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Pressing on

By Lisa Provence

Long before the pandemic further slashed advertising revenue, newspapers were in distress. Ad dollars are being sucked up by huge corporations like Google, which made $4.7 billion in digital advertising on news sites in 2018, almost as much as the $5.1 billion every single U.S. news outlet combined made that year.

Add to that corporate takeovers of once venerable media chains that continue to gut newsrooms. 

“As long as financial groups like Alden Global Capital treat newspapers as commodities, rather than the bread and butter of democracy,” says UVA media studies professor Christopher Ali, the future of the daily newspaper looks dim.

Charlottesville’s local media is feeling those shifts. Around town, established media outlets are trying to adapt, with varying levels of success. Meanwhile, two veteran reporters launched or expanded their own Substack news sites during COVID-throttled 2020.

“The thing I continue to see is the ongoing evisceration of the Daily Progress,” says Ali, who is on the board of Charlottesville Tomorrow. “I continue to see the decline of the newspaper of record.” 

The Progress has been struggling since it was owned by debt-laden Media General. When Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Media Group bought the chain in 2012, it was seen as a lifeline to the shrinking paper. But Buffett was not the white knight journalists had hoped, and after declaring newspapers “toast,” he sold 31 dailies to Iowa-based Lee Enterprises early last year.

And, like other corporations that unload newspapers’ real estate, BH Media is selling the Daily Progress building on Rio Road and leasing back a portion of the building to the paper, publisher Peter Yates announced last week.

Lee is known to squeeze out profits through layoffs and consolidations. Even more chilling for those who care about their local newspaper, hedge fund paper-killer Alden Global Capital owns 13 percent of Lee. In April 2018, before Lee took over, the Progress had 26 staffers. Today it has 15 in the newsroom.  

For the staffers at the Progress, adapting to the changes in the national media landscape meant forming a union, the Blue Ridge Guild, which signed a contract with Lee last April. 

The union wasn’t enough to keep the paper’s copy desk from going to Midwest. Nor did it prevent already low-paid employees from being furloughed without pay for two weeks last year. Nor were vacant positions, like a dedicated UVA reporter, filled.

“The biggest difference? We don’t go to work every day with the existential dread we’ll be laid off,” says Guild president Katherine Knott. 

The contract guarantees two weeks notice and four weeks severance. “That’s as big as we could dream,” says Knott.

With the reduced staff and fewer reporters assigned to beats like UVA or health, a lot of the Covid-19 coverage has been done by committee. “Maybe that means a meeting doesn’t get covered,” says Knott.

“I feel like local news was not in a sustainable situation before the pandemic,” she says. “The pandemic has exacerbated that. I’m not an optimist. I hope Lee figures it out. I hope someone figures it out.”

Daily Progress editor Aaron Richardson declined to comment.

It’s no secret that Charlottesville’s other print newspaper, the one you’re reading right now, has also seen advertising revenue fall as local businesses have been hurt by the pandemic. Coronavirus was a “nearly perfect weapon against alternative weeklies,” reported Nieman Lab this spring, and in June, C-VILLE laid off six employees. 

Since then, the paper has continued publishing, and started a membership program. “It’s a way for readers to support local journalism,” says publisher Anna Harrison. “We had people reaching out asking how to help. Lots of other alternative papers are doing this—at least the ones still in business.”

Harrison says the paper has over 100 paid memberships, and more than 9,500 readers receive its weekly newsletter. The memberships don’t add that much to the bottom line, she says, but do help pay for photographers or freelance reporters—and they’re a way to engage readers.

The memberships don’t surprise Ali, who says local news weeklies and dailies “have to experiment with different revenue models because the advertising revenue is not there.” For example, ProPublica seeks funding to pursue certain articles, he says. Hosting events is another way papers have sought revenue.

Harrison bucks the trend of those who see advertising-supported print as doomed. “I think the majority of our revenue will continue to be in print once things open up again,” she says. C-VILLE’s circulation fell in the early days of the pandemic but has trended upwards since.

At the same time, some independent writers are changing the way they operate. Dave McNair, a former Hook reporter, started his DTM news site in 2012. Last year he switched to subscriptions and was surprised how many people signed up.

“There’s definitely been a shift in things,” he says. For a long time, “‘paywall’ was such a dirty word. Things have changed and people are willing to pay subscriptions. That saved the New York Times.”

Other changes McNair has seen since the Hook closed in 2013? “A lot of information comes directly from sources,” he says. “We didn’t have to deal with a mayor with 4,000 Facebook followers.”

