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Labor Day: it's no picnic

Clancy Sigal - The Guardian - 07 Sep 2010

Labor Day may be a useful time to drag out of the attic a few old-time radical (even Marxist!) notions that, until fairly recently in our history, were common currency. Such as, Marx's "reserve army of the unemployed", as well as his ostensibly outdated "increasing immiseration of the proletariat" due to economic recession because workers cannot afford to buy the products of their labor. Sound familiar?

Trumka: "Most Crucial Election in 75 Years"

Dick Meister - truthout - 07 Sep 2010

Labor and Democratic Party leaders are concerned - and rightly so - that labor's rank and file may not turn out in November to support labor-friendly Democrats in the massive numbers that played a major role in the election of President Obama and Democratic Congressional majorities in 2008. But they'd best beware, as AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka says, of the serious consequences of a victory by "the Republican party of NO."

New 'social contract' needed in 21st-century economy, bishop says

Mark Pattison - Catholic News Service - 06 Sep 2010

A new "social contract" is needed in today's economy, said Bishop William F. Murphy in the U.S. bishops' annual Labor Day statement. "Currently, the rewards and 'security' that employers and society offer workers in return for an honest day's work do not reflect the global economy of the 21st century in which American workers are now trying to compete," said Murphy, chairman of the U.S. bishops' Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development.

The Real Lesson of Labor Day

Robert Reich - - 06 Sep 2010

This time around, policymakers had knowledge their counterparts didn't have in 1929; they knew they could avoid immediate financial calamity by flooding the economy with money. But, paradoxically, averting another Great Depression-like calamity removed political pressure for more fundamental reform. We're left instead with a long and seemingly endless Great Jobs Recession.

Labor Day by the Numbers

Anna Turner - Economic Policy Institute - 06 Sep 2010

* Number unemployed: 14.9 million (up from 7.7 million in December 2007) * Portion of unemployed who have been jobless more than six months: 42% * Portion of unemployed who have been jobless more than a year: 21.9% * Underemployment rate: 16.7%; Number of under- and unemployed, marginally attached, and involuntary part-time workers: 26.1 million * Average weekly unemployment benefit in July: $306

Postmedia confirms job cuts

Canadian Press - 06 Sep 2010

Canada’s largest-circulation newspaper chain, which is comprised of the former CanWest dailies, has started laying off some employees and offering voluntary buyouts to others at some of its operations. Offers were sent to employees at the Victoria Times Colonist and papers in the Pacific Newspaper Group — The Province and the Vancouver Sun, reports said. Other sources said offers were made to employees at the Ottawa Citizen and The Gazette in Montreal.


Happy Labor Day!

Will Durst - - 06 Sep 2010

Poor Labor Day. Gets no respect. It’s the Rodney Dangerfield of celebrations. The runt of the holiday litter. But it's also one day to celebrate what it is that we do for a living by taking the day off from work. Paying tribute not to some dead presidents or a religious fertility ritual or the valiant who have fallen defending democracy, but to the living. To us.

‘There is Power in a Union’

The past, present and future of America’s labor movement

Steve Weinberg - In These Times - 03 Sep 2010

The overall value of unions to society at large is not in question. Yet many, many generally intelligent, humane individuals do not share, what to us, is an obvious conclusion. This split is akin to that between believers in a Christian God and atheists. Each side harbors great minds, each side is certain of its rightness and rarely does anybody switch sides without a rare revelation involved. Philip Dray's new book, "There Is Power in a Union," explores some of the reasons for that dynamic, and their implications for all of us.

Flying the Flag; Faking the News

John Pilger - truthout - 03 Sep 2010

Edward Bernays is said to have invented modern propaganda. During the First World War, he was one of a group of influential liberals who mounted a secret government campaign to persuade reluctant Americans to send an army to the bloodbath in Europe. In his book, "Propaganda," published in 1928, Bernays wrote that the "intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses was an important element in democratic society."

