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The successful formation of a union at the Los Angeles Times would have been largely unimaginable in the last century.
From 1960 to 1980, the Times was a totem of West Coast journalism that had been built up into a journalistic force by the aspirations of Otis Chandler, the golden boy heir to one of the most powerful and most aggressively anti-union families in Southern California. The Times became a marquee newspaper during his time as publisher, and by and large his employees felt richly compensated not only in pay but prestige.
The end of the Chandler era wasnât perfect, but the paperâs staff earned a certain swagger during his tenure. With bureaus around the world and an eye to national dominance, the major metropolitan newspaperâs reporters traveled first-class, and pay was competitive enough to lure ace reporters and top editors from East Coast institutions. The newsroom felt like it was closing in on the competitionâwhich they saw as The New York Times, to the exclusion of any other paper. The newspaper even had a Picasso collection.
The broadly accepted company line was: Who needed a union when success was so abundant and available to the rank-and-file?
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When the Chandler family sold the paper to Tribune (now known as Tronc) in 2000, the newspaper earned $200 million a year in profit, before its pages and staff fell prey to the endless cuts and carvings of bean counters in Chicago, and then in 2007 became the plaything of foul-mouthed blowhard Sam Zell. Then came the industry-wide nosedive of ad revenue, the slow-to-adapt business model of newspapers in general, and the questionable business decisions of a panicked management team. The intervening years, and their waves of buyouts and layoffs, signaled the end of the days when the looming, Art Deco building in downtown Los Angeles could be dubbed a de facto mausoleum, for all its âvelvet coffinâ jobs. The staff now numbers fewer than 500, down from a peak of 1,200, and there are rumblings about more cuts to come amid yet another management shakeup. Earlier this year, Tronc unexpectedly fired the newspaperâs top editors including Davan Maharaj, the publisherâinstalling Ross Levinsohn, a veteran of Fox and Yahoo, as publisher, and former Forbes Editor Lewis DâVorkin, as editor.
The resulting uncertainty is fueling a union effort that may finally prevail in transforming one of the nationâs largest non-union newsrooms. There are currently labor unions at The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and non-newspaper outlets such as Vice and The Associated Press. A Tronc spokeswoman declined an interview request to speak with DâVorkin or anyone else at the LA Times for this story.
Current and former LA Times staffers tell CJR the newsroomâs hopes to join NewsGuild-CWA turn on a desire to maintain a semblance of what it has long meant to be employed by the Los Angeles Times. Some former staffers recall the halcyon days when the paper was fat, brimming with copy that kept government and industry accountable. Others left for better opportunities and lament the Timesâ wasted potential. Every interviewee told CJR a union was a good idea, though some consider it a last resort. Employees have yet to file for unionization with federal officials, but dozens of newsroom employees went public as the face of the union drive in late October. They are calling for fairness in wages, job protections, the first across-the-board raises in seven yearsâand theyâre openly critical of a persistently white and male masthead. For young women, people of color, and other diverse newsroom members, itâs difficult to see a rosy future, not only for themselves, but the Times itself as a critical source of news in a city as diverse as Los Angeles.
The Timesâ interim executive editor, Jim Kirk, recently sent letters discouraging staffers from forming a union or sowing doubt the union can deliver on its promises, writing in one: âWe can say with certainty that if the union is voted in, the company will bargain in good faith and will attempt to reach mutual agreement. However, it is important to remember that the union cannot provide any wages, benefits or working conditions to you without the companyâs agreement.â
Hey, thatâs us! đŚ https://t.co/wV7GyWfDl8 pic.twitter.com/J0qoPVU4wq
— Matt Pearce đŚ đşđ¸ (@mattdpearce) November 15, 2017
For all the demands for newsroom cuts, members of Tronc management are giving themselves huge raises. Executive pay ballooned by 80 percent from 2015 to 2016, to more than $19 million, according to data from Morningstar. By comparison, executives at The New York Times took a steep pay cut in the same periodâfrom $26.3 million to $15.9 millionâwhile running a bigger newspaper with a better reputation.
The present
Like many newsrooms, buyouts, firings, and departures for greener fields have harmed morale at the LA Times. What keeps talent is the promise of progress, but itâs hard to have faith when everyone on the newspaperâs current leadership team is a stranger to the newsroom.
Current Tronc chairman Michael Ferroâa tech mogul with no newsroom experienceâhas been openly out of touch with any sort of journalistic reality, with promises of reporting by a yet-to-be-invented artificial intelligence solution (after years of cuts to the already-existing, natural variety) and 2,000 videos produced a day, an utterly insane figure if you ask anyone who has ever produced a video (and a questionable strategy at best). Even seemingly feasible promises havenât been kept: Pledged new bureaus in Hong Kong, Seoul, Rio de Janiero, Lagos, and Moscow have yet to become realities.
