Home

About
- Who We Are
- Community Guidelines
- Right to Respond
Advertising on BOR
- Advertise on BOR
- Buy on all Texas Blogs

Advertisements

Search




Advanced Search


Follow Burnt Orange Report on Twitter (@BOR) and Facebook.

Texas newspapers share content: Capital Press Future Uncertain


by: Glenn Smith

Mon Jul 13, 2009 at 09:33 AM CDT


(Now that the Sotomayor hearings are on lunch break, I wanted to put this back atop the page. It is real, real big news for the day...until Hutchison announces her campaign totals later this afternoon. - promoted by Phillip Martin)

Texas newspaper publishers are talking about sharing their content -- outside the usual Associated Press pick-ups, sources say. The implications for the depth and breadth of state government and political news are huge. And dire.

We may have seen the first evidence of new sharing arrangements this weekend. Emily Ramshaw of the Dallas Morning news ran a story Saturday morning about the notorious private prison company, GEO Group,taking over a private psychiatric hospital in Montgomery County. The company's prisons have a history of sexual abuse, riots and suicides.

Take a look at the Houston Chronicle piece, posted at 8 p.m. Saturday.

Texas officials wary of prison company contract
Copyright 2009 Houston Chonicle
July 11, 2009, 8:00PM

Did you catch that? "Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle."

No credit to the Associated Press, the normal avenue for stories taken from other papers. Maybe this was a copydesk error. However, word is that some editors have begun briefing their staffs on the new sharing arrangements.

Sources say publishers and editors have ratcheted up their efforts to come up with news while cutting staff. Additionally, word that Austin investment guru and innovative thinker and businessman John Thornton will soon begin publishing a Texas online newspaper has these same editors and publishers worried.

By sharing content, they hope to head-off competition from a well-funded, hard-hitting, aggressive, online news source that could do in Texas what Politico or Huffington Post have done nationally.

The distance between Austin and voters is already enormous. Layoffs and shrinking space for news in the troubled newspaper industry have meant a dramatic decline in coverage of state politics and government. Chasing distracted audiences, local television affiliates for the most part gave up on state political news long ago. Fires, wrecks, murders and sex are much more salable.

How many Texans even knew there was a regular session of the Legislature this year? How many know what happened? Damn few.

The fate of the dwindling capitol press is very much in doubt. Keep in mind that these are plum jobs, or were plum jobs. Typically, only the best and most responsible journalists were given a chance at the capitol beat. Lose them -- and we've already lost many great ones -- and Texas suffers.

If newspapers are already agreeing to share content, how long before they further reduce their Austin offices?

It's impossible to overestimate the importance of a large and diverse press corps. Not too many years ago, a major event in Austin would attract eight or more cameras and a dozen or more print reporters. Those multiple perspectives were key to accurate, broad reporting. Competition among journalists kept things lively.

We are in a Dark Age of state political and government news. Maybe it's just a transition period. But state blogs -- and there are many good ones like BOR -- have nowhere near the resources, the reporting experience or the reach of newspapers and local TV affiliates. There are high hopes that Thornton and maybe others will succeed in new era publishing. But it hasn't happened yet.

I don't have much sympathy for the corporatized ownership of newspapers. Their commitment to the public's right and need to know has long played second fiddle to their bottom lines. They've rationalized, downsized, and minimized their coverage of state news for years. Texans are paying the price, and that price could get much steeper in coming months and years.

ADVERTISEMENT
Tags: , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Great post, Glenn (5.00 / 1)
I was actually doing some reading about this over the weekend. Here are a few other articles that have talked about this very problem over previous months:

Nieman Watchdog - McNeely recounts 40+ years of covering the Texas legislature

Texas Monthly - The Capitol Press Corpse

The Daily Texan - Capitol press corps adapts to technology's impact on journalism

Now, a very great man once said that some people rob you with a fountain pen.


The problem in Texas... (4.00 / 2)
Shrinking coverage of state capitol news is happening in many states. But Texas' size makes the problem much worse than many places. Maybe not Albany or Sacramento, but other capitols have seen a tremendous fall-off in state coverage.

Texas is a big place. There's a natural distance between the Capitol and the people. This makes that distance even greater.


[ Parent ]
This is true (5.00 / 1)
And its' hurting our largest newspapers the hardest:

Newspaper veteran Alan Mutter reports that the bigger the newspapers are, the more their profits decreased over the past five years. Since 2004, operating profits on average fell just over 100% at newspapers with circulation higher than 80,000. That's right. Taken all together, their losses wiped out their profits.

-- Small Newspapers May Be Able To Prolong Death Longer Than Large Counterparts

Small newspapers, meanwhile, don't have the resources or personnel to fill the void...

Now, a very great man once said that some people rob you with a fountain pen.


[ Parent ]
Nice post (5.00 / 1)
I believe this is an opportunity to reshape news/newspapers/how the public stays in the know. It's going to hurt and coverage will suffer but I am confident we can create new models of keeping the public informed.

Notice I said "we." Top down models of information sharing doesn't work anymore. I hope we grow a more participatory democracy through a different news model but that will require us, as a citizenry, to do more.

My big concern is how to keep partisan tainted coverage from expanding. FOX News has created an appetite "news with views" instead of the just the facts. The line between reporting the news and spinning an agenda is gone.  

Nature abhors a vacuum and people like John Thorton are going to step up if other don't.  


The cost of news gathering (4.00 / 2)
The presence of professional journalists -- their mere presence -- helps make democracy healthier. The costs involved in gathering the news are considerable. How much public harm is being done today by corrupt state officials the press simply doesn't have the time or resources to pursue? The sunlight is only going to dim.