He points out the reach activist Molly Conger has with her 104,000 Twitter followers. “C-VILLE Weekly has 16,000. The Daily Progress has 35,000. She has more followers than local media.”

McNair is not a believer in traditional print revenue models. “I don’t see how you can make any money on print advertising,”  he says. “I think the corporate ownership model is doomed. You see how it affects the people who work [at the Progress]. They have to use their energy to fight their employer when you’re not even making that much.” 

And he notes that the Daily Progress Twitter feed includes no local news. The paper’s digital content coordinator was laid off in September.

What the DTM brings to local news—besides McNair’s institutional knowledge—is a zestier writing style than more established media. In a recent story in which Charlottesville Police Chief RaShall Brackney took to task the Unitarian Universalists Church of Charlottesville for alleging racial profiling, both the Progress and C-Ville headlines said the chief “refutes” the church’s claims. The DTM described Brackney’s comments as a “blistering rebuke.” 

McNair declines to say how many subscribers he has, and he isn’t giving up his day job.

Former Charlottesville Tomorrow reporter and Piedmont Environmental Council land-use representative Sean Tubbs did give up his day job. He was working on a podcast with PEC’s blessing when the pandemic began, and by summer, he felt a need to get back to work as a journalist.

He’s been delivering a podcast and newsletter on Charlottesville Community Engagement five days a week. “Initial interest was enough to help me take a leap of faith,” he writes in an email.

Tubbs has doubled down on covering the pandemic locally, as well as covering government meetings. He says he brings “years of experience covering municipal government, and a renewed interest in documenting how this community gets through the next set of challenges.”

Tubbs’ Patreon account has 75 contributors. “That’s just one of many sources of revenue,” he says, listing his Substack platform and sponsorship opportunities. “The audience is growing slowly, and I’ve demonstrated I’m here to do this work.”

While he declines to say how many subscribers he has, Tubbs offers that he has produced more than 130 newsletters and each is read by around 500 people. 

Veteran reporters deciding to go it alone is “something we’re seeing a lot of,” says Ali. “The challenge with these startups is not professionalism and is not gusto. The problem is sustainability.” Burnout and financial sustainability take their toll, he adds.  

Tubbs does not plan to remain a single-proprietor news shop. “My hope is to be able to hire people in the future, and train younger people in the kind of civic journalism I believe every American community deserves to help restore our democracy,” he says. 

The one news org in town that seems impervious to pandemic pain is nonprofit Charlottesville Tomorrow. Founded in 2005 by deep-pocketed donors to focus on land use, community design and transportation, Charlottesville Tomorrow has expanded its purview.

“We did rewrite our mission to become a public service news entity for the whole community rather than focus on land use,” says executive director Giles Morris, who used to be C-VILLE editor. 

Charlottesville Tomorrow partnered with In My Humble Opinion radio show that covers issues affecting the local Black community, and with Vinegar Hill Magazine, which supports a “more inclusive social narrative,” to form Charlottesville Inclusive Media.

“Charlottesville has a big gap in trust between the Black community and legacy news organizations,” says Morris.

The inclusive mindset and partnerships have paid off in grants, including $150,000 from Google GNI Innovation Challenge, $35,000 from Facebook Journalism Project and $23,000 from Charlottesville Area Community Foundation.

“We didn’t have the disruptions in our revenue like others did,” says Morris.

The nonprofit model seems to work well in a town like Charlottesville, with a large, highly educated donor class. In 2018, Charlottesville Tomorrow’s revenue was around $500,000. Now it’s $700,000. “This has been our best year,” says Morris. 

And Charlottesville Tomorrow is hiring. Its ad for a community engagement reporter with a salary range of $50,000 to $60,000 has certainly caught the attention of local reporters stuck in the $30K salary range.

“Someone has to pay for reporters,” says Morris. “We believe in journalism” and the importance of its role in a democracy, he says.

“I think Charlottesville Tomorrow is doing exactly what a local news organization needs to do to be local,” says Ali. “They’re clearly being rewarded for that. They’re hiring and they’ve doubled down on local news. No one goes to local news to find out about Afghanistan.”

Among the publications thriving in their own space is Vinegar Hill Magazine. “I wouldn’t call Vinegar Hill Magazine boutique,” says its content manager Sarad Davenport. “I’d call it bootstrapped.” The quarterly publication started as a two-page newsletter to tell the stories that otherwise wouldn’t get told, and has seen an increase in advertising. 

“We’re in a different galaxy from other news organizations in how the pandemic has affected us,” says Davenport. “Some people have lost a lot but we never had anything.”