U.S. gets a 'B' on workers' rights -- as do Turkey, India

Mark Gruenberg - Press Associates, Inc. - 03 Sep 2010

New York-based Freedom House has rated 165 nations on their workers’ rights records on a five-point scale ranging from “free” to “very repressive.” The U.S., with 37 other countries, is rated “mostly free,” but is sharply criticized for its weak labor laws and declining private-sector union density -- a decline the report’s lead author says is due to employer control of the union organizing process. The report also blames right-to-work laws.

Buyouts offered at Postmedia papers in Canada

CEP - 03 Sep 2010

Postmedia, Canada's largest newspaper chain, has begun job reductions at newspapers already picked clean by the Asper's Canwest ownership days. Today letters went out to employees at the Victoria Times Colonist, Vancouver Sun and The Province announcing buyouts. The basic provisions are 6 weeks pay per year of service to a maximum of $150,000, but few other details have been made available.

Feinstein: No Shield Law for Bloggers, Wikileaks

Anne Lowe - CalAware Today - 03 Sep 2010

A bill headed for a vote in the U.S. Senate could extend protection to journalists who refuse to divulge their materials or sources, but contentions have arisen as to who should share that protection. California's Sen. Dianne Feinstein, unsuccessful at excluding bloggers from the bill, now wants an amendment excluding Wikileaks.

NLRB rules that union ‘bannering’ is permitted under labor laws

National Labor Relations Board - 03 Sep 2010

The National Labor Relations Board has ruled that a union practice of displaying large stationary banners at a secondary employer’s business is not coercive, and so does not violate U.S. labor law. The decision was issued in three Arizona cases in which union carpenters held 16-foot-long banners near establishments to protest work being performed for the owners of the establishments by construction contractors that the union claimed paid substandard wages and benefits.

Investigative Shortfall

Mary Walton - American Journalism Review - 03 Sep 2010

Kicked out, bought out or barely hanging on, investigative reporters are a vanishing species in the forests of dead tree media and missing in action on Action News. I-Teams are shrinking or, more often, disappearing altogether. Assigned to cover multiple beats, multitasking backpacking reporters no longer have time to sniff out hidden stories, much less write them. In Washington, bureaus that once did probes have shrunk, closed and consolidated.


Rogers' cartoon for Monday, Aug. 30.

Nation’s Only Black Staff Editorial Cartoonist Laid Off at ‘South Bend Tribune’

Rob Tornoe - Editor & Publisher - 03 Sep 2010

Ron Rogers -- who is believed to be the only African American working full-time as an editorial cartoonist at a daily newspaper --is losing his job at the South Bend Tribune. Rogers will draw his last cartoon for the Tribune on Friday. "I wanted to be the first black editorial cartoonist on the country since I was 14," Rogers said. "I just hope my departure doesn’t discourage somebody else who might want to do this."

Pain Dealer

Cleveland's daily deserves credit for shaking off a legacy of lethargy, stirring the town to outrage and helping to change a government run amok.

Michael D. Roberts - Cleveland Magazine - 03 Sep 2010

Over the years, I've criticized the PD, mostly because I once worked there and knew it could be better. But I've grown to appreciate its pluck, especially its reporting on the worst public corruption case in Cleveland's history. Despite its uncertain future, dwindling staff and shrinking ad revenues, the PD has stirred the community to outrage and played a key role in changing a 200-year-old county government -- thanks to new leadership without any binding ties to the city.


Tough words from the Rough Rider.

Century Later, Teddy Roosevelt’s Speech on Corporate Power

Chuck Collins and Sam Pizzigati - AlterNet - 02 Sep 2010

Ex-Presidents almost always follow a small number of well-worn scripts. Some rush to cash in on their celebrity. Some do charitable good deeds. Some just lay low. Exactly one century ago, on August 31, 1910, we had an ex-President who took a brash and bold leap that took him far beyond these narrowly circumscribed roles. On that day, in the middle of Middle America, Theodore Roosevelt essentially called on his fellow citizens to smash the nation’s rich down to democratic size.