I, too, think there will be new models emerge. But partisans on all sides tend to devalue the professionalism required to gather and report the news. One reason is that in the last several years -- on the national scene -- journalism has declined as journalists have become insider celebrities committed to a status quo that's lined their pockets and grown their fame. Another reason is the growing acceptability of FOX-like bias.

Here in Texas, though, we have as professional a group of reporters as exist anywhere. I don't mind seeing the corporatist model fail. I do mind the loss of professional, experienced news gatherers and reporters.


[ Parent ]
Speaking of copydesk errors (5.00 / 1)
I believe the expression is "plum jobs". Things are tough all over.

Good post Glenn. We're certainly in a period of transition, and the result is that we are more widely informed, but at a much shallower depth.
On the other hand the new media, while amateurish (no offense BOR) strikes me as just as competitive, even if the stakes are lower. Over time, some new kind of professionalism will emerge, I think (hope).


None taken (5.00 / 1)
We're proud of what we've done with a volunteer-run site, and BOR will have to continue to be that for a little while.

But some major changes to the site in the coming months will help move us even further to that area of professionalism.

Now, a very great man once said that some people rob you with a fountain pen.


[ Parent ]
Copy editor magic (5.00 / 1)
Fixed.

[ Parent ]
New payment models (5.00 / 1)
The newspapers' cost-cutting measures are a serious threat to our democracy, which depends upon an informed and engaged citizenry.

As a heavy consumer of online news, I would not be opposed to the papers moving to a micropayment model.  The means of payment would have to be very convenient and unobtrusive for it to take off, and the price would have to be right for folks, but it is something that should be explored seriously.


"Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will." -Frederick Douglass


what about issue-oriented coverage? (0.00 / 0)
Has the Capitol Press mentioned the cancellation of TPWD's excellent annual event, Wildlife Expo?

This was the nation's largest free outdoors experience.
This year the corporate sponsors didn't come through, so this year, and next year, there will be no Expo.

This is a great shame.Kids, families and the public in general will miss out on a chance to see, and participate in, a variety of outdoor activities second to none.

Can anyone find out how we became this dependent on corporations, that a state agency could be forced to cancel its own open house?


Burnt Orange Reader

Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Poll
Who would you vote for in the Democratic Primary for Ag Commission?
Kinky Friedman
Hank Gilbert

Results

Advertisement

Best of Texas Left
- (Complete Directory)
- A Capitol Blog
- As the Island Floats
- B & B
- Bay Area Houston
- Blue Bloggin
- Bluedaze
- Brains and Eggs
- Capitol Annex
- Collin County Democrats
- Collin County Observer
- Community Forum
- Dog Canyon
- Dos Centavos
- Easter Lemming Liberal
- Eye on Williamson County
- Feet to the Fire
- Greg's Opinion
- Grits for Breakfast
- Half Empty
- Houtopia
- In the Pink Texas
- Kiss My Big Blue Butt
- Letters from Texas
- McBlogger
- Mean Rachel
- Musings
- North Texas Liberal
- Off the Kuff
- Panhandle Truth Squad
- Para Justicia y Libertad!
- Pink Dome
- San Antonio Mayor
- South Texas Chisme
- StoudDemBlog
- Texas Clover Leaf
- Texas Kaos
- The Caucus Blog
- There..Already
- Three Wise Men
Best of Texas Right
- Blogs of War
- BlogHouston
- Boots and Sabers
- Lone Star Times
- Publius TX
- Rick Perry vs the World
- Safety for Dummies
- Slightly Rough
- Urban Grounds
Other Texas Reads
- Burka Blog
- D Magazine
- DOT Show
- Statesman Elections
- Strong Political Analysis
- Texas Monthly
- Texas Observer
- The Texas Blue
- Quorum Report Daily Buzz
Around Austin
- Austin Bloggers
- Austin Chronicle
- Austin Contrarian
- Austin Metblogs
- Austin on Two Wheels
- Austin Real Estate Blog
- Austin Statesman
- Austin Texas Bike Shit Stuff
- Austin Towers
- Austinist
- Capital MetroBlog
- Daily Texan
- Do512
- Downtown Austin Blog
- East Austinite
- Elise Hu
-
Flash Mob Austin
- Keep Austin Blue
- M1EK
- Travis County Democrats
- University Democrats
TX Progressive Orgs
- ACLU Legislative Blog
- Atticus Circle
- Criminal Justice Coalition
- Equality Texas
- Latinos for Texas
- NOW Texas
- PFAW Texas
- Public Citizen
- SEIU Texas
- Tejano Insider
- Texas AFT
- Texas HDCC
- Texas Watch
- TFN
- TSTA
- TSEU
- Texas Young Democrats
- United Ways of Texas
TX Elections/Returns
- TX Returns 1992-present
- TX Media/Candidate List

- Bexar County
- Collin County
- Dallas county
- Denton County
- El Paso County
- Fort Bend County
- Harris County
- Jefferson County
- Tarrant County
- Travis County

- CNN 1998 Returns
- CNN 2000 Returns
- CNN 2002 Returns
- CNN 2004 Returns
- CNN 2006 Returns
- CNN 2008 Returns
Traffic Ratings
- Alexa Rating
- Quantcast Ratings
-
Syndication

Burnt Orange Reporters
Publisher - Karl-Thomas M.
Editor-in-Chief - Matt G.
Staff Writer - David M.
Staff Writer - Katherine H.
Staff Writer - Michael H.
Staff Writer - Todd H.
Man of Mystery - Phillip M.
Founder - Byron L.

Powered by: SoapBlox