Charlottesville is a “pretty news-hungry area,” he says. “Everyone is settling into its niche. The publication struggling with that is the Daily Progress.”

He suggests local news orgs think in terms of “coop-etition” and cites the groundbreaking, now-defunct agreement between the Progress and Charlottesville Tomorrow in which the paper ran CT’s coverage of government meetings. That, he says, was the “intersection of competition and cooperation.”

McNair similarly says that  teamwork could be the key to keeping local news in business. He suggests individuals who have created huge platforms online could team up to form a local digital subscription platform. 

“People are hungry for real independent news,” he says.“They’re willing to pay for news now moreso than in the past.”

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Going it alone: Charlottesville Tomorrow dumps Progress, broadens mission

When Charlottesville Tomorrow began in 2005, it was one of the first nonprofit, local news orgs in the country. Its mission was so narrow—land use, community design, transportation—that another local weekly called it a “growth watchdog.”

The online publication broadened its name recognition and reach when it began sharing content with the Daily Progress in 2009, a liaison that lasted 10 years, until executive director Giles Morris announced June 24 that its partnership with the Progress was over, and CTom was broadening its mission: “Charlottesville Tomorrow delivers in-depth reporting and analysis that improves local decision-making. We seek to expand civic engagement to foster a vibrant, inclusive, and interdependent community.”

It wasn’t just one thing that caused the break up with the Progress, says Morris, a former editor of C-VILLE Weekly. The once-heralded collaboration had survived multiple editors, publishers, and owners of the newspaper, most recently BH Media, a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway, whose CEO Warren Buffett famously declared for-profit print newspapers “toast.”

Lately, “the Progress was only running about half our stuff,” says Morris. “I don’t think it was working as well.” And he’s not worried about losing the print outlet. “We’ve always been digital.”

In the year or so since Morris became executive director, he’s doubled the news staff to four, and hired former DP associate city editor Elliott Robinson to be editor. He wants to run longer, more in-depth pieces. In the past, says Morris, “we just wrote meetings reports.” The daily news cycle doesn’t allow time for a reporter to call nine sources, he says. “As a nonprofit, we can be very intentional.”

“It was their call,” says DP editor Aaron Richardson. “I wish them every success.”

UVA associate professor Christopher Ali, who specializes in local media, says he was surprised by the move. “This was one of the most innovative partnerships in digital news.”

Working with the Progress guaranteed visibility for Charlottesville Tomorrow, he says. “I’d be interested in seeing their strategy for visibility.”

Ali is “more worried about the Daily Progress than I am Charlottesville Tomorrow. It is really difficult to be a small market paper.”

He suggests with the loss of CTom content, the Progress “double down on local coverage” and don’t substitute AP stories. “That’s the one thing local newspapers can offer.”

Charlottesville Tomorrow was founded by hedge fund manager Michael Bills and Southern Environmental Law Center founder Rick Middleton at a time that growth in Albemarle County was a big concern for rural landscape lovers. Its wealthy board included Renee Grisham, wife of mega-author John, and the nonprofit was supported by donors like Ted Weschler, a top stock picker for Buffett and an investor in C-VILLE Weekly’s parent company.

The change in mission came slowly over the past year since Morris was hired. “The language in our original mission didn’t sound like where we want to be.”

Land use and public education have been “pillars of our coverage,” he says. “We’re not going to abandon that. If the community wants public health or housing coverage, we’re going to raise the money to do it well.”

“I consider it more of an evolution than a change in mission,” says Bills. “We’re still trying to fill the local news coverage the community needs to make decisions.”

Much like listener-supported public radio, Charlottesville Tomorrow will continue to need donors. It reported revenues of $460,000 in 2017, and in the $400,000 ballpark the two years prior, according to its IRS 990s.

Morris wants people to sign up for emails, which will include fundraising pitches. “We want more readers. We want more readers to be donors,” he says. And CTom will continue to apply for grants, such as the ones it receives from the Knight Foundation.

The events of August 12, 2017, also factored into the changes Charlottesville Tomorrow is making, with more people covering local government meetings, says Morris, and more awareness of racial inequity.

Morris says he wasn’t pointing fingers specifically at the Progress when he wrote, “Today, Charlottesville is a place where we’re all questioning and challenging the inherited models that have reinforced harmful power dynamics.”

But he does acknowledge the role community newspapers had in supporting segregation while covering up “the corrosive injustice of racism in the South.”

When he came to Charlottesville in 2011, he says he was “unprepared to cover race and equality in this place.” While at C-VILLE, Morris had to deal with a protest in 2013 after the paper published a racist comment in a section called “The Rant.”

