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Times are tough for suburban papers, too.


If the job cuts announced at the Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  News paper Group on Oct. 30 surprised anyone, the reasons behind the layoffs became clear later the same day when new data showed an 8.2 percent average decline in circulation among the group's local newspapers.

The decline was surprising because suburban and other local papers often are seen as more secure than their big, metro brethren, based upon their delivery of intensely local news and advertising. But now it's clear the woes of bigger metro dailies have spread to the suburbs.

"The whole industry is in a moment where we can either get it right and figure out what people want to read and how to make money, or we can go out of business," said Brent Hopkins, a reporter and union representative at the Daily News.

The Los Angeles Newspaper Group The Los Angeles Newspaper Group is an umbrella group of local daily newspapers published in the greater Los Angeles area by MediaNews Group. The news coverage of the newspapers are mainly local stories.  is owned by MediaNews Group Not to be confused with Media General, an unrelated newspaper and TV group.
MediaNews Group, based in Denver, Colorado, is one of the largest newspaper companies in the United States.
 Inc. of Denver, which is controlled by Chairman William Dean Singleton William Dean Singleton is the chairman of the board of directors of the Associated Press, on which he has sat since 1999. He is also the founder, vice chairman and chief executive officer of MediaNews Group, the fourth-largest newspaper company in the United States in terms of . The newspaper group, called LANG, is made up of eight suburban papers that ring central Los Angeles. Together, they provide the most significant competition in terms of national and local advertising and local news coverage for the Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times

Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name).
.

LANG's flagship publication is the Daily News in Woodland Hills, followed by the Long Beach Press-Telegram The Long Beach Press-Telegram is a major daily newspaper published in Long Beach, California. Tracing its history to 1897, it is currently published by the Los Angeles Newspaper Group. External links
  • The Long Beach Press-Telegram
. Those papers showed circulation reversals of 10.7 and 8.5 percent respectively in the last year. Together, LANG's eight papers lost a total of 40,352 subscribers, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 data from the Audit Bureau of Circulations
The Audit Bureau of Circulations is one of the several organizations of the same name operating in different parts of the world. It audits circulation, readership, and audience information for the magazines, newspapers, and other publications produced by
. That gives them an average of 452,124 daily readers, as compared with the Times' 775,766.

When MediaNews formed LANG, starting with the 1996 acquisition of three papers in the San Gabriel Valley The San Gabriel Valley is one of the principal valleys of southern California. It lies to the east of the city of Los Angeles, to the north of the Puente Hills, to the south of the San Gabriel Mountains, and to the west of the Inland Empire. , the goal was to create a regional buy for advertisers as well as to "cluster" the papers geographically for operational efficiency. But the strategy never anticipated the across-the-board circulation declines that recently developed. (The group added the Press-Telegram to its roster in 1997 and the Daily News in 1998.)

The Inland Empire In·land Empire  

A region of the northwest United States between the Cascade Range and the Rocky Mountains, comprising eastern Washington, eastern Oregon, northern Idaho, and western Montana. Farming, lumbering, and mining are important to the area.
, one of the fastest-growing regions in the U.S., looked to hold tremendous potential for LANG, when it made its final buyouts of the Inland Valley California's Inland Valley is a region that inlcudes parts of San Bernadino, and Riverside counties. As the name implies, the Inland Valley is situated on the inland side of the Santa Ana Mountains in southern California. There are few geographic boundaries to define the area.  Daily Bulletin, Redlands Daily Facts and San Bernardino San Bernardino, city, United States
San Bernardino (săn bûr'nədē`nō), city (1990 pop. 164,164), seat of San Bernardino co., S Calif., at the foot of the San Bernardino Mts.; inc. 1854.
 Sun in 1999. But despite population growth in those communities, circulation at their papers is shrinking, with the Sun taking a 9.3 percent circulation tumble in the past year.

However, the Daily News staff has taken the group's biggest hits. The payroll reductions totaled 21 positions, including four in editorial and several as the result of combining management functions. For example, John McKeon John Mckeon (March 29, 1808 - November 22, 1883) was a U.S. Representative from New York.

Born in Albany, New York, Mckeon attended private schools and was graduated from the law department of Columbia College (later Columbia University), New York City, in 1828.
 will now serve as both chief executive of LANG and publisher of the Daily News.

"To the paper's credit, they tried to do it strategically as possible. They tried to do it in jobs where the work could be redistributed re·dis·trib·ute  
tr.v. re·dis·trib·ut·ed, re·dis·trib·ut·ing, re·dis·trib·utes
To distribute again in a different way; reallocate.