âWith Michael Ferro of Tronc taking over, theyâre back into this new cycle of instability and things changing all the timeâand theyâve bet their careers on working at the LA Times,â says Kevin Roderick, the founder, publisher and editor of LA Observed and a former Times reporter and editor who worked there for 25 years.
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For journalists concerned about their professional reputations, the tea leaves donât read well with Tronc. âTronc has not distinguished itself as any kind of news achiever,â says Roderick. Â âTheyâre all about trying to find a way to monetize things and in this case itâs about experimenting with the LA Timesâand thatâs not what any reader of the LA Times is looking for.â
Among the signatories to the unionâs open letter to the newsroom is National Correspondent Matt Pearce, who canât imagine working most anyplace elseâhe loves the impact of being a Los Angeles Times reporter, and admires his boss and his coworkers. âBut one of the things that I havenât really liked about the Times is the low morale that has been pretty consistent for the past five years Iâve been here,â he tells CJR. âWeâve had five publishers in the five years Iâve been here, and a lot of turnover in the past five years.â
Every Times staffer CJR spoke with was pleased with what the Times has been able to produce despite cuts and chaosâmany pointed to the 2016 Pulitzer Prize for breaking news during the San Bernardino mass-shooting.They want leaders who believe in journalism. They want to see support for strong reporting that serves a broad readership and the communities in Southern California.
Dear media "experts": The @latimes newsroom is not "resistant to change." We've undergone more disruption than anyone. And we still kick ass
— Robin Abcarian (@AbcarianLAT) October 10, 2017
They believe itâs possible because theyâve seen other phoenixes rise.
âYou look at a place like The Washington Post which was in a similar position as the Los Angeles Times and you seeing what dynamic ownership and a dynamic editor can do to invigorate the newsroom,â Pearce says, referring to Amazonâs Jeff Bezos and (former LA Times editor) Editor in Chief Marty Baron.
Pearce also points to the newsroomâs class of diverse young reporters who are equipped to report on many cultures in Los Angeles, but have felt undervalued when it comes to advancement and opportunity, a âkind of invisible barrier with younger reporters of color and especially women in terms of our masthead.â
Among the signatories to the unionâs letter were alums of the Timesâ highly prestigious diversity program Metpro, including Copy Editor Kristina Bui. As a woman of color, she says she supports a union because it âcan bargain for things that help push back against old barriers,â with pay scales and step raises that create a salary floor and create equity.
Ten years ago, a union would not have found the same support, and before that, such an effort would have been seen as unimaginable.
Is past prologue?
The Timesâs first publisher, Civil War veteran Gen. Harrison Gray Otis, prided himself on being anti-labor. In 1907, the International Typographers Union called his newspaper âthe most notorious, most persistent and most unfair enemy of trade unionism on the North American continent.â The reputation was earned, in part, by the generalâs venomous anti-union editorials, often aimed at San Francisco, where unions were embroiled in scandalsâand casting side-eye at union-friendly rival newspaper Los Angeles Examiner.
In the Timesâs view, Los Angeles was a perfect business environmentâan anti-labor wonderland of endless prosperity in the sun. Itâs worth remembering that by 1910, American industrialists like John D. Rockefeller and Henry Ford were engaged in open class warfare, hiring thugs to beat back striking workers. Otisâ newspaper was âstaunchly Republican and pro-growthâ in the age of recently completed railways that connected Los Angeles with America. He backed efforts (some would say orchestrated) to outlaw labor demonstrations in LA.
Which is how the Los Angeles Times became the target of a 1910 bombing that killed 20 people working the late shift, when a suitcase full of dynamite exploded in an ink supply closet in its building on the corner of Broadway and First in downtown Los Angeles. Unionists were convicted of hiring the McNamara brothers to plant the bomb, which they claimed wasnât supposed to go off until later when everyone would have left the building. The 1911 trial inspired chaos in LA streets: âTwenty thousand McNamara supporters marched on the county jail to denounce General Otis, Harry Chandlerâ and others as âschemers bent on crucifying organized labor,â Denis MacDougal writes in the book Privileged Son.
