Weekend Times


Google Workspace

Business News

With 14 community newspapers due to close, too many parts of NZ are becoming ‘news deserts’

  • Written by Greg Treadwell, Senior Lecturer in Journalism, Auckland University of Technology
With 14 community newspapers due to close, too many parts of NZ are becoming ‘news deserts’

When media company NZME proposed the closure[1] of 14 community newspapers last week, the so-called “news desert[2]” encroached a little further into the local information landscape.

The term refers to those many regions in both town and country where newspapers that for generations have kept their citizens informed – and local politicians and planners (mostly) honest – have been shut down.

As a metaphor, the desert evokes a sense of arid emptiness and silence. But it also suggests a featureless place where we lose a sense of direction. Many of these papers were their community’s central or only source of verified local news.

Research[3] from the United States has shown the death of a local newspaper leaves citizens struggling for information about community events, and feeling more isolated. People worry about a loss of community pride and identity. Volunteers struggle to fill the void.

Among the NZME titles facing closure for being unprofitable is the Te Awamutu Courier[4], which has been publishing for more than a century. It and its stablemates may well soon join the 28 local papers Stuff sold or closed[5] in 2018.

Between those two headline events many other little papers have gone, financial burdens on their owners in an age of online advertising and shifting consumption habits. Those that still exist, at least the ones owned by major news publishers, are often shadows of their former selves.

The power of a local press

The effect of this trend, of course, is to remove a kind of media town square. Affected communities are left to the perils of community social media, which are not professionally moderated, can be defamatory, and which post largely unverified content.

The Te Awamutu Courier has survived more than a century.

For all the faults that come with local newspapers – and most journalists can tell you about an editor who was too vulnerable to influence, or a publisher who meddled in the newsroom – these news organisations connect their communities to their cultural, physical and human geographies.

Good ones – and there have been many – identify the social issues that unite and divide their communities, and then represent and champion their readers or play the role of moderator.

Authorities are put on notice when local coverage amplifies the complaints and demands of residents and ratepayers. When enough pressure on politicians and officials is exerted in this way, things have even been known to change.

The papers that survive now are often the ones which reinforce a strongly-felt community identity in places as diverse as the West Coast of the South Island[6], Waiheke Island[7] and Mahurangi[8].

Readers will rally behind a paper that gets behind them, and a collective voice of sorts emerges. A community’s struggles – be they over housing, employment or the environment – help define its identity, building knowledge and resilience.

A training ground for good journalism

In telling these stories, young journalists (many of whom are destined for metropolitan newsrooms later in their careers) learn how government is meant to work – and how it actually works in practice.

It’s where they learn how to report without fear or favour, how to find reliable sources, and where official information can be accessed – the nuts and bolts of journalism, in other words.

It’s also often where journalists first experience the powers of the bureaucracy and the executive. There’s nothing like a bully on a local board or a vindictive council official to help a young reporter up their game.

Of course, local politics are now often conveyed via social media in disordered, fragmented and incendiary ways. Politicians and other powerful players can reach voters directly, telling their own stories, effectively unchallenged.

Yet this persuasive power, and the prevalence of misinformation and disinformation, only underscore the need for political information to be ordered and moderated by accountable community journalists.

Digital solutions struggle

Newspapers do seem anomalous today, it’s true. Growing pine forests to share news is, frankly, quite ridiculous.

But online-only ventures in community news have largely struggled. Crux, a Central Otago site for robust community journalism since 2018, was proposed as a model for a network of regional news sites, but it has recently gone into hibernation[9].

According to its founder, journalist Peter Newport, Crux had “tried, tested and implemented every single type of digital publishing innovation”. Newport has instead taken to Substack[10], where freelancers can build paying newsletter audiences, to publish his brand of investigative community journalism.

With Google now threatening to stop promoting[11] New Zealand news content if the government goes ahead with the Fair Digital News Bargaining Bill, the plight of local papers is in danger of being overshadowed by a wider crisis. Whole television news networks have closed[12], and others are being hugely downsized.

Elsewhere, philanthropists such as the American Journalism Project[13] are recognising the risk to democracy and social unity from the loss of local news sources, and are funding attempts to restore it. As yet, however, a sustainable model has yet to rise.

In Aotearoa New Zealand, there are now calls[14] from local councils themselves to strengthen existing government support[15] for local-democracy reporting. This and more should be done. The longer we wait, the closer the news desert creeps every day.

References

  1. ^ proposed the closure (www.nzherald.co.nz)
  2. ^ news desert (www.cislm.org)
  3. ^ Research (journals.sagepub.com)
  4. ^ Te Awamutu Courier (www.nzherald.co.nz)
  5. ^ Stuff sold or closed (www.stuff.co.nz)
  6. ^ West Coast of the South Island (wpn.co.nz)
  7. ^ Waiheke Island (waihekegulfnews.co.nz)
  8. ^ Mahurangi (www.localmatters.co.nz)
  9. ^ gone into hibernation (crux.org.nz)
  10. ^ Substack (substack.com)
  11. ^ threatening to stop promoting (www.rnz.co.nz)
  12. ^ closed (www.newshub.co.nz)
  13. ^ American Journalism Project (www.theajp.org)
  14. ^ now calls (www.rnz.co.nz)
  15. ^ existing government support (www.rnz.co.nz)

Authors: Greg Treadwell, Senior Lecturer in Journalism, Auckland University of Technology

Read more https://theconversation.com/with-14-community-newspapers-due-to-close-too-many-parts-of-nz-are-becoming-news-deserts-243792

The Weekend Times Magazine

Parrtjima opens in Australia’s Red Centre

Free event in Alice Springs will lift spirits every night until 20 September Parrtjima – A Festival in Light launched last night with an incredible display of lighting installations and interactive...

What is Medicines Optimisation and Why is it Important?

Medicines optimisation is a patient-focused approach to safe and effective medication use that helps people get the best possible outcomes from their treatments. Rather than simply ensuring patients take their...

What To Look For In a Robot Pool Cleaner

Robotic pool cleaners are a stunning feat of modern technology, allowing you to keep your pools clean with minimal effort on your part. Pool cleaning and maintenance has always remained...

Why You Should Hire a Professional for Kitchen Designs

The design of a kitchen tells a lot about the residents of a house and that is why some homeowners take it seriously. If you are thinking about giving your...

Weekend getaways from Perth

You Are in Perth, Australia and You Want to Get Away for the Weekend: What Are the Options? Perth is one of the most isolated cities in the world, but that...

Understanding Root Canal Treatment – What You Need to Know

For many people, hearing the term root canal treatment brings immediate anxiety. It’s one of the most feared dental procedures, often associated with pain and discomfort. However, this perception is outdated...

5 Things You Must Do in Australia

If you are setting sights on Australia as your next holiday destination this year, then you are about to embark on a life-changing adventure. The country offers an exciting and...

The official ANZ launch of EPOS

Sydney - Following a panel discussion with Australian businessman Mark Bouris and panellists Alyce Tran, Scott Bidmead and Jahan Sheikh from Microsoft EPOS was launched. Attendees experienced...

Dentists in Sydney: Your Guide to Dental Care

Sydney, Australia is home to the absolute best dental experts in the country. With a different range of services and specialties, dental specialists in Sydney take care of different needs...