Adj. 1.
," said Hopkins. "It's horrible for the people who lost their jobs, but from a corporate efficiency standpoint it makes some sense."

Repeated calls to McKeon and other executives at LANG were either not returned or the executives declined to comment.

Clustering strategy

"The pressures on the news and information industries have forced us to consolidate functions so that we can maximize our resources," a story in his own paper quoted McKeon as saying. "I believe we are geared up to grow our business and improve our service to the public both in our printed and online products."

But critics charge MediaNews with shortsighted short·sight·ed
adj.
1. Nearsighted; myopic.

2. Lacking foresight.



shortsight
 penny pinching and cheapening of the news.

"Singleton's main cry at the beginning was that he was our savior, that without him we wouldn't survive. Now it's just a grab for more papers and profits," said Joe Segura, a reporter at the PressTelegram in Long Beach.

As for the clustering of newspapers, Segura agrees with the theory but not with the practice of MediaNews. The system leads to top-heavy bureaucratic bu·reau·crat  
n.
1. An official of a bureaucracy.

2. An official who is rigidly devoted to the details of administrative procedure.



bu
 management, he said, and over time the largest paper in a cluster accumulates a disproportionate share of resources. Until recently, he felt that applied to the Daily News, "but now I'm questioning it," Segura admitted.

It's of little comfort to MediaNews executives that the Los Angeles Times is struggling, too. Dwindling dwin·dle  
v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles

v.intr.
To become gradually less until little remains.

v.tr.
To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease.
 circulation and advertising revenues have forced the paper to cut more than 200 jobs in the last five years, and the paper has been put on the block by its parent, the Chicago-based Tribune Co.

The new data, however, show several suburban MediaNews papers losing greater percentages of readers than the Times, which slipped 8 percent, though some have lost less and the Whittier Daily News actually gained circulation. In a report released in May, Merrill Lynch Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (NYSE: MER TYO: 8675 ), through its subsidiaries and affiliates, provides capital markets services, investment banking and advisory services, wealth management, asset management, insurance, banking and related products and services on a global basis.  & Co. media analyst Lauren Fine found that newspapers with circulation between 100,000 and 500,000 showed the worst declines. These papers "suffer from more intense competition, both from traditional media outlets in their markets and from online, and their niche is harder to define," she wrote.

Grave new world

In response to the shift in consumers' appetite for news and its delivery, papers of all sizes have embraced the Internet, and it's clear that LANG buys the concept.

MediaNews' annual report indicates that interactive media now represent 5 percent of the company's total revenue and over 13 percent of MediaNews Group's earning before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. Online revenue grew 39 percent in fiscal 2006 to $57.2 million.

The Daily News and Press-Telegram have online editors and have integrated their Web sites into the newsroom, rather than as separate departments. And LANG's online plans also include Nisha Gutierrez's daily morning podcast for the three San Gabriel Valley papers, as well as other blogs or podcasts at every paper in the group. Even the 4,000-circulation Redlands Daily Facts has a blog--on local music.

The Daily News' Hopkins seemed to reflect the attitude of many LANG employees. He's accepted the challenge issued by Ron Kaye, editor the Daily News, when he announced the job cuts. Besides saying the books were now balanced and the paper could move forward, Kaye made the point that no one knows the answer for the newspaper industry right now.

"Look at the drops at the Times or the (Orange County) Register--everyone's hurting and scrambling to figure it out," Hopkins concluded. "The task we were given was to find that answer.

BY JOEL RUSSELL

Staff Reporter
Bleeding Readers

                                           2005-2006 Daily
Newspaper (Owner)                        Circulation Change

Los Angeles Newspaper Group (MediaNews)               -8.2%
  Los Angeles Daily News                             -10.7%
  Long Beach Press Telegram                           -8.5%
  San Bernardino Sun *                                -9.3%
  Inland Valley Daily Bulletin *                      -7.7%
  San Gabriel Valley Tribune                          -3.5%
  Pasadena Star-News                                  -4.3%
  Whittier Daily News                                 +1.4%
  Redlands Facts *                                    -8.1%
Los Angeles Times (Tribune)                           -8.0%
La Opinion (ImpreMedia)                               -2.5%
Torrance Breeze (Copley)                              -4.7%
Orange County Register * (Freedom)                    -3.8%
Ventura County Star * (Scripps)                       -2.1%

*  Not in Los Angeles County

Source: Audit Bureau of Circulations report for period ending Sept. 30
COPYRIGHT 2006 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Russell, Joel
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Nov 6, 2006
Words:1159
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