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‘United for Progress’: Daily Progress union calls for fair wages, community input

By Ali Sullivan

The story is all too familiar: Media corporation buys local newspaper, budget cuts ensue, and seasoned journalists lose their jobs. The staff at the Daily Progress doesn’t want to be next.

Murmurs of unionizing began in January, and the formal announcement came on October 14. The Progress staff has formed a union—the Blue Ridge NewsGuild, a unit of The NewsGuild-CWA’s Washington-Baltimore Local.

“People shouldn’t be waiting for the day that they come in and their job is done,” says Katherine Knott, a K-12 reporter for the Progress. “That’s particularly terrifying [and] unsettling.”

The Progress, family-owned for its first 78 years, has been bought and sold several times since 1971—first by The Worrell Newspaper Group, then by Media General. In 2012, it was bought by BH Media Group, controlled by billionaire Warren Buffett, who made headlines last spring when he called the newspaper business “toast,” and declared that newspapers are “going to disappear.” In 2018, BH handed management duties over to the media company Lee Enterprises.

“Lee Enterprises has a history of cutting off the edges in places that they manage, so [the union] is more for my co-workers to know they have a little more peace of mind for the possibility of layoffs or cuts in the future,” says Nolan Stout, the Progress’s City Hall reporter.

The union will be fighting for fair wages (Progress reporters currently earn salaries in the low $30,000 range, on average), severance pay, and appropriate benefits, and is asking for voluntary recognition from BH Media. Knott says the company has yet to respond, so the NewsGuild plans to win recognition via a National Labor Relations Board election, which will take place in the Daily Progress office October 30.

The months-long process that preceded the announcement involved attempts to get all sections of the paper on board­—a tricky process considering the high turnover in local newsrooms.

“You don’t just walk up to someone and say, ‘Hey, let’s form a union,’” Stout says. “It took time, and eventually we decided to just do it as a newsroom.”

Following the unionization announcement, the Progress had an all-staff meeting to discuss it. Stout says the meeting in part consisted of managing editor Aaron Richardson discussing “the things he thinks would be negatively affected” by the NewsGuild, but says the decision to unionize wasn’t a personal one.

“We like the people we work with,” Stout says. “We want to keep the environment the way it is, and this is the best way to do that.”

Signs emblazoned with NewsGuild’s logo decorate the newsroom, and Stout says the general sentiment among staff is one of excitement coupled with “a sense of camaraderie.”

While increased benefits and safety nets are central to the Blue Ridge NewsGuild’s mission, members also want to acknowledge the Progress’ checkered history and strengthen the paper’s bond with readers. To do so, the union plans to bargain for greater editorial control, a minority-hiring practice, and the reinstatement of a community-sourced editorial board.

“As recently as 2017 we had an editorial blaming Wes Bellamy for the Unite the Right Rally,” Stout says. “We want to be advocating for our management to let the community have a say.”

Knott and Stout aren’t sure what the future of local news is, but they know that the Blue Ridge NewsGuild is a step in the right direction.

“Seeing newsrooms…and journalists across the country, trying to take back some control and fight for their papers through unionization has really been the only thing giving me hope,” Knott says. “My advice to people is to assist in that movement.”

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In brief: City digs in, winemaker dies, rioters plead, and more

Truth in scheduling: Progress joins City v. Civilian Review Board fray

A Daily Progress reporter was a topic of discussion during public comment at the May 6 City Council meeting, following Nolan Stout’s story earlier that day that police Chief RaShall Brackney’s calendar seemed to contradict claims that she was unavailable to meet with the Police Civilian Review Board.

CRB member Rosia Parker thanked Stout for his reporting, while Mayor Nikuyah Walker blamed Stout for the escalating tension between the chief and the review board. Councilor Wes Bellamy said he had “personal issues” with the article, and defended Brackney and her calendar. Police gadfly Jeff Fogel yelled at Bellamy to “not punk out,” and Bellamy replied, “You’re the last one to tell me to punk out.”

The latest outburst follows a bizarre April 26 city press release that accused a CRB member of lying about Brackney refusing to meet with the board. That was followed by an even weirder April 30 retraction of the falsehood allegation, which instead pointed the finger at the Progress’ reporting. The paper stands by its story.

And in the latest deepening of trenches in the war of words, city spokesman Brian Wheeler told Stout his Freedom of Information Act request for emails between Brackney or her secretary and City Council or CRB members, and emails between councilors and CRB members, would cost $3,000 and require a $700 deposit. Wheeler refused to break down the costs, which are unprecedented in C-VILLE Weekly’s experience with FOIA.

Megan Rhyne with Virginia Coalition for Open Government says this is only the second time she’s seen a local government refuse to detail its alleged costs, and tells the DP, “I don’t think it’s very transparent.”


