Saturday, August 17, 2019

'News Deserts' harm society, threaten democracy


This column was published in the Wilson Times Aug. 17, 2019.

The American public has taken little notice of the collapse of a great American industry, one that helped British colonists win the American Revolution and American families to follow the battles of the Civil War, when nearly every family had someone — a son, a brother, a father, a cousin, in jeopardy. This industry went on to inform the American public about events in far-away battles of World War I and World War II, as well as Korea, Vietnam, the Persian Gulf and Iraq.

Newspapers, so important in the minds of the Founding Fathers that they made freedom of the press a topic of the First Amendment to the Constitution, have faced a crisis of loss of revenue as advertising migrated from print to digital. Twenty years after the “dot com” explosion, many newspapers now face extinction.

The New York Times earlier this month published a thorough report on the terrible toll of disappearing newspapers in locations as varied as large cities (New Orleans and Denver are examples) to small towns such as Warrroad, Minn., where the weekly Pioneer recently printed its last edition. At the University of North Carolina School of Media and Journalism, Professor Penelope Muse Abernathy has published a study on “news deserts” — places where there is no source of local news because of the closing of small newspapers.

The impact of these news deserts is important. Without a local news source, the outcome of the high school football game goes unreported. The team’s conference standing is not provided to local fans. The heroics of high school athletes go unrecorded. No impartial reporter covers city council or county commissioner meetings. Local government budgets are not examined in the way newspapers have examined them in the past, living up to their “watchdog” role. Ignorance of local crimes could lead to dangerous complacence when residents have no newspaper to report on crime, criminals and courts. Without a local newspaper, fewer residents will attend public hearings, concerts, plays and other events because they had not heard about it. Local charities will have more difficulty keeping donors aware of community needs without a newspaper to fill its role as town crier/messenger.

In the last 15 years, the New York Times reports, 2,100 local newspapers, comprising a fourth of all newsrooms, have closed or merged with a competing paper. It’s not just the newspapers that folded that are creating these news deserts. Some venerable, usually family-owned, newspapers have been sold to investors, such as hedge funds, with no experience in journalism and no interest in news. They see little newspapers as overlooked, potential cash cows. By laying off most of the news staff, consolidating printing and layout work and squeezing the financial life out of these papers, the new owners sometimes succeed in turning a profit, but readers still lose their community pride, connection to local events and common interests.

The centuries-old relationship between newspapers and the public has been threatened not only by changing business strategies but also by changes in the minds of potential subscribers. Fewer people read, and shortened attention spans trained by television and social media limit in-depth reading. A 12-year-old quoted in the New York Times story said, “most (potential readers) probably moved to social media by now. Most kids don’t even pick up a newspaper in their life.”

The public is looking elsewhere for information, but “elsewhere” has no assurance of truthfulness or disinterest. Little of what appears on a Facebook feed or elsewhere on the Internet has been vetted for truthfulness and accuracy, and mendacious individuals and groups have used this lack of accountability to sow hatred, violence, discontent and disinformation.

At the beginning of the Great Recession, when the federal government was bailing out the auto industry, banks and investment houses, I suggested the federal government should offer a tax deduction to households that subscribe to a local newspaper, perhaps $50 to $100 a year. Such a deduction, with no direct outlay by the government, could have saved hundreds of newspapers, large and small, and given them a chance to reconfigure their business model to get on sounder financial ground. No one embraced my ploy, so newspapers continue to struggle and drown.

We have already begun to see the long-term impact of the loss of newspapers. Public interest in elections and government policies is waning. Simple knowledge about politics (Can you name your state’s two senators? Who is your congressman? Your state’s lieutenant governor?) is in sharp decline. Young people know nothing about current legislation but know all about “American Idol” and “The Bachelorette.”

The Founding Fathers guaranteed freedom of the press for a reason. Voters must have solid information in order to make wise decisions in the voting booth. When that information is unavailable, democracy fails.
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