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L.A. Times guild accepts 20% reduction in pay, hours amid coronavirus

Los Angeles Times
The L.A. Times has suffered deep advertising declines due to COVID-19.
(Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times)
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Los Angeles Times’ newsroom guild agreed Friday to accept a 20% reduction in pay and hours for its members amid a devastating decline in advertising because of the coronavirus crisis.

In an effort to help management reduce expenses, nearly 440 journalists represented by the Media Guild of the West will have their wages and hours cut for 12 weeks, beginning May 10. Journalists will work four days each week instead of the usual five days. The reductions are expected to save more than $2 million.

“This is the best possible deal we could have made under the circumstances,” Anthony Pesce, president of the NewsGuild-Communications Workers of America Local 39213, said. “We worked very quickly to arrive at a solution that will ultimately help everyone.”

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With the agreement, The Times becomes the latest news organization to cut pay for journalists due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Newspaper advertising has been decimated as retailers, movie theaters and live event sponsors have pulled their ad buys because their stores and venues are closed. Newspapers were already struggling before the pandemic because of a migration of ad dollars to internet giants like Facebook and Google, but the health crisis has made the situation more dire.

Coronavirus: Pandemic turns Northern California counties into news deserts

As part of the pact, The Times’ management said it would not lay off any member of the guild during the 12-week period. At the guild’s urging, The Times also made a commitment to apply for California’s Unemployment Insurance “Work Sharing Program,” a program established in 1978 and that allows eligible employees to receive unemployment benefits even though they still have a job. The Times also will seek unemployment benefit coverage for its journalists in Washington, D.C.

Should the state decline The Times’ application, the paper would abandon its plan to reduce the wages and hours of those represented by the guild.

The pay reductions will not extend beyond Aug. 1, unless the two sides agree to further cuts.

“We are proud of the work being done, from the pressroom to the newsroom, to inform the community at such a critical time,” Chris Argentieri, president and chief operating officer of California Times, said in a statement. “We are humbled by the dedication of our staff, the sacrifices they continue to make, and the support of our readership as we manage through this difficult time. We are pleased to have reached an agreement with the Guild and thank their leadership along with the workforce across our company for their collaboration and consideration as we meet the challenges of this crisis.”

Last fall, the paper signed its first-ever collective bargaining agreement with newsroom employees, which required the two sides to negotiate a deal. Most non-management newsroom staff are covered, including reporters, data journalists, copy editors, librarians, web producers, audio producers, page designers, photographers and videographers.

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Local news outlets are asking the federal government to increase ad spending to mitigate the financial impact of the coronavirus pandemic.

The paper, along with its parent California Times, has already taken steps to slash costs in response to the pandemic. Senior managers, including eight top editors in the newsroom, had their pay cut by as much as 15% in mid-April. Some business-side employees were furloughed, and some non-guild employees will have the company’s match to their 401K contributions suspended.

California Times also folded three community newspapers — the Burbank Leader, Glendale News-Press and the La Cañada Valley Sun — and laid off 14 people who produced those weekly publications.

On Thursday, La Cañada Flintridge publisher, Charlie Plowman, acquired the three titles. Plowman did not agree to hire the laid-off workers and plans to use his existing staff to create content. The Burbank and Glendale papers are expected to restart Saturday.

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