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Op-Ed: How the Senate Will Decide the Fate of Local News

Front page of the latest edition of the Norwood News
Photo by Norwood News

The Senate is now deciding the fate of local news.

 

As part of the Build Back Better Act, the Senate is, in the next few days, considering an important proposal: providing a payroll tax credit to local news organizations to retain or hire local journalists.

 

Why? Local news is in a deep crisis. The Internet has fundamentally broken the business model of local newspapers. The number of reporters has dropped by more than half since 2000.

 

There are at least 1,800 total “news deserts,” with no local newspapers at all, and thousands more have “ghost newspapers” that have been so gutted that they barely cover the community.

 

This is having catastrophic consequences. In communities of color, especially, misinformation about COVID has cost lives. The only way to combat misinformation is with trusted, accurate information.

 

Studies have shown that when local news declines, communities have more corruption, more waste, lower voting and even lower bond ratings. It cripples the community’s ability to solve their own problems.

 

It also helps foster division and polarization. The vacuums that have been created have been increasingly filled by misinformation, national cable news and fake local news sites.

 

Without government help, we can expect hundreds more newspapers to close in the next year and probably about 500 in the next five years.

 

This is a thoroughly nonpartisan, bipartisan issue. In fact, the communities harmed are disproportionately Republican.

 

No journalist loves the idea of the government helping out. The crisis has become so existential that temporary measures like this are necessary, and this particular provision is  shrewdly constructed to avoid First Amendment problems. It’s a tax credit to all those that cover communities; there’s no federal bureaucracy dispensing grants to local newsrooms that the president likes. It’s content neutral, and would benefit newspapers, TV stations, websites and public radio for their community coverage.

 

The cost is miniscule compared to the rest of this bill – less than 0.1 percent of the total, but it’s the only thing in the bill that would help save democracy.

 

Please urge Senator Schumer and your state’s senator to support this nonpartisan provision to help save local news.

 

Steve Waldman is chair of the Rebuild Local News Coalition and co-founder of Report for America

 

 

Welcome to the Norwood News, a bi-weekly community newspaper that primarily serves the northwest Bronx communities of Norwood, Bedford Park, Fordham and University Heights. Through our Breaking Bronx blog, we focus on news and information for those neighborhoods, but aim to cover as much Bronx-related news as possible. Founded in 1988 by Mosholu Preservation Corporation, a not-for-profit affiliate of Montefiore Medical Center, the Norwood News began as a monthly and grew to a bi-weekly in 1994. In September 2003 the paper expanded to cover University Heights and now covers all the neighborhoods of Community District 7. The Norwood News exists to foster communication among citizens and organizations and to be a tool for neighborhood development efforts. The Norwood News runs the Bronx Youth Journalism Heard, a journalism training program for Bronx high school students. As you navigate this website, please let us know if you discover any glitches or if you have any suggestions. We’d love to hear from you. You can send e-mails to norwoodnews@norwoodnews.org or call us anytime (718) 324-4998.

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