In 2003, then-Gov. Jeb Bush punished reporters from the Tallahassee bureau of the Palm Beach Post by canceling their invitation to his year-end interview session.
His staff cited the āunprofessional behaviorā while dealing with some of Bushās officials, but the paper suspected it was in retaliation for critical reporting on Bushās pet school vouchers program. Iām betting on the latter.
As a career newspaper guy until my own paper, The Tampa Tribune, folded in May, I always admired the Post. At its peak, this award-winning newspaper was top-to-bottom one of the best in the land.
That is why I ask this question now to the owners and operators of the Post:
Are you freaking crazy?
Thatās a rhetorical question, I know. But it seems apropos after last weekās announcement that the Post will close its Tallahassee bureau. We found out about that from the Facebook page of the Postās Tally reporter, John Kennedy. He was announcing his own layoff.
āThe paperās future is local and digital, and coverage of the goings-on in the state Capitol donāt meld as well with this direction,ā he wrote.
Those words could be on the tombstone of many newspapers that abandoned their own strengths in search of click-bait. Papers throughout the state have decided that all that complicated stuff coming out of Tallahassee is boring to the younger generation and doesnāt bring the digital bang for the buck that newspapers chase in the hope it will bring in enough cash to keep them going.
Theyāre screwing over readers they do have but declining circulation and readership numbers show they arenāt attracting new ones. Why do you think that is?
They keep trying to reinvent the wheel when what they ought to do is realize that nothing generates clicks like real news. We used to see it all the time at the Tribune on our digital site, TBO.com. If there was a big breaking news story, site traffic would spike and readers became engaged.
Whoever ultimately decides at papers like the Post to go without that news is chasing foolās gold. They either donāt understand or donāt care that real stories happen because of dedicated and plugged-in reporters who find out stuff that governors and presidents would prefer they didnāt know.
Instead of engaging the public with hard news, publishers push in their chips on dubious strategies like page redesigns and marketing slogans. To cut costs, they lay off reporters and decide, as Kennedy so aptly penned, ācoverage of the goings-on in the state Capitol donāt meldā with the modern newspaper.
Then they call a staff meeting or send out a memo and moan about the ātough decisionsā they had to make. What they should do is apologize to readers for shirking their responsibility to inform the public what the top elected officials in Florida are doing.
There are a few papers that still do it right. The Tampa Bay Times and Miami Herald have combined forces in Tallahassee for several years. The Florida Times-Union in Jacksonville has been aggressive.
I was at the Tribune when bosses decided coverage in the state capital was a luxury (while maintaining two full-time reporters on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers) ā although, I can promise you that wasnāt the feeling in the newsroom. Top editors fought to regain our presence in Tallahassee by hiring Jim Rosica and, later, Jeff Schweers. But the overall trend isnāt good.
Besides the Post, FloridaPolitics.com reported Gatehouse Media, which owns the Sarasota Herald-Tribune among its nine daily newspapers in the state, closed its Tally bureau recently.
Reporters at that level are the firewall between citizens and politicians who donāt have the publicās best interests in mind. They are the one who make sure the pet projects from top leaders arenāt another effort to line someoneās pocket with public cash.
When newspapers decide thatās no longer important enough to have someone on the scene every day, the public isnāt the only loser. When you take the ānewsā out newspapers, all thatās left is a bird-cage liner.