Analyst: Paywall Subscribers Worth A Quarter Of Print Readers

Robert Andrews - paidContent.org - 02 Sep 2010

Even if newspapers migrate every print reader to paying online, they will still face big losses, according to one analyst. Annual income per paywall subscriber on TheTimes.co.uk and WSJ.com is just a quarter that from subscribers to UK quality dailies’ print editions, he concludes, while switching off the presses might save newspapers 25% of their total costs -- which is not enough to make up the gap from the smaller online income.

Has Rupert Murdoch's paywall gamble paid off?

Ian Burrell - The Independent - 02 Sep 2010

As the fugitive businessman Asil Nadir flew back to Britain from his North Cyprus bolt-hole last week, Sean O'Neill, the crime editor of The Times, scooped Fleet Street by being the only print journalist on the plane. Yet those searching Google for the latest on the breaking story that morning would have found no sign of O'Neill's exclusive -- only follow-up stories by rival news organizations such as The Guardian and ITN

Stop killings of Honduran journalists

Editorial - Miami Herald - 02 Sep 2010

Honduran radio reporter Israel Zelaya Díaz was found dead Tuesday night on the side of a rural road in San Pedro Sula, making him at least the eighth journalist killed in that country this year. If past killings are any guide, his murder will go unsolved -- a pattern that suggests a deeper breakdown of law and order, undermining Honduras' desire to put last year's political violence behind it.

Next big thing? TV-newspaper staff mergers

Alan D. Mutter - Reflections of a Newsosaur - 02 Sep 2010

Newspaper and TV newsroom mergers could become the next big thing as profit-pressed publishers and broadcasters seek to cut costs and strengthen their digital presence. But will hybrid newsrooms live up the promises of producing better journalism? The performance of the longest-running major newsroom merger -- the combination 10 years ago of the Tampa Tribune and WFLA -- is far from encouraging.

Board majority finds union’s annual renewal requirement for dues objectors was unlawful

National Labor Relations Board - 02 Sep 2010

The National Labor Relations Board has ruled that a union violated its duty of fair representation in requiring nonmember dues objectors to restate their position every year, despite their express desire to have the objection continue from year to year. The ruling grew out of a case in which a union member had informed his union that he wished his objection to continue indefinitely; the union responded that all dues objections had to be restated annually.

Newspapers’ sale deadline extended for 2 weeks

Christopher K. Hepp - Philadelphia Inquirer - 01 Sep 2010

The formal sale date of The Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News has been extended for two weeks to permit the prospective new owners more time to resolve contract issues with five unions. The closing deadline for the sale had been today, but Chief Bankruptcy Judge Stephen Raslavich extended it until noon Sept. 14 at the request of Philadelphia Media Network Inc., a collection of 16 financial institutions that bought The Inquirer, the Daily News, and the website Philly.com.

Media Manipulates the 'End' of the War in Iraq

Michael Corcoran - truthout - 01 Sep 2010

Sadly, it is not merely the president and others who have a political motive for perpetuating the myth that the United States has ended our national nightmare in Iraq. More troubling has been the performance of the mainstream media, which, in print and on television, have been witting pawns in this massive deception, reporting on the war as if it were truly over, celebrating this historical moment and ignoring crucial details.

Poster Boy for Debt No More, GateHouse Media Gets Rating Upgrade

Mark Fitzgerald - Editor & Publisher - 01 Sep 2010

GateHouse Media, which took on heavy debt to fund a newspaper buying binge just as the industry was about to tumble into its worst-ever recession, received something Tuesday that would have seemed extremely unlikely just last year: a ratings upgrade from Moody’s Investors Service. Moody’s upgraded GateHouse’s “probability of default rating” to Caa3 from Ca which while an improvement is not exactly a ringing endorsement.

