Posts Tagged ‘media layoffs’

Poll: do ‘one-man-bands’ mean more news?

P&T readers think social media is “tweet.”

Over half of our poll respondents said that they use social media such as Facebook and Twitter several times each day. In the binary opposite, just under a quarter voted that they never or rarely use it.

This week’s poll is inspired by a comment about how “one-man-bands” are very prevalent in many television news markets, even bigger ones, yet not in Erie. This relatively new approach, where the reporter takes his/her own camera, shoots, reports, then edits each story by themselves, could mean that more people would cover more stories. Or it could mean more layoffs and the same or less news.

Could the "one-man-band" approach to TV news mean more coverage on Erie stations?

  • No - management will just cut more jobs and reporters would have to work harder for each story (72%, 21 Votes)
  • Yes - more reporters at more places means more news (17%, 5 Votes)
  • I don't know/I'm ambivalent (11%, 3 Votes)

Total Voters: 29

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WQLN lays off five, cuts salaries

Dwight Miller has been warning us for months that if something didn’t change in the state budget for the upcoming year, it was going to be a painful summer for public broadcasting in NWPA.

WQLN-TV

The pain is here.

In advance of the elimination of state funding for public broadcasting coming in two weeks, WQLN Public Media made deep cuts to its personnel and operating budget Tuesday. According to broadcast and published reports, five employees have been let go, including program director Gordon Stroufe, and Director of Engineering Ed Upton.

Other cost-cutting moves include:

  • 5% salary cuts for all management, with Miller taking a 10% cut
  • Two-week unpaid furloughs fro all employees
  • Hiring and wage freeze
  • No unnecessary travel, conference attendance, and staff training
  • The “Marketplace” financial program on WQLN-FM will be dropped

Miller told JET-TV that they tried to cushion the blow on the viewer:

Our goal is for viewers not to see an impact on the services we provide to them. We were very strategic in choosing positions to try to minimize the impact that the public will see. But eventually it will have an impact in the long run.

WQLN normally receives $800,000 from the Commonwealth, and neither version of the state budget currently being considered in Harrisburg would continue that funding. There is hope that a portion of the funding could be restored in the final budget bill. If that were not to happen, more layoffs could be likely.

WSEE’s 12th & Peach studios shuttered

The end of an era.

After 55 years of continual broadcasting from a building that one housed a hairdressing academy and bingo hall, WSEE is moving to 35th & State as it merges with WICU. Scott Bremner and Jacqueline Policastro aired the final Newswatch from the studio last night at 11:00.

WSEE.tv Screen Shot

WSEE.tv Screen Shot

There will be no newscasts from WSEE Friday and over the weekend, but Scott did say that they would have a local cast at 6:00 PM on Monday.

On the staff front, NABET representative Eric Seggi doesn’t expect to have a complete roster of who is being retained by WICU and who is gone until Monday. Meanwhile, as we have been reporting, all off-camera, and several former on-camera talent are now seeking jobs. They include morning anchor and producer Raychel Vendetti, along with reporters Jennifer Mobilia, and Charles Santini.

On Thursday’s last Morning’s Live, Raychel indicated that Ray Petelin would be back Monday, albeit without her. Sources say that Stephanie Schelkun is the leading candidate for the morning show and the Nooner. Meanwhile all indications are that Policastro and Bremner will be anchoring the 7 & 11 PM shows, although on Monday, there will be a 6:00 cast, which will probably be taped.

Go to the new WSEE.tv for videos of some of the reporters’ last newscasts.

Finally, we want to remember that as we are sorting out all of the news and trying to figure out management’s next move, we are feeling a great deal of empathy for those now looking for employment. Our hearts and well-wishes go out to all of the unsung heroes that have served that station and our community; some for decades.

Thank you for your efforts and energy to make our city and our media community a better place.

NABET’s Seggi responds

NABET, the union that represents the released WSEE employees, has been under fire here on The Press and Tower, with comments asking why the union wasn’t able to cushion the impact of this massive job loss. Their representative Eric Seggi responded to our request for comment.

Here’s our e-mail exchange:

P&T: What has been NABET’s role since the beginning when Lilly Broadcasting started talking about the merger of WSEE with WICU?

ES: The Union has been discussing the merger situation since the end of last summer/early fall (2008). As part of contract negotiations with WICU for the NABET unit at the station, the Company brought up the merger proposal. Because WICU has two collective bargaining agreements, one with NABET and another with AFTRA, we believed the best way to approach the discussion was to have all of the parties together (WICU units AFTRA & NABET, and the WSEE NABET unit). The three parties put together a comprehensive proposal which would allow the company to assign members of each unit to perform work under the other agreements. This process took several months, with several revisions. We presented the proposal to the Company and they decided to go in another direction (They did not give the Union a reason for their change in position). We finished the WICU negotiations in early December without an agreement on the merger.

P&T: In my discussions with NABET members at WSEE over the past few months, very few knew what was in store for them. What kinds of communication have you been able to facilitate to your members as they’ve navigated this process?

ES: We have held several meetings with the membership, and the stewards at WSEE (I just met with the Stewards from WSEE and WICU two weeks ago) . Unfortunately, we can only speculate on what path the Company will take. We have tried to advise the membership on what the possibilities are, and how NABET will respond in each instance. There have been many rumors as to when the merger would occur, some had the weather and sports departments moving to WICU in February.

P&T: Is there anything in the current union contract that the way these layoffs are being executed are in violation of the contract and if so, what if any action is being taken?

ES: So far the Company has followed the contractual procedure regarding layoffs, there have been no contract violations. If, for example, the Company began to assign work covered under the WSEE/NABET collective bargaining agreement to employees outside of the bargaining unit, the Union believes that would be a violation. If that were to occur, the Union would file a grievance under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement, which could end up in arbitration if the matter is not resolved between the parties.

