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RECENT LOCAL NEWS
SJ Layoff and Buyout Information
California Media Workers Guild - 16 Jul 2009
  Len Vaughn Lahman |
Former Mercury News photographer Len Vaughn-Lahman dies at 55
Patrick May - The San Jose Mercury News - 11 Jul 2009
He was a sweet-souled bear of a man, a globe-trotting photojournalist who infused his work with heart and true grit. And whenever former Mercury News photographer Len Vaughn-Lahman rolled off on assignment, he'd bring back not only the perfect photo, but stories that were as much a part of him as what he had seen through the lens.
BULLETIN
Layoffs in the East Bay
California Media Workers Guild - 04 Jul 2009
The Guild has been trying to answer the many questions regarding the upcoming editorial work reduction in the BANG-EB unit. Executive Editor Kevin Keane sent out answers to many of them yesterday afternoon. Instead of replicating them, the information is posted below.
There are also additional questions we have asked the company. We asked how many guild positions are among these 18. The company was checking, but an early answer was that it will probably depend on how many volunteers there are. If you volunteer, you will qualify for unemployment insurance. The company said it will not challenge claims, as it has done in the past.
Guild scholarships
California Media Workers Guild - 28 Jun 2009
If you're a Guild member, and your dependent child is starting college in the fall, he or she may qualify for $500 scholarship from the union. Check out the flyer and application.
PRESIDENT'S VIEW
Tough times in Guild land
Finding glimmers of hope in frontline workers
Michael Cabanatuan - Media Workers Guild - 20 Jun 2009
At the Guild convention in Washington, I was part of a panel that reviewed recent concessionary bargaining situations, and it was my job to recount the brutal round of talks this spring at the San Francisco Chronicle. We made a difficult decision in the best interest of the majority of our Guild colleagues. I'm proud of
that decision, and proud of our members at the Chronicle, as well as
those at the Sacramento and Modesto Bees, who made similar sacrifices.
Mercury News 2009 Contract
- 16 Jun 2009
News workers offered path to skills upgrade
Everybody: Take the survey! MediaNews workers: a deal for you
Media Workers Guild - 07 Jun 2009
As Bay Area newspapers cut hundreds of jobs, skill training programs are springing up to help out-of-work print journalists find new jobs -- and help current members at MediaNews papers increase their prospects while they still have jobs. A survey and special scholarships are in the works -- and here are early details.
REBEL GIRL
Steffens to focus on her other family for a while
- 07 Jun 2009
Sara Steffens stepped aside Saturday as East Bay unit chair. She was presented a framed poster of "Rebel Girl," commemorating the famous Wobbly lyric written by Joe Hill about Elizabeth Gurley Flynn in service of the "One Big Union," which provided inspiration for the "One Big BANG: One Guild Universe" organizing drive that led to the founding of the East Bay unit in 2008.
CAREERS IN FLUX
  Luther Jackson |
How to get free multimedia training
New consortium aims to help 100-200 news workers
Media Workers Guild - 04 Jun 2009
Guild members are welcome at a June 17 job forum in the South Bay that will include a career coach, resume-writing help and other resources. Also, former San Jose Guild leader Luther Jackson, now a consultant, is leading a survey as part of an exciting new multi-media training project for unemployed Guild members looking to gain new skills.
Details of the San Jose settlement
California Media Workers - 28 May 2009
Here are some details of the new contract your bargaining committee negotiated with the company. As you know, it is a difficult period in the newspaper industry and the country. This contract settlement represents our best efforts at protecting workers, jobs and quality at the Mercury News.
Contract ratification meeting
California Media Workers - 28 May 2009
TA reached with Mercury News
California Media Workers Guild - 26 May 2009
The San Jose bargaining committee and representatives of the Mercury News have come to a tentative agreement on a new 18-month contract. Lead negotiator Darren Carroll will be verifying details of the deal with the company's representatives.
  Luther Jackson |
Life after journalism
Linda Thomas - The Seattle P-I - 23 May 2009
Most journalists don't fall into their profession by accident. It's a calling. It's a passion. It's an obsession. It's the best job anywhere. Journalists aren't accidentally falling out of their profession either. They're laid off. They're bought out. Their papers close. There are fewer jobs everywhere.