Bankruptcy Court Appoints Mediator for Tribune's Talks with Creditors

Editor & Publisher - 01 Sep 2010

The court overseeing Tribune Co.'s increasingly contentious 19-month bankruptcy case appointed a mediator Wednesday to assist in the Chicago media giant's talks with its various creditors. U.S. Bankrtupcy Judge Kevin Gross was named mediator for the tangled talks.

The Read and the Black

Why are Latin American democracies suddenly attacking the free press?

Mac Margolis - Newsweek - 01 Sep 2010

Here’s a puzzler. Latin America has never been more democratic: of 34 nations in Central and South America and the Caribbean, all except one (Cuba) are constitutional democracies, with laws guaranteeing open elections, independent courts, legislatures, and freedom of expression. So why do so many governments still trample on citizens’ rights, bully journalists, harass private business, and generally lord over hearth and home?


iPad Dailies: Ripe For Innovation

Richard MacManus - ReadWriteWeb - 01 Sep 2010

All of the major western newspapers have an iPad app now: the New York Times, Wall St Journal, Guardian, USA Today, Financial Times, and others. There are also new forms of news services that have arisen based solely on the iPad's touchscreen interaction and multimedia capabilities: Newsy and Flipboard come to mind. In this post we'll look at how some of the leading newspapers are using iPad, what the user experience is like, and what could be improved still.


Michael Eisner

Michael Eisner Close to Tribune Co. Takeover

Dominic Patten - TheWrap - 01 Sep 2010

Michael Eisner is ready to cross the finish line. An announcement on the former Disney CEO becoming the chairman of the Tribune Co. is imminent, a person familiar with the talks has told TheWrap. "Right now, it’s going to be Eisner,” the person said. "The lenders are going to try to take the company. It's the only way they are going to get some of their money. But they're not ready yet."

Rupert Murdoch's pay falls by 6% to £10.9m as British newspapers suffer

Andrew Clark - The Guardian - 01 Sep 2010

While Rupert Murdoch's newspapers laid off journalists and fought their way through a global advertising recession, the Australian-born media mogul endured a modest degree of personal belt-tightening: his take-home pay dropped by 6%, to $16.8m. Although still a hefty sum, Murdoch's annual pay packet was his smallest since 2003. The 79-year-old billionaire's salary was unchanged at $8.1m, but his performance-related bonus fell 20%, to $4.4m.

No holiday for labor unions

Katrina vanden Heuvel - Washington Post - 01 Sep 2010

For all of their flaws, unions give voice to workers, and not just their members. Their "small d" democratic strength is a vital counter to the special-interest big money that has so distorted our politics. And their revival is central to building a new foundation for this economy, one that will ensure that it works once more for working people.

Trying to exclude WikiLeaks from shield law stinks

Douglas Lee - First Amendment Center Online - 01 Sep 2010

One of the odors emanating from Washington, D.C., these days is from journalists marking their territory. It doesn't seem all that long ago that representatives of the newspaper industry would have recoiled from working with Congress to deny legal protection to anyone who leaked confidential or classified documents. Today, however, they seem happy to be doing so.

Teamsters', machinists' contract rejections hold up closing of newspaper deal

Bob Warner - Philadelphia Daily News - 31 Aug 2010

Stephen Raslavich, the federal bankruptcy judge trying to shepherd the Daily News and Inquirer to new ownership, met for three hours yesterday with lawyers, union representatives and business executives, but the parties emerged from the private discussions with little to say about the newspapers' immediate future. Today is the scheduled closing date for a deal that would turn over the papers and their Web site, Philly.com, to a new company called Philadelphia Media Network.

Star Tribune asks court to block grievances

David Phelps - Minneapolis Star Tribune - 31 Aug 2010

The Star Tribune went back to U.S. Bankruptcy Court on Monday seeking an injunction to prevent its mailers union from filing grievances at odds with the union's existing contract agreement with the company. The company said in a court filing that Teamsters Local 120 has filed more than 50 grievances that "seek to undo the very core" of the 2009 agreement that cut production costs by more than $3.3 million as part of the newspaper's bankruptcy reorganization plan.

