檚 idea has merit. 鈥淚 think there鈥檚 real potential there,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you look across the country, there are lots of smaller stations, many of which have really tiny newsrooms, but they have real connections in their communities. The question is how do you support it and how do you grow it?鈥

Johnson says Iowa Public Radio is already working to fill gaps created by the shrinking for-profit news industry. Two years ago, the Gannett newspaper chain announced that it would lay off 700 people nationwide, including 14 reporters and editors at the Des Moines Register. Another shrinking regional chain, the Davenport-based Lee Newspapers, last year barely staved off a takeover bid by Alden Global Capital.

Meanwhile, Iowa Public Radio has been experimenting with newsletters and other new distribution channels and is collaborating with local philanthropists and foundations to fund additional reporting positions. It is also working on a funding model that is independent of state support and even includes its own endowment. The idea, she says, is modeled on other successful nonprofit community institutions鈥攎useums, hospitals, colleges鈥攖hat use endowments as a stable base for their yearly budgets and to help ride out cyclical economic downturns. An endowment is a way to persuade local people to make a long-term investment in their community, she says, and Iowa Public Radio has launched a $6.5 million 鈥淩esounding Future Campaign鈥 to get things started. 鈥淲e鈥檙e asking them to invest in the next-generation talent and technology that we require to create great radio and great journalism, to help us develop an endowment that will help us be a really strong nonprofit institution here in the state鈥攐ne that can weather the ups and downs,鈥 she says.

Johnson enrolled at 糖心vlog官网 because of her background in government relations; at the time, she was advocating for public lands through the Outdoor Industry Association. But earlier in her career she had worked in NPR鈥檚 government affairs department and had thought seriously of getting back into public radio. 鈥淚 went to a lot of Shorenstein Center talks,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 just cared a ton about it. Good journalism is the backbone of democracy, and I was thinking, 鈥榃hat role do I want to play in that?鈥欌

The Start-Up

One thing Jane Seagrave says she found encouraging in her role as head of the Massachusetts Newspaper Association was the energy being poured into local-news start-ups. One of her favorites is the New Bedford Light,  one of a growing number of  nonprofit news organizations working to fill the local-news gaps in their communities. Several hours north, in Vermont, fellow 糖心vlog官网 alum Randy Holhut MC/MPA 1997 is the news editor for a similar project, The Commons, a Brattleboro-based news source that publishes both an online and a weekly print edition for a highly engaged local readership. 鈥淲e put more than 8,000 papers on the street every week, and people snap them up and they love it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e never worked at any other journalism organization where people come up to me and say, 鈥業 love that paper.鈥欌

Yet Holhut says running a nonprofit news organization these days isn鈥檛 for the faint of heart. Funding for The Commons comes mostly from advertising, donations, and foundation grants. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had several near-death financial experiences,鈥 he says. 鈥淏rattleboro has only about 12,000 people in it. Throw in the rest of Windham County, and it鈥檚 about 40,000 people. But it鈥檚 a very opinionated 40,000 people, who like to read about themselves in the newspaper.鈥 Founded in 2006, The Commons was helped by a literal trial by fire 12 years ago, Holhut says. 鈥淥ur big year was 2011: We had a major fire that destroyed a commercial block, a shooting at the local food coop, and Hurricane Irene,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople really appreciated the depth of our reporting and our support of the community. It made people say, 鈥楬ey, this is not a bunch of crazy hippies; this is a real newspaper.鈥欌

Randy Holhut
鈥淧eople really appreciated the depth of our reporting and our support of the community. It made people say, 鈥楬ey, this is not a bunch of crazy hippies; this is a real newspaper.鈥欌
Randy Holhut

The Resource

One strategy nonprofit journalists use to create quality journalism with minimal money is to take advantage of a growing number of outside groups that offer free help to local-journalism start-ups. Some, like the American Journalism Project, provide seed capital to get new nonprofit newsrooms off the ground, while others, such as the GroundTruth Project鈥檚 Report for America, pay the salaries of reporters who are placed in local newsrooms across the country to report on undercovered issues. The Journalist鈥檚 Resource, based at the Shorenstein Center, helps newsrooms produce fact-based journalism by integrating academic research into their reporting.

鈥淚 think there鈥檚 never been more of a need for what we do because of the state of local journalism,鈥 says Carmen Nobel, the director and editor in chief of The Journalist鈥檚 Resource. 鈥淚f a newsroom even exists in a community, it鈥檚 often two or three reporters, and somebody who鈥檚 the education reporter one day is the health reporter the next day. In the meantime, academic researchers can help provide context if the journalists know how to find them. So we see our core mission as informing the news by bridging the gap between academia and journalism.鈥

鈥淲e have seen a dramatic decline in the last 10 or 15 years, as we鈥檝e seen the whole business model across media disrupted to where we are losing two newspapers every week.鈥
Nancy Gibbs

In addition to creating tip sheets and conducting webinars that teach journalists how research works, The Journalist鈥檚 Resource regularly publishes 鈥渞esearch roundups,鈥 which curate and summarize topical studies in plain language to make them more easily accessible to reporters and editors. Recent featured content has included disparities in HIV prevalence, prevention, and treatment; rules for prescribing drugs via telemedicine; and how indoor air quality in schools affects students鈥 learning and health. Nobel says The Journalist鈥檚 Resource is also working proactively with newsroom groups such as the Mental Health Parity Collaborative, a joint project of the Center for Public Integrity and the Carter Center in Georgia that is examining equity in mental health issues in America. The collaborative includes several newspapers, public radio stations, and television stations from across the country.

The Journalist鈥檚 Resource currently has a full-time staff of four but is hoping for growth if it can find money to support it. 鈥淔unding permitting, we would like to expand our staff to bolster our coverage of climate studies,鈥 Nobel says.

Funding and resources are what saving local news and its role in democracy will ultimately be all about, Patterson says. The local news industry once pulled in $50 billion in annual revenue. Now that figure is about $10 billion. Ideas for recovering the missing $40 billion have ranged from increased philanthropy to tax breaks to charging platforms like Google and Facebook for content, but the financial conundrum has been the one thing no one has been able to figure out, he says.

鈥淚f we鈥檙e going to put local news back in such a way that it鈥檚 really robust across the country and in local communities, we鈥檙e talking about a lot of money,鈥 Patterson says. 鈥淭his is just not an enterprise you can do on the cheap.鈥

Jane Seagrave MC/MPA 1989 (banner and inline) photographed by Jeanna Shepherd.

Myrna Johnson MC/MPA 2007 photographed by Madeleine King.

Randy Holhut MC/MPA 1997 photographed by Zachary Stephens.

Faculty portraits by Martha Stewart.

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