By Rick Edmonds
The (Baltimore) Sun took the layoff binge to a new level of carnage Tuesday night when it showed more than a dozen top editors to the door (literally).
Along the way it dashed cold water on the hopes of local businessman
Ted Venetoulis to return the paper to local ownership and operate it as
"a high quality, full-service" newspaper.
Venetoulis
and other local backers have been working on a deal to acquire the
paper for years and thought they were close as recently as a few weeks
ago. But complications involving Tribune Co.'s bankruptcy proceedings
had pushed the schedule back several months, Venetoulis said in a phone
interview, and this week's action may be a further blow to his plans.
"One
assumes that the publishers have balanced the need to respond to
economic conditions," he said, "with a need to provide a quality
editorial product." But he sounded doubtful.
I
have been speaking with Venetoulis on background since an introduction
through a mutual friend in January, and he attended a Poynter
conference in March on nonprofits and the future of news. He went on
the record on several matters in our conversation today.
Venetoulis has been a strong supporter of Maryland Sen. Ben Cardin's proposal to allow newspapers to operate as nonprofits
and receive contributions from individuals and foundations that would
be tax-exempt. The structure fits Venetoulis' plans for raising money
for the Sun venture, but he
has also said that he and his group would go ahead and buy the paper
anyhow as a for-profit business if he could close the deal.
A
former Baltimore County Executive (an elected position), Venetoulis
owns a group of community newspapers and has said he is realistic about
the financial distress of the Sun
and other metros. But late in his career, he is willing to take it on
and has pitched potential investors that saving the paper is comparable
to past efforts in Baltimore mobilizing the business community to save
the city's sports franchises.
Among potential contributors is the Abell Foundation, a mid-sized Baltimore community foundation, with the twist that its founding money came from the family that once owned The Sun.
The
group's first pass at buying the paper was several years ago while
Tribune was still a public company. Negotiations with Sam Zell and his
management team have run hot and cold. But the asking price has fallen
steadily, and Venetoulis said he thought the two sides had reached
agreement.
The dismissals Tuesday included, among
others, a deputy managing editor, the copy desk chief, the editorial
page and op-ed editors and three regional bureaus chiefs -- the core of
editors who know the city well and put out the paper every day. Guild leadership has said 40 more newsroom employees and lower-level editors got pink slips Wednesday.
That
suggests radical innovation, such as cutting back print and swinging to
an online-dominant strategy could be in the offing. But Poynter calls
to Tribune and Sun executives seeking clarification were not returned.
Sun editor Monty Cook dropped some strong hints of his plans for the Sun's future in a presentation two week ago at Johns Hopkins University. "The days of the six-part series are gone," he said, while indicating that the Sun's
future is online with blogs, social media and Twitter playing prominent
supporting roles to traditional news. That's a direction about 180
degrees opposite what Venetoulis hopes to do.
Venetoulis
said that he remains optimistic that his group will acquire the paper
and wanted to be circumspect in not rendering a snap judgment on the
cutbacks.
David Simon, a former Sun reporter and the high-energy creator of the HBO series, "The Wire," did not hold back in a comment on his Facebook page: "I (am) revulsed at what happened at the Baltimore Sun
this week... It's almost unfathomable. The Baltimore newspaper's only
plan is slow suicide, with Chicago leeching the last nickels and dimes
even to the moment when they shutter the doors. Never has an industry
so willingly butchered itself or shown its own product such contempt."
Comments