P&T: There’s seems to be many misconceptions of how much power a union has during job losses. Can you explain what protections NABET can and can’t give members during a massive layoff?

ES: Most of the power of any Union regarding massive layoff would be subject to the collective bargaining agreement. Some agreements have minimum staffing levels, this type of language is difficult to negotiate in to contracts because Company’s are concerned about economic downturns etc. The WSEE agreement does not have a minimum staffing level, it does contain jurisdictional language that requires the Company to use only bargaining unit members to perform the work, unless otherwise allowed under specific conditions. The Union believes the merger is not one of those conditions. Moreover, Unions have the ability to negotiate severance, medical/health care extensions, request information regarding plant closure/mergers and bring political leverage to a situation in order to protect as many jobs as possible. The television industry is no different than manufacturing when it comes to mergers/downsizing.

P&T: What kind of encouragement would you like to say in public to your NABET brothers and sisters?

ES: I want our members to know that they will be informed on any proposals/changes etc., as soon as it becomes available. I know how tough it is not knowing what your future employment will be in the next couple of weeks. We have scheduled a meeting with the Company and we will try to provide answers to all of their questions. The Company has abided by the collective bargaining to date, we cannot respond until there is a violation of the agreement.

Poll: how relevant are media unions in the current environment

I must say that I’m a little perturbed about results of last week’s poll, which asked whether folks would be willing to pay for premium local content online. The “No” beat “Maybe” 60-40 with no one voting “Yes” with any certainty.

Now I know that these polls are not scientific and may have no relevance to what would happen when reality hits, but what frustrates me is that the same people who are not willing to pay for any content on the web are the ones paying $90 per month for cable/satellite, $75/month for cell service and $2.99 for a ring tone! Add that to the fact that the majority in an earlier poll refuse to click or even look at online advertising and you have an untenable business model for financing the production of content on the web.

Moving on: in the last couple days the NABET union representing workers at WSEE has taken a beating on the comments here at The Press and Tower for their apparent lack of protection of those jobs that are being eliminated this month. We have yet to hear first hand from union representatives regarding what role they did play in ensuring severance and other measures.

Meanwhile, let’s ask the question about the power of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, The Newspaper Guild, and others.

Given the massive media layoffs nationally and locally, on a scale of one to three, how relevant are media unions currently?

  • 1: the unions are totally impotent in the current media environment and are getting rolled over by media owners (65%, 22 Votes)
  • 2: the unions are arranging for some protections for current and laid off members (21%, 7 Votes)
  • 3: the unions are totally engaged in the process despite the downturn and are saving members from conditions that could be much worse (14%, 5 Votes)

Total Voters: 34

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Not a merger, but a massacre

We are watching Darwinian Theory play out before our eyes here in Erie television.

Lilly Broadcasting has determined that the essence of what is WSEE is too weak to survive, so it is being eliminated from the species. If Gerry Weiss’s reporting from this morning turns out to be true, any strong elements left from the old WSEE will be transferred to the Alpha Male, WICU, in a quest for survival of the fittest.

As we reported Thursday, nine people who worked off camera at WSEE were given their notices that their employment would cease by June 1st. Now it is apparent from comments here at The Press and Tower that many if not all on-camera personnel will also go away, in direct contradiction to what Brian Lilly told the newspaper last month. What’s also apparent is that the NABET local here is impotent on these moves.

The sticking points on who stays or goes on the on-air side is the existence of personal contracts. It seems likely, but we can’t be sure, that each station will have separate identifiable anchor teams. There are also the tasks that the 35 crew, including the very popular island-shirt-wearing Joey Stevens, does for the CBS Caribbean satellite feed that need to be taken into account.

The massacre doesn’t end with the staff. The better programming schedule will also go to WICU, according to sources quoted by the paper. Most egregious is the proposed move of the “Wheel of Fortune”/”Jeopardy” franchise to channel 12, in exchange for a 7:00 newscast and “Two and a Half Men.” It doesn’t matter that ICU has poorly programmed Prime Access for decades since dropping its own 7 PM Hotline News, they get rewarded the big ratings from Wheel/Jeopardy in the spirit of the AIG bonuses.

Finally, as we’ve conjectured, WSEE will run a recycled newscast at 11 PM that it airs live on its CW affiliate. I guess if there’s any accidents on I-90 or fires, they’ll just have to take the live show from WICU. It’s easy to predict that evolution will lead to just one live cast on two or all three channels at 11:00.

It is difficult to not get emotional when you see friends and colleagues who have given blood, sweat, and tears to a job and a company get tossed aside. But this scenario is playing out not only in media outlets across the country, but at companies throughout our region as well. We may as well be talking about the closing of IP or GAF, however the difference here to our P&T readers is that it is happening to our family, the Erie media family. Plus, it comes after the 9% workforce buyouts at the Erie Times-News, and the decimating of the radio staffs at Connoisseur and Citadel.

It just hurts.

Decision day for WICU/WSEE merger

UPDATED: Lilly Broadcasting apparently has no place for the off-air employees of WSEE. The gist of continuing individual meetings with WSEE employees is that all non-on camera personnel are being released by Lilly Broadcasting before June 1st.

In my opinion, this is the end of what makes WSEE an individual or independent television station. Gone is the competitive spirit of three newsrooms. Gone is the individual and sometimes award-winning excellence shown by commercial production and promotion departments. Perhaps even gone is the drive to shoot things a little bit better, light sets more artfully, and the ability to create a product that stood on its own.

I don’t say this as a slap on the remaining hard working production staff at WICU, but given the workload those folks will be under very shortly, quality will inevitably suffer.
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