Recent years have seen a dramatic decline in local newspapers. As access to the internet expanded, many people stopped paying for the local newspaper. This is a shame because it meant there would be little or no coverage of local government, school boards, and the many decisions that affect daily lives.
An additional reason to worry about the fate of journalist: private equity began buying up news media, slashing their staff, and reselling them to other private investors. Many parts of the country have become news deserts, where cable TV is the only source of news. The talking heads read press releases, and there are few if any investigative reporters.
Democracy requires an informed public, debate and discussion.
Robert Kuttner writes about a hopeful development:
A nonprofit group dedicated to rescuing local newspapers from either collapse or private equity pillaging is buying 22 local papers in Maine. The National Trust for Local News, founded just two years ago, will purchase five of the state’s six dailiesand 17 weeklies from a private company called Masthead Maine owned by Reade Brower, who made his money in direct mail. (How one guy managed to get control of all the important newspapers in a state is a story for another day.)
The Prospect has long been interested in the takeover of local papers by private equity companies. In 2017, I wrote an investigative piece with Ed Miller titled “Saving the Free Press From Private Equity.” We were reporting on a sickening trend with immense implications for democracy and civic life.
As daily newspapers became less profitable with the rise of online competitors for both news and ad revenue, private equity operators were swooping in and buying up papers by the thousands, and making profits by paring staff and news coverage to the bone. Since then, the venerable Gannett chain was bought by GateHouse, one of the most predatory of the private equity outfits, which took over the Gannett name.
But there was a silver lining to our story that had not yet come to fruition: Local dailies and weeklies could actually turn a profit with well-staffed newsrooms if owners could be satisfied by returns in the 5 to 10 percent range rather than the 15 to 20 percent that was typical in the pre-internet era and that is demanded by private equity players. Despite the internet, local merchants still rely heavily on display ads, which are profit centers. And well-run local papers attract more display ads.
Since then, there has been a slowly growing movement to save the local press by returning it to community or nonprofit ownership. My friend and co-author Ed Miller has gone on to found an exemplary weekly, The Provincetown Independent, which has thrived at the expense of the GateHouse-owned Provincetown Banner, which has lost most of its staff and circulation. Between 2017 and July 2022, over 135 nonprofit newsrooms were launched, according to the Institute for Nonprofit News.
Another hopeful sign is that even by laying off staff and reducing coverage, private equity companies are not making the money they hoped for, so some of these papers are on the auction block and can be saved. Maine is not a typical case, since Reade Brower is a relatively benign monopolist and was willing to work with the National Trust for Local News.
The trust, still in its infancy, has an operating budget of only about $1 million, which means it does not have its own money to finance community buyouts. The terms of the deal were not disclosed, so it’s not clear whether the trust found a benefactor or whether Brower is selling the Maine papers for a nominal sum.
The Trust uses a variety of ownership models. Its first major deal was in Colorado, where it now owns24 local newspapers in that state in collaboration with The Colorado Sun. It has funders that include the Gates Family Foundation, the Google News Initiative, and the Knight Foundation. The MacArthur Foundation also recently announced a major initiative to save local news.
This is the beginning of a very hopeful trend to save priceless civic assets from predatory capitalism at its worst.
~ ROBERT KUTTNER

Ad blocking software—which I confess I do use—is another factor hurting newspapers.
It’s a sad thing to see.
What’s also sad is that I live in the largest news market in the entire country, but the paper that I am often forced to turn to for local issues is a tabloid. The Times’ metro desk has been gutted as it has become for the most part a purely national paper.
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All Americans should be clear that the Gates Family Foundation has no connection to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The latter promotes for-profit monopolies because Bill and Melinda, we can assume, prefer the predatory capitalism of libertarians.
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As the daughter of two reporters, I have always bought the newspaper – I currently subscribe to three. I believe we need them for democracy locally and nationally but my local, the LA Times just keeps getting worse. Not only are they filling the paper with downloaded fluff, but they don’t even cover the local teams, nor print the box scores (you know – stuff that happened) which was presented to us as an exciting opportunity to know more about the players in a wider variety of sport. So instead of reading about Chris Taylor’s grand slam, we got to read about a new untested player trying to be a professional soccer player. After an uproar, they admitted it was a money decision, which makes me think how long before they just don’t have the staff to cover local news. I still think there is a market for investigative reporting, and not just human interest stories, or stenography type articles without context.
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Good news. Both my wife and son work as journalists.
Our country needs reliable news.
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xoxoxoxox
If they can write as well as you do, John, they have a lot of the work of being good journalists down cold.
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Thanks, Bob.
Basically, three women (including my wife, Kristin) put out the weekly paper here in town. If they didn’t do it, well, those stories just wouldn’t exist.
The debate over Dollar General coming to a small town; a bridge recently dedicated to a Congressional Medal of Honor recipient from World War II; the hard work and creativity that made a dog park a reality.
Of course, government meeting coverage is the local paper’s bread and butter. And, as the old saying goes, democracy dies behind closed doors. If no one attends a town meeting or can read about it after the fact, who knows what went on. It’s like a de facto closed door.
They work hard on the paper. Not sure I could hack the reporting life now. (Did it full-time 35 years ago, on what seems like a different planet in some ways, ha, ha.).
And, we are lucky to have some solid and thoughtful local officials here.
It gives me some hope.
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This is just wonderful, John. Love to you and yours!
They can get up every morning knowing that they are doing something that matters. Much, much praise to them!!!
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Speaking of journalists,
According to Mark Pendergrast, in 1674, a group of women published an attack on the new fad of drinking coffee, “The Women’s Petition Against Coffee,” which was tying their husbands up in coffeehouses. They said in this piece that their men would “trifle away their time, scald their Chops, and spend their Money, all for a little base, black, thick, nasty bitter stinking, nauseous Puddle water.” Furthermore, they claimed, the habit was causing “a very sensible Decay of that true Old English Vigour.” They continued, spelling this out clearly: “Never did Men wear greater Breeches, or carry less in them of any Mettle whatsoever.”
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Reblogged this on What's Gneiss for Education and commented:
This is good news. I gave up my subscription to my local paper (Syracuse Post-Standard) when they went from publishing a paper 7 days a week to just three, raised my subscription price by 30%, and took away my ability to comment on stories. The current online version is 90% subscriber based, so you can’t even read the articles without a digital subscription.
I get it…these publications are losing money and are struggling to survive. I’m 66 now and for the first time in my life I don’t read a daily paper. I grieve this immensely, so reading about this promising development warms my heart.
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