Big trouble is brewing, and it’s more threatening to Long Island’s future than any other issue that’s been laid on the table.
The sale of Newsday trumps affordable housing, taxes, energy and even brain drain as the most critical topic affecting Long Island right now, and the reason it takes precedence is quite simple: The flow of information is about to be interrupted. And that is the exact reason the sale of a newspaper should be of utmost concern to the 2.7 million people who call Long Island home.
Potential bidders for the paper surprise no one, as their names have been bandied about for years: Murdoch, Dolan, Zuckerman. What mega-media company would not have an interest in a newspaper that still boasts one of the highest concentration rates in one of the most desirable markets in the country and, until recently, served as the fabled cash cow that helped offset losses at other Tribune Co. newspapers, including the perpetually troubled L.A. Times.
Yet, Newsday and the people of Long Island, deserve better.
Should any of the named prospects take title of Newsday, we face the ramifications of uber media consolidation, at levels unprecedented in our region. Since the Telecommunications Act of 1996, we’ve watched media companies acquire and merge, FCC regulations lessen and newsrooms disintegrate. Much of the M&As are reported to be for reasons of “synergy.” Since 2000, such synergy has borne witness to more than 72,000 media job cuts. If news and information put into perspective is what you want in your local news, you’ll find plenty of wire copy and repackaged content from other media properties in the same family to take the place of what you want, need and expect in your local news. If media companies as local businesses and employers speaks to your interests, you’ll find an incredible track record of downsizing combined with profits going to headquarters, instead of reinvested in the local property and its people.
Under Tribune Co. (prior to Sam Zell’s recent purchase of the company), Newsday has gone from a regional player with a strong track record for carefully chosen, well crafted national and international news, to a daily paper operating without a national desk, no foreign bureaus and a regional and local staff so slimmed down it’s bordering on anorexic. The product has changed greatly. With it, Long Island’s perspective of itself is shifting. Heavy on police blotter and random acts of crime, it’s an eye opener: Despite all the talk of the Island’s stronghold as a sleepy suburbia, those things do happen here. To give credit where it’s due, perhaps Newsday Editor John Mancini’s biggest achievement has been to abruptly awaken this place into recognizing it’s not so sleepy, nor as suburban as it pretends. New York Newsday was once touted as the tabloid in a tutu. Now, its provincial sister paper has turned tabloid, without the benefit, nor the budget, for frills.
What Long Island needs most at this moment is not what any of the Big Three can provide. Mort Zuckerman’s holdings concentrate too much power within the New York metro area, but pale to those of Rupert Murdoch. Murdoch’s News Corp.’s recent acquisition of weeklies in the Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens give his empire too much say in too little space. To acquire the dominate voice on Long Island takes Montauk to New York and turns it into a highway littered with News Corp.-driven information. Conversely, the concept of the Dolan family’s Cablevision acquiring Newsday places total control of the information Long Islanders receive in the hands of two properties, Newsday and News12, squarely in the hands of one owner.
There’s another aspect of information control that seldom sees the light of day: it has nothing to do with how a story is covered and has everything to do with which stories are ignored. Reporters won’t cover stories that present a conflict of interest, and editorial writers face the same dilemma. The conflicts increase as media companies are bought by larger entities. Depending on how centralized a media company, certain topics may be mandated as off limits. It’s a much more subtle threat to the free flow of information, yet it happens.
While the price of Newsday’s worth may be speculated between $300 million to $1 billion, those numbers don’t and can’t reflect its true value in the right hands. What is the real value to keep a region informed and therefore, vibrant and competitive? What would you pay for someone to trust your word? Local news is a valuable natural resource, just like the water you drink and the air you breathe. Information has the ability and the power to open your mind to new ideas, solutions and philosophies. The power of the press, when placed in the wrong hands, or too few hands, changes the fundamental concept of all American freedoms and goes straight to the heart of a democratic society. Since 1996, has America been that strong of a country? Recently, we’ve seen war on our own soil. More recently, we’ve lost our super power status and watch as three countries are poised to overtake the United States as the place where your children are guaranteed a better life. A strong, responsible news media keeps society healthy. The formula is proportional.
Is Long Island so strong we can afford to lose our only daily newspaper to big media?
We’ve seen what media consolidation has done across America, and Long Island has been bleeding all along: Our 19 commercial radio stations have not one news reporter among them, leaving us highly vulnerable in times of emergency. Put into such context, it’s imperative that Newsday end up in the hands of an independent owner who values Long Island. That won’t happen under the helm of a mega-media company.
Like it or not, Long Island’s future is tied directly to Newsday’s future. And now that our lone daily is no longer quietly being shopped around for prospective buyers, what happens next has the power to change your life.
What can you do to help? Ask your friends and family to read this piece. Forward it to your local politicians and the FCC, and let them know you care about the quality of your local news and you need a local daily newspaper that cares about Long Island.