Local news rivals doom publisher pay walls

Alan D. Mutter - Reflections of a Newsosaur - 31 Aug 2010

While newspaper executives have agonized for the better part of two years about whether to charge for their costly content, every indication is that portals, local broadcasters and other media companies have no intention of asking anyone to pay for access to their increasingly ambitious local sites. And that means newspapers simply won’t be able to charge for access -- especially when their own stories are likely to become freely available within minutes at competing sites.

Not on His Watch, USA Today Founder Says

Jeremy W. Peters - New York Times - 31 Aug 2010

Allen H. Neuharth, 86, the former Gannett executive who founded USA Today nearly 30 years ago, had some tart words for the people now in charge of his beloved paper. When USA Today wrapped its front section in an advertisement for a Jeep last month, obscuring the entire front page, Mr. Neuharth fired off an angry letter to the paper’s publisher, David L. Hunke. He called it “the low point in any decision any USA Today publisher has ever made.”


In the Tax Debate: A Blast of Fresh New Air

Sam Pizzigati - Too Much - 31 Aug 2010

Until this summer, no national pundit -- at least no pundit in good standing with the chattering class -- would ever dare suggest a federal tax rate on America's top income bracket higher than 39.6%, the level in place under Bill Clinton. Now pundits and the policy wonks who hover around them are openly singing the praises of top tax rates calibrated at 50 or 60 or even 70%, a level that would double the current 35% rate on top-bracket income.

As Schaumber Leaves, NLRB Drops From Five To Four Members

Marcia Coyle - Legal Times - 31 Aug 2010

The National Labor Relations Board, plagued by years of vacancies, enjoyed just a brief two months at full strength this summer before losing another member with the departure last week of Peter Schaumber. Schaumber's second term on the board expired Aug. 27. The board's membership now drops from five to four: three Democrats and one Republican.

Pressmen reject Philadelphia newspapers' contract offer

Christopher K. Hepp - Philadelphia Inquirer - 31 Aug 2010

Another newspaper union, representing pressmen, voted overwhelmingly Monday against a contract offer from the prospective new owners of The Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News. The pressmen voted, 74-9, to turn down the offer, joining the newspapers' drivers and machinists in rejecting tentative contracts negotiated with Philadelphia Media Network Inc.

Internships: indentured servitude or worthy right of passage?

Matthew Claudel - Yale Daily News - 30 Aug 2010

Loath to “waste” a summer, hundreds of us join the throngs of college students nationwide who find internships during their time off. While some are formal, established programs with corporate gyms and company cars, others are tossed together by an office manager and shaped by the intern’s personal input. Internships in journalism, it turns out, are either the chance of a lifetime or slave labor.

U.S. should shield all its journalists

Editorial - Modesto Bee - 30 Aug 2010

By protecting journalists and sources from government intimidation, prosecution and incarceration, passage of the Free Flow of Information Act would further protect the rights established in the First Amendment and ensure transparency in government at all levels. These protections should be the law of the land -- all of it, not just of individual states.

No New Reorganization Plan as Tribune Co. Continues Talks With Creditors

Randall Chase - Associated Press - 30 Aug 2010

Tribune Co. backed off its threat to file a take-it-or-leave-it reorganization plan for its emergence from Chapter 11 Friday, saying in a memo to employees it would continue negotiations with its creditors. “Given the ongoing nature of those discussions, we have decided not to file any amendments to our plan at the present time,” Tribune CEO Randy Michaels wrote. “We'll continue to keep you aware of developments in the Chapter 11 process as we go forward.”