  Delfin Vigil |
He took the money -- but won't run
A 'farewell-for-now' note from Del Vigil
Delfin Vigil - California Media Workers - 20 May 2009
Former Chronicle Staff Writer Delfin Vigil took out an ad in the Fri., March 5, San Francisco Examiner to publish an essay headined, "Chronicle In Ruins." He was laid off in the recent job reductions. He sent us the following "farewell for now" note.
BANG-EB: THE GUILD UPDATE
East Bay unit officer elections June 6 in Oakland
As summer approaches, a new Guild season awaits
Media Workers Guild - 13 May 2009
Meeting date change: Because of the holiday-related switch in EC/RA meeting plans, our BANG-EB meeting moved, too. Now, plan on June 6, 11 a.m., in Oakland to elect unit officers and hear about negotiations.
BARGAINING BULLETIN
East Bay contract 90% complete
Core issues left include right to bargain on pay
Media Workers Guild - 13 May 2009
Guild negotiators met Tuesday with Bay Area News Group-East Bay management to continue our push toward a first contract. Tentative agreements were reached on union membership and dues deduction policies, as well as a preamble that emphasizes cooperative effort to advance the twin goals of editorial quality and business efficiency.
Hellman has 2-month timeline to create business model for news
Chris Rauber - S.F. Business Times - 08 May 2009
Noted San Francisco financier Warren Hellman said in a statement Friday that he and "a team of business and media experts" are, as rumored in recent weeks, working on a plan to develop a new, sustainable model for community journalism in San Francisco and the Bay Area, given the intense pressures on daily papers, including the San Francisco Chronicle.
Mercury News Bargaining Bulletin 16
Mediator keeps talks in confidence
California Media Workers - 07 May 2009
Representatives of the Guild and the Mercury News met today and had a serious discussion about pay cuts, jurisdiction and consolidation. At the direction of federal mediator David Weinberg, details of the current negotiations will remain in the confidence of the bargaining committee until we get more information from the company.
CHRONICLE UNIT BULLETIN
Hearst puts hatchet away at least until May
Media Workers Guild - 22 Apr 2009
Management has told us that there would be no announced layoffs this Friday and that any layoff announcement would be "most likely sometime in May." No other details were given.
Mercury News Bargaining Bulletin 15
Hopes rise for May contract
But pay may fall -- and some jobs move to East Bay
Media Workers Guild - 22 Apr 2009
Guild and Mercury News negotiators on Tuesday traded proposals, and both sides expressed hope for a collective bargaining settlement in early May. Company officials dropped several demands, including removing advertising sales representatives from the bargaining unit and seeking a 40-hour work week. But the company made clear its need to find significant permanent savings to ensure the newspaper survives.
BARGAINING BULLETIN
Nailbiting time in East Bay talks
Progress after three days of talks -- focus shifts to Merc
Media Workers Guild - 16 Apr 2009
Three days of intensive negotiations in Pleasanton have produced significant
progress toward a first contract for the Bay Area News Group-East Bay Guild
unit. We have not yet reached our goal of a comprehensive labor agreement, which
will be subject to a ratification vote by our membership. But discussions
between the BANG-EB bargaining committee and management resolved a number of
critical areas, including severance, management rights, overtime provisions,
flexible schedules and subcontracting.
Eugene Bryant, longtime union leader, dies of cancer
Mary Anne Ostrom - The Mercury News - 15 Apr 2009
When Eugene Bryant Jr. went in to battle for his troops, the newspaper labor negotiator came prepared with his arsenal of facts and held his ground firmly. But the burly former college football player never raised his voice.
Chronicle, Teamsters agree on job cuts
The San Francisco Chronicle - 15 Apr 2009
The approximately 235 Chronicle drivers represented by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 853, are scheduled to vote Sunday on what was presented as the company's final offer, said Rome Aloise, the local's secretary-treasurer.
San Francisco Chronicle reaches tentative deal with Teamsters
Chris Rauber - San Francisco Business Times - 14 Apr 2009
The San Francisco Chronicle, under the gun by owner Hearst Corp. to slash expenses, has reached a tentative deal with a second union to do just that, according to a report Tuesday by Bloomberg.