Quote of the week

“I believe we have more than enough mandatory minimum sentences—more than 200—in Virginia state code.” Governor Ralph Northam on why he won’t sign any more such bills, which he calls punitive, discriminatory, and expensive


In brief

Carbon friendlier

Charlottesville’s carbon emissions per household—11.2 tons annually—are a ton above the national average. City Council voted unanimously at its May 6 meeting to approve a climate action plan that includes a goal of 45 percent carbon emissions reduction by 2030, and total carbon neutrality by 2050.

Wine pioneer dies

David King. file photo

 

David King, patriarch of King Family Vineyards, died May 2 after what the family calls a “hard-fought” battle with cancer. The 64-year-old was a past chair of the Virginia Wine Board, a polo player, pilot, and reserve deputy with the Albemarle County Sheriff’s Office search and rescue division. The family will host a celebration of life on June 14 at their Crozet family farm from 7:30-9:30pm.

Rioters plead

The last two members of the now-defunct California white supremacist group Rise Above Movement, who traveled to Charlottesville for the August 2017 Unite the Right rally to brawl with counterprotesters, pleaded guilty May 3 in U.S. District Court. RAM founder Benjamin Drake Daley, 26, from Redondo Beach, and Michael Paul Miselis, 30, from Lawndale, each pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to riot. Fellow RAMmers Cole White and Thomas Gillen previously pleaded guilty.

The Guys

Unrelated Bridget Guy and Kyle Guy got top UVA athletics honors at the Hoos Choice Awards May 1. Bridget, from Greensburg, Pennsylvania, is an all-American pole vaulter who was undefeated this season. Indianapolis-native Kyle was named Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA Final Four, in part for his sangfroid in firing off three free throws in a row to beat Auburn 63-62.

Flaggers appeal

Confederate battle flag-loving Virginia Flaggers were in circuit court May 2 to appeal a Louisa Board of Zoning Appeals decision that the 120-foot pole they raised on I-64 in March 2018 to fly the “Charlottesville I-64 Spirit of Defiance Battle Flag” exceeded the county’s maximum of 60 feet. The judge has not yet issued a ruling.

Cruel and unusual

The U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Virginia’s death row inmates, who spend years alone in a small cell for 23 to 24 hours a day. The justices said the inmates face a “substantial risk” of serious psychological and emotional harm in violation of the Eighth Amendment in the case filed by local attorney Steve Rosenfield.

UVA student sentenced

When former UVA student Cayden Jacob Dalton drunkenly abducted and strangled his ex-girlfriend in August 2018, she told the judge “there was no doubt in my mind that I was going to die.” Now, he’ll serve one and a half years for the crime, with the rest of his 15-year sentence suspended.


Show us the money

With the first campaign finance reports filed March 31, we learned who’s pulling in the bucks ahead of the June 11 City Council Democratic primary,  as well as the funds raised by independents Paul Long and Bellamy Brown.

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In brief: Perriello saves the day, lots of $$$, and council retreat chaos

Perriello’s Sierra Leone rescue

A desperate mother needed to get her 5-year-old daughter out of Sierra Leone in 2003, and asked a stranger at the airport to take her child to her grandmother in the U.S. Fifteen years later, Zee Sesay learned that the man who brought her daughter to safety was former congressman Tom Perriello, according to BuzzFeed. Perriello calls it “one of the crazier experiences” of his life.

Another renaming?

City Councilor Wes Bellamy pounced on the last few moments of the December 17 City Council meeting to suggest renaming Preston Avenue, which gets its moniker from Thomas Preston, a Confederate leader, slaveholder, and former UVA rector. Is Jefferson Street next?

Big bucks

Local philanthropist Dorothy Batten—yes, the daughter of Weather Channel co-founder and UVA grad Frank Batten—will donate $1.35 million to a Piedmont Virginia Community College program called Network2Network, which trains volunteers to match community members with open job listings. 


Quote of the week: “I have never been disrespected the way I have been here in Charlottesville.”—Police Chief RaShall Brackney


Bigger bucks

Following the Dave Matthews Band’s recent announcement that it, together with Red Light Management and Matthews himself, will give $5 million to local affordable housing, came the news that another $527,995 in grants will be doled out to 75 local nonprofits through the band’s Bama Works Fund, which awards similar grants twice a year.

Remains IDed

Police arrested and charged Robert Christopher Henderson with second-degree murder December 20 in connection with the death of Angela Lax, who was reported missing in August. County detectives, who found skeletal remains in the woods along the John Warner Parkway’s trails in November, suspect that Henderson killed Lax in June and dumped her body.

Clerk’s Office closing

Hope you don’t have any important deeds to file or a marriage license to pick up during the first week of the new year, because the Charlottesville Circuit Court Clerk’s Office is moving to new temporary digs during a massive courthouse renovation and will be closed December 31 through January 4 for the holiday and for the move.


Maybe a little bit of “vitriol”

What happens when City Council has a daylong retreat, and two people live tweet the gathering? Here are some excerpts from the December 18 event with Mayor Nikuyah Walker, councilors Wes Bellamy, Kathy Galvin, Heather Hill, and Mike Signer, as narrated by Molly Conger, aka @socialistdogmom, and Daily Progress reporter Nolan Stout. Click to view their threads.