Internet wiping out printed Oxford Dictionary

Sylvia Hui - Associated Press - 30 Aug 2010

It's been in print for over a century, but in future the Oxford English Dictionary -- the authoritative guide to the English language -- may only be available online. Publisher Oxford University Press said Sunday that burgeoning demand for the dictionary's online version has far outpaced demand for the printed versions. By the time the lexicographers behind the dictionary finished revising and updating the latest edition -- a gargantuan task that will take many more years -- publishers are doubtful there will still be a market for the printed form.

Kingston paper plans production move to Troy; 58 jobs at stake

By Jeremiah Horrigan - Times Herald-Record - 30 Aug 2010

The Daily Freeman in Kingston is planning to close its print production facility and move its operation to Troy. The plan, which Publisher Ira Fusfeld called "tentative," would mean the loss of nine full-time and 49 part-time jobs in the press and mailrooms. Newspaper Guild President Patricia Doxsey, while acknowledging that the paper had the right to move its production operation, deplored its effects. "Not only will this be detrimental to the people in those jobs, but it's a slap in the face to our very loyal readers," said Newspaper Guild President Patricia Doxsey.


Hashmeya Muhsin, head of the electrical workers.

Is the U.S. Pulling the Plug on Iraqi Workers?

David Bacon - truthout - 30 Aug 2010

The Iraqi government, while seemingly paralyzed on many fronts, has unleashed a wave of actions against the country's unions that is taking Iraq back to Saddam Hussein's era. The Maliki government has issued arrest warrants for oil union leaders and transferred that union's officers to worksites hundreds of miles from home, prohibited union activity in the oil fields, ports and refineries, forbade unions from collecting dues or opening bank accounts, and even kept leaders from leaving the country.

Google, AP Reach New Deal on Licensing Rights

Associated Press - 30 Aug 2010

Google and The Associated Press have struck a new licensing deal that will allow Google to continue posting the news cooperative's content. The AP said in a statement Monday that the two companies also will work together in ways to improve discovery and distribution of news. Financial terms and the duration of the contract were not disclosed.

Newspaper drivers reject tentative contract

Christopher K. Hepp - Philadelphia Inquirer - 30 Aug 2010

The drivers who deliver The Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News voted overwhelmingly Sunday to reject a tentative contract agreement reached between their union, Teamsters Local 628, and Philadelphia Media Network, the newspapers' new owner. The no vote -- 182-3 -- was a setback for Philadelphia Media Network, which is trying to reach contract agreements with 14 unions by Tuesday, when it is scheduled to bring the company out of bankruptcy.

Tribune Co. creditors court Michael Eisner and Jeff Shell for top jobs

Dawn C. Chmielewski, Michael Oneal and Sallie Hofmeister - Los Angeles Times - 26 Aug 2010

Former Walt Disney Co. Chief Executive Michael D. Eisner is in discussions that could lead to his return to the media spotlight – as chairman of the now-bankrupt Tribune Co. Eisner, who has been dabbling in the digital world as an investor since stepping down from Disney in 2005, is among the candidates under consideration to replace Chicago real estate magnate Sam Zell as chairman of the reorganized company.

"To the Editor: Obama Is a Muslim"

Standards Vary on How to Handle Readers' Assertions

Richard Prince - Journal-isms - 26 Aug 2010

If President Obama is not a Muslim, why do some newspapers publish letters to the editor claiming that he is? Michael Landauer of the Dallas Morning News, assistant editorial page editor for reader engagement, asked his colleagues for advice on that point after receiving six letters from people saying they believe Obama is a Muslim. "Is this a matter of opinion? Or is it a fact that people have wrong? (We do not knowingly print factual errors, of course.) . . ."

The life of a freelance biz reporter, a/k/a getting your life back

Talking Biz News - 26 Aug 2010

When Heidi N. Moore decided to strike out on her own as a freelancer, one unexpected task was to reassure her friends. "What surprised me at first was that a lot of my colleagues or people I knew were astounded and terrified by the idea of my completely going outside the newsroom system and freelancing; financial journalists are better paid than other journalists and tend to value security. I was the one making a change, but they were scared of the move."



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