OBITUARY
  Gene Bryant |
Eugene S. Bryant
Frank Sweeney, Secretary Treasurer, retired - San Jose Newspaper Guild - 13 Apr 2009
When Gene Bryant retired as an international representative for The Newspaper Guild in 1995, he made sure that he owed the union a week’s work for the final salary he collected. Months later, he came back to lend a hand in the final drive to another contract between the Guild and the San Jose Mercury News.
Eugene S. Bryant box
- 13 Apr 2009
OBITUARY
  Gene Bryant |
Remembrance of Gene Bryant set April 18
Longtime Guild rep for San Jose and TNG
TNG-Media Workers Guild - 08 Apr 2009
A remembrance of the life of Gene Bryant will be held Saturday, April 18, at 11 a.m. at the Dunsmuir Estate and Gardens at 2960 Peralta Oaks Court, Oakland, east of I-580 near the Oakland/San Leandro city lines. Mr. Bryant, a veteran Bay Area Guild leader and international representative, died March 30 at the age of 76. He had suffered from leukemia.
Mercury News Bargaining Bulletin 14
Merc management proposes two-tiered salary structure
Media Workers Guild - 01 Apr 2009
The Mercury News on Wednesday expanded its wage concession proposal. In addition to seeking a 15 percent across-the-board wage cut for current employees, the company proposed that all future employees would come in at substantially lower salaries.
The proposal came at a session where the Guild was expecting a long-awaited company proposal on revamping advertising commissions.
Newspaper Guild-CWA representative Darren Carroll, the Guild's chief negotiator, told the company negotiators, "We're very confused about the message you intended to send," saying the introduction of a two-tiered salary structure would disrupt the parties' effort to quickly reach a new collective bargaining agreement.
  Former P-I reporters fuel SeattleBulldog.org news site with allies in public TV |
Print refugees building a new home
Public broadcasters expanding mission
Dru Sefton - Current - 01 Apr 2009
Groundbreaking collaborations are beginning to surface as public broadcasting stations partner with laid-off print journalists to bolster multiplatform local and regional reporting. Though future business models and financial relationships remain undefined, pubcasters and newspaper journalists are finding that their missions mesh nicely.
BARGAINING BULLETIN
East Bay team hones contract proposal
A push is on to reach agreement by May Day
Media Workers Guild - 01 Apr 2009
Guild negotiators presented a revised comprehensive contract proposal to management Tuesday. The proposal emphasizes a minimum weekly pay rate of $800 for most editorial employees including reporters, photographers and copy editors, $15.20 an hour for support staff (editorial assistants), and guaranteed severance in the event of layoff. Guild bargainers hope to conclude negotiations by May 1. Three more full days of negotiating are scheduled to begin April 13.
Mercury News Bargaining Bulletin 13
Short session in San Jose
Talks yield no new agreements
Media Workers Guild - 30 Mar 2009
The San Jose negotiating team and the Mercury News met for a short session this afternoon. The MN offered a partial response to the Guild's proposal on cost reductions, but no tentative agreements were made.
No justice from NLRB in East Bay layoffs
MediaNews had 'business considerations' to ax Steffens
Media Workers Guild - 29 Mar 2009
Our last-chance appeal for justice in the July 2008 BANG-East Bay layoff case was snuffed last week. The NLRB saw no grounds to resuscitate unfair labor practice charges, accepting the employer's defense that it had "a legitimate business reason" for laying off Sara Steffens, Rebecca Rosen Lum and Geoff Lepper. They were most prominent among 29 Bay Area News Group-East Bay workers who lost their jobs after a hard-fought union campaign.
  Peter Sussman |
Confessions of a cyberscab
Peter Y. Sussman - SFGate.com - 27 Mar 2009
The invitation to join SFGate's new corps of bloggers called City Brights offers the opportunity to reach a substantial audience, a prospect no journalist or professional writer turns down easily. But it carries troubling implications. Blogging for free for a news business that has just announced plans to lay off or buy out scores of paid staff journalists feels uncomfortably like scabbing.
