Local newspapers have been shuttering at an alarming rate for more than a decade.
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As digital news pioneers observed, ‘local doesn’t scale.’ Any solution to the local news crisis is going to involve reporters and editors who are creative and smart about what works for their readers.
Billionaire media owners can’t change inhospitable market dynamics.
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How can an industry experiencing systemic failure get back on its feet?
Susan Stamberg interviewed President Jimmy Carter during a National Public Radio call-in program in 1979.
AP Photo/Charles Tasnadi
From the beginning, National Public Radio vowed that it would speak with ‘many voices.’
Throngs of Santa Barbara News-Press readers, rallying in 2006.
AP Photo/Michael A. Mariant
The health of American democracy could be at stake.
More money but not for all.
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Memberships, subscriptions and small donations are reducing reliance on big grants, but mainly for the outlets that were already flourishing.
No longer tangled and pointing in the right direction.
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Fixes for small pieces of massive problems show that overarching crises may be less hopeless than they appear.
The Guelph Mercury office in Guelph, Ont., is seen in January 2016 after the final print edition of the newspaper was published. Ottawa has announced initiatives to support local journalism, including a measure to classify nonprofit news organizations as charities, making it easier for them to attract donations.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/Hannah Yoon
Canada has a lot to learn from the U.S. about nonprofit news. Here’s how nonprofit news organizations work in the United States. Spoiler alert: It’s all about collaboration.
NBC News intern Cassie Semyon, dashing to beat the competition.
AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin
Instead of taking pride in how quickly they cover the same stories as everyone else, these organizations make public service journalism their top priority.
H.F. ‘Gerry’ Lenfest, left, donated tens of millions of dollars to sustain Philadelphia’s newspapers.
AP Photo/Rich Schultz
Without credible news and information, a healthy democracy is not possible.
As journalism loses its financial footing, it may need more support from foundations.
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Big cash infusions can give nonprofit journalism a much-needed boost. But the ailing news industry needs more consistent funding.