Says Morris, “In journalism, we share a responsibility.”

Morris and Robinson will be conducting a series of listening sessions in the coming months to learn how locals want Charlottesville Tomorrow’s guiding values of “equity, truth and community” put into place.

City spokesman Brian Wheeler was CTom’s first executive director. “As someone who was involved in the birth of the organization, I am excited to see its current leadership continuing to innovate, to launch a next generation news website, and to serve the community’s critical information needs.”

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In brief: U-Hall rocks, new police chief and a rally no one wants to attend

Hall of fame

It’s never the right time to say goodbye, but loyal patrons of the University of Virginia’s iconic, clamshell-roofed venue with notoriously bad sound quality don’t have much longer—the dumping of more than 40 years’ worth of stuff from University Hall has begun, with a complete demolition scheduled by 2020. To help you grieve, here’s a look back at some of the basketball stadium and concert hall’s greatest—and not-so-great—hits.

1965: It opens as the home court of the university’s men’s and women’s basketball teams.

1969: Janis Joplin rocks U-Hall, but trash talks some stage crashers in an after-performance interview with the Cavalier Daily. “That tonight wasn’t natural,” she says.

1971: The Faces grace the stage, fronted by Rod Stewart, who was then accompanied by guitarist Ron Wood—who later became a member of the Rolling Stones.

1973: Paul Simon plays U-Hall and uses portions of the show in his live album Paul Simon in Concert: Live Rhymin’.

1974: Sha Na Na takes the stage, and about an hour after the show, lead guitarist Vinny Taylor is found dead in his Holiday Inn hotel room, where he allegedly overdosed on heroin.

1975: Fleetwood Mac’s Christine McVie tells the Cavalier Daily in a post-concert interview that the U-Hall crowd was the worst she’d seen in a “long while.”

1982: The Grateful Dead trucks into its highly anticipated show, which sold out two weeks in advance.

1984: Elvis Costello plays a solo acoustic and piano set, though a WTJU DJ pranked the world earlier that year by saying the rock star had died—a hoax that even made it into the pages of the New York Times and Washington Post.

1986: R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck chases, punches, attempts to strangle and rips the shoes off a fan’s feet after he jumps on stage during “7 Chinese Brothers.”

1986: An attempt to break the ACC attendance record by offering free admission, hot dogs and sodas to attendees of a women’s basketball game brought about 13,000 fans, including the fire marshal, who kicked out a couple thousand, bringing the total down to 8,392. Former men’s coach Terry Holland said Hot Dog Night cost them about 1,800 seats for future years, which totaled about $10 million in lost revenue.Compiled from the Hook

Regrets only

Jason Kessler, middle, arrives to the rally. Photo by Eze Amos

Newsweek reports that the white supremacist leaders who attended last year’s Unite the Right rally, such as Richard Spencer and Mike Enoch, are reluctant to return to Charlottesville for the anniversary event organizer Jason Kessler hopes to get off the ground.

Another chief vacancy

University Police Chief Michael Gibson says he’ll step down this summer from the force he’s led since 2005 and worked for since 1982. UVA has formed a task force to find his successor. Both Gibson and Al Thomas, former Charlottesville police chief, were criticized in Tim Heaphy’s independent review of the events of August 11 and 12.

Vacancy filled

RaShall Brackney. Contributed photo

RaShall Brackney, the former chief of the George Washington University Police Department and a 30-year veteran of the Pittsburgh police, will succeed interim Charlottesville police chief Thierry Dupuis. She resigned from GWU in January, after serving for fewer than three years, and was sued by a former student for allegedly violating Title IX policies, according to school newspaper The GW Hatchet. Brackney was also known at GWU for buying her department a fleet of Segways.

Another vacancy filled

Giles Morris, vice president for marketing and communications at Montpelier and former C-VILLE editor, has been named executive director of Charlottesville Tomorrow. His first day will be June 11. He succeeds CT founder Brian Wheeler, who took the city spokesperson job in January.

Sistah city

Charlottesville’s soulmate city in France gets an honorary street at Second and Market May 10: Rue de Besançon.

Oh, brother

Zachary Cruz, the 18-year-old brother of Parkland, Florida, shooter Nikolas Cruz, was given permission by a judge last week to move to Staunton. The man who’s currently on probation for trespassing at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School has been offered free housing for a year, and a job as a maintenance mechanic, both provided by Nexus Services.

Quote of the week:

Jalane Schmidt by Eze Amos

“What happens to all that hate?” —UVA professor Jalane Schmidt in describing the festive atmosphere often found at lynchings