After he inherited the newspaper and Gen. Otisâ grudge against unions, Harry Chandler gloated: âThere is one city in the United States where a labor strike has never been able to succeed. That city is Los Angeles. The reason is because it has the Los Angeles Times.â
In 1942, the Times earned its first-ever Pulitzer Prize, a Gold Medal for Public Serviceâand they won it while staying true to the paperâs earliest animosities against unions. The Chandlers sided with port ownership in a bloody war with the longshoremanâs union. Men up and down the California Coast had walked out on their jobs to protest. Company thugs beat them back. The Times published a volume of what MacDougal described as âbiased reporting and abusive editorialsâ against the formation (and later existence) of the International Longshoremenâs & Warehousemenâs Union. The flood of copy was enough to earn a contempt citation from the judge, who simultaneously was deciding whether to grant an injunction that would prevent the union from striking. Norman Chandler took his fight over the contempt citation to the Supreme Court in 1941. Justice Harry Black, who wrote the decision in favor of the Times, wrote: âIt is a prized American privilege to speak oneâs mind, although not always with perfect good tasteâŚâ
He made the same solemn oath that his father had made: no unions on his watch.
For all managementâs conviction, the rank-and-file did push to organize in that era. In 1944, the National Labor Relations Board oversaw the first union election ever held at the Times. According to Privileged Son, the pressmen âvoted overwhelmingly to reject the union.â Ownership took it in stride, vowing to pay workers so well that they couldnât be tempted to unionize again. That year, Harry Chandler died, passing on the newspaper to Norman, âwho kept his Times âfamilyâ paid at least one notch above the highest comparable union wage, (and) made the same solemn oath that his father had made: no unions on his watch.â
Slanted anti-union coverage persisted at the paper, with Norman Chandler telling Newsweek in 1967, âWe were kind of lopsided in those days. If we gave the Republicans a big story, we’d give the Democrats a small one. And we only gave management’s side in labor disputes.â
That was often seen in the paperâs coverage of farmworkers and Latinos in Southern California, whose fight for passable wages was frequently met with the Times siding with farmers and underreporting labor abuses.
In the immediate aftermath of the Chandler dynasty, which ended in 2000, the Times was led by a succession of editorsâsome truly great onesâwho were forced to go to the mat for their newsrooms and suffered defeat. Time after time, editors would leave the paper over never-ending demands for staffing cutbacks from Chicago.
The first was John Carroll. As the editor in chief whose tenure began the year Tribune took the reins from the Chandlers, Carroll was a beloved and experienced editor, who in turn recruited a pivotal managing editor, Dean Baquet from The New York Times. Baquet later remarked âwe came in and the newsroom was downâbut it was a hell of a newsroom,â adding âit was like a Ferrari that needed to be reminded that it was a Ferrariâand thatâs what we did.â
In five years time, Carroll and Baquet led the newspaper to 13 Pulitzer Prizes, before Carroll stepped down in 2005 to protest âopen-endedâ cuts that he felt would damage the paper. The fight to preserve the newsroom didnât end with Carroll. In 2006, publisher Jeff Johnson was ousted for his refusal to cut 100 jobs from a 940-member editorial staff (nearly double the size of the current staff).
Baquet, the editor in chief after Carroll, would take the same stance against job cuts and be ousted later that year. For many, it was Baquetâs departure that marked the beginning of the Timesâ descent into chaosâand a pattern of bosses coming and going over clashes with Chicago. âBaquet was the last beloved editor in the newsroom. When he was forced to leave, a lot of people saw that as a really, really bad sign,â says Roderick.
One by one, editors who tried to fight Tribune were routed and ousted. Then a Trumpian real estate tycoon came along in 2007 and bought Tribune. Sam Zell openly relished being an outsider with little interest in journalism. Though the the leaders have changed many times in the intervening years, the paper hasnât been the same since. Which helps explain why a resistance is afoot with unionization.
An amazing display of solidarity for @latguild from our unionized colleagues at the @nytimes. We appreciate your support. đŚ pic.twitter.com/LNbIZU4ddS
— L.A. Times Guild đŚ (@latguild) November 8, 2017
âFor the past 10 years, itâs been the workers, not the owners, who are preserving the legacy of the Los Angeles Times,â Pearce, the national reporter, says. The idea of unionization has not been a hard sell in a newsroom in a spiral of chaos. And the early performance of the new owner has done nothing to boost newsroom trust: LA Observed on November 13 reported that, with the arrival of new editor DâVorkin, âDays of Discord are Back at the Los Angeles Times.â The staff is in an uproar over DâVorkinâs decision to downplay the paperâs spat with Disney, a major advertiser.
Union supporters say the Timesâs era of union busting wonât deter them. The union boosters havenât set a date yet for making a federal filing; meantime, theyâre boosting morale with a social media push for new subscribers and with support from other newsrooms.
âWe think this can be successful,â says Pearce, referring to the union, and the paper. âWeâre the dominant publication in the most populous, wealthiest state in the country, one that is driving the direction of the country in many ways.â
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