Mercury News Bargaining Bulletin 12
Guild offers comprehensive package
Media Workers Guild - 27 Mar 2009
The San Jose bargaining committee and the Mercury News resumed expedited negotiations Thursday for a new labor agreement, exchanging proposals that addressed jurisdiction, outsourcing and compensation. Guild negotiators offered a comprehensive package that outlined cost-reduction measures designed to meet the company's goal of reducing $1.5 million in annual expenses. The Guild proposals protect current pay scales, phase in health-care premium increases, preserve jobs and work in core areas, increase severance for those laid off due to outsourcing, and provide for experimentation with novel pay plans in advertising.
  Host Rose Aguilar queried Guild militant Del Vigil |
SPJ's Chronicle gabfest on the radio Friday
SFGTV - 26 Mar 2009
KALW-FM 91.7 will air "A Conversation About the Chronicle" this Friday March 27 at 7 pm. A panel of 15 news types, academics, media "innovators" and one Media Workers rep were questioned by KALW's Rose Aguilar. The event was sponsored by the Northern California Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. Full video coverage
KPFA radio report on the SPJ event
Mercury News Bargaining Bulletin 11
No deal reached in MediaNews Guild unit merger talks
BANG-EB and Mercury News to seek separate contracts
Media Workers Guild - 24 Mar 2009
Bargaining committees representing the two largest MediaNews Group Guild units in the Bay Area will resume expedited negotiations for individual contracts after talks about a proposed merger of the units failed to produce an agreement Monday.
Mercury News Bargaining Bulletin 10
Guild bargaining team meets with federal mediator
- 24 Mar 2009
Guild bargaining teams met Tuesday with company representatives and agreed to meet with a federal mediator to explore the possibility of creating a merged unit including the existing BANG-EB and San Jose Mercury News guild units.
BARGAINING BULLETIN
No deal reached for MediaNews Guild unit merger
BANG-East Bay and Merc to resume separate contract talks
Media Workers Guild - 24 Mar 2009
Bargaining committees representing the two largest MediaNews Group Guild units in the Bay Area will resume expedited negotiations for individual contracts after talks about a proposed merger of the units failed to produce an agreement Monday. A meeting of the Guild and management committees was held Monday with David Weinberg, a federal mediator with the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service.
San Diego daily sold to private equity firm
Union-Tribune sale ends 80-year run for Copley
Thomas Kupper - SignOnSanDiego.com - 18 Mar 2009
The parent company of The San Diego Union-Tribune announced Wednesday that it has reached an agreement to sell the newspaper to the Beverly Hills private equity firm Platinum Equity for an undisclosed price. La Jolla-based The Copley Press Inc. had been seeking a buyer since July 2008, when it hired investment bankers to explore “strategic options” amid a nationwide decline in newspaper advertising and circulation.
P-I offered reporting, Chronicle served flackery
David Cay Johnston - Columbia Journalism Review - 17 Mar 2009
Under editor Ward Bushee Jr., the San Francisco Chronicle has provided little actual news reporting about its prospects for dissolution unless its unions agree to drastic job cuts and givebacks for those who remain on the payroll. Mostly, Bushee gave Chronicle readers unsigned "staff reports" -- actually rewritten Hearst press releases.
Chronicle Guild braces for devastating job cuts
KALW-FM Cross Currents - 16 Mar 2009
After the Hearst Corp. threatened to put the Chronicle on the market the California Media Workers Guild voted by an overwhelming margin to eliminate seniority protections against layoffs. Hearst now threatens to cut 150 or more jobs, vs. 225 had there been no deal. Either way, the impact will be devastating... and raises some big questions. Podcast
FUTURE OF NEWSPAPERS
Knight Foundation spending millions to reshape journalism
Experiments in a period of transition
Daniel Chang - Miami Herald - 16 Mar 2009
Brothers John S. and James L. Knight were media titans in the era of upright typewriters and gray fedoras -- publishing newspapers, including The Miami Herald, in more than two dozen communities. Now, their Miami-based charity, the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, is underwriting an ambitious effort to shape journalism in the digital age, through a five-year, $25 million initiative called the Knight News Challenge.
BARGAINING BULLETIN
Chronicle Guild ratifies contract changes
Now, a search for real solutions
Media Workers Guild - 14 Mar 2009
Members of the San Francisco Chronicle Unit voted today by a 10-to-1 margin in favor of ratifying proposed amendments to the collective bargaining agreement designed to help avoid sale or closure of the newspaper. The Guild Elections Committee announced that 366 members cast ballots, either in person or absentee, 333 for ratification, 33 against.
BARGAINING BULLETIN
Chronicle ratification moved to Saturday
Pension issues await answers before vote
Media Workers Guild - 11 Mar 2009
Guild negotiators announced Wednesday that tomorrow's scheduled ratification vote of proposed amendments to the Chronicle collective bargaining agreement has been moved to Saturday. Time and place will be announced shortly. Officers said the main reason for the change was to allow pension officials a chance to clarify issues surrounding early retirements, termination dates and an expected financial recovery timeline for the Chronicle pension plan. Although changes in the pension aren't part of the Chronicle labor agreement, issues are interconnected and there has been considerable confusion in our ranks which our pension lawyers are working to fix.
FAQ
Details on proposed Chronicle contract changes
Media Workers Guild - 10 Mar 2009
As most of you know, we reached a Tentative Agreement (TA) with Chronicle and Hearst management representatives Monday night. Because of the urgent need to expedite this process, there are meetings planned to go over pension questions and to discuss the Tentative Agreement and whether it should be ratified. A majority of the membership (simple majority of those who cast ballots) must approve the amendments to the contract before they can take effect. The vote will be held on Thursday night, March 12. Below you will find meeting and absentee voting information, a summary of the tentative agreement and a general Q&A.
BARGAINING UPDATE
Chronicle ratification set for Thursday
Members to debate proposed contract changes
Media Workers Guild - 10 Mar 2009
Chronicle members will meet to consider whether to ratify the proposed tentative agreement on contract amendments from 5 to 8 p.m. on Thursday, March 12. Discussion will be from 5:30-7:30 p.m. We expect to have the vote at 7:30 p.m. The meeting will be in the Cyril Magnin room, Parc 55 Hotel, 55 Cyril Magnin St., San Francisco (north from the Chronicle building on Fifth Street and across Market).
CHRONICLE BARGAINING UPDATE
Tentative agreement reached in Chronicle-Guild talks
Media Workers Guild - 09 Mar 2009
Negotiators for the Guild and the San Francisco Chronicle reached a tentative agreement Monday night on proposed changes to the collective bargaining agreement in connection with cost cuts planned by the company.
The agreement will require approval by Chronicle Unit Guild members.
A ratification meeting will be scheduled as early as Thursday of this week. Time and place will be announced on Tuesday as soon as a large enough facility can be secured.
In view of the latest terms agreed today, the Guild Negotiating Committee recommends membership approval.
BARGAINING UPDATE
Guild committee awaits Chronicle's next move
Talks continuing on Monday
Media Workers Guild - 06 Mar 2009
Chronicle Unit negotiators met today with management representatives to raise certain issues concerning the company's latest cost-cutting proposals. It appeared we made some headway in terms of narrowing our differences, but the meeting adjourned without an overall tentative agreement. The parties plan to resume the discussions on Monday.
NEWS RELEASE
Pay cuts at Bee approved to save jobs
Sacramento unit votes tough cost cutting plan
Media Workers Guild - 06 Mar 2009
Sacramento Bee newsroom and advertising employees voted Friday to accept a 6 percent wage cut for most employees, in addition to other cost cutting concessions. The vote, ratifying the company's contract proposal, saves 19 jobs that Bee managers had threatened to otherwise add to the guild-covered 34 jobs already slated for elimination.
BARGAINING UPDATE
Little progress seen in Chronicle concession talks
Members reviewing options as ultimatum looms
Media Workers Guild - 05 Mar 2009
Our bargaining committee has reached no overall agreement with the management. Nor does our committee recommend passage of the "final proposal" before us. We can only say this: No option at this point looks favorable. The proposal before us may be the "least bad" choice. In any case, we chose to put the question to our members to decide.
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