On July 6, 2016, Gannett, the nation's biggest newspaper chain, paid the Borgs $40 million for North Jersey Media Group (The Record of Woodland Park, Herald News, NorthJersey.com, (201) magazine and 50 weeklies). Stephen A. Borg, publisher for a decade, oversaw the biggest downsizing ever. Local news declined, errors mounted and most employees were denied raises. Gannett replaced Editor Deirdre Sykes, revised The Record's website and redesigned the print edition, cutting another 350-plus jobs.
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Three-day weekend for staff
If you thought, after looking at Saturday's edition, the staff of The Record of Woodland Park started its weekend on Friday, today's paper only reinforces the impression. Except for a Michael Gartland story on lavish spending by a non-profit Bergen County agency on Page 1, you'll find barely four inconsequential stories about Bergen towns in the entire paper.
You know there is no municipal, development or education news of Hackensack, Teaneck and Englewood -- or many other Bergen towns -- in the former Hackensack daily by looking at Page L-6 and the three, long, wire-service obituaries of people you may have never heard of -- that's what the lazy, desperate, incompetent editors call "filler." You also know it by a brief on L-2 about kindergarten registration in Ramsey -- a waste of precious space for information that goes home in every kid's backpack. Does reporter Allison Pries really think this is education news?
So what do you find in today's former Bergen Record? Stories about the Passaic County Sheriff's Department, a possible festival in West Milford, budget woes in that sprawling township, smoking at a Morris County college and a deer hunt on Garret Mountain -- near the paper's new headquarters. The incompetent editors put a story about three New Milford Eagle Scouts on L-1. Wow. That's real news.
There isn't much in the rest of the Sunday paper, which squanders most of the front page on a stupid football game and the endless palaver over a guard who left his post and a man who entered a secure area at Newark airport to see his girlfriend off. On the front of Better Living, a copy editor must have thought it clever to say: "Where North Jersey chefs go to get their eats on." How ridiculous.
It's hard to believe Publisher Stephen A. Borg can read the paper day after day and not wonder why it consistently fails its Bergen County readers or what the editors and some of the reporters are doing to earn their salaries. When I still worked in the old Hackensack newsroom, other staffers reported that sports reporter John Rowe overheard the wealthy, arrogant Borg say his goal in cutting costs was a news staff where no one made more than $40,000 a year.
I doubt Borg achieved his ridiculous salary goal for the staff, but since he took over and promoted Editor Frank "The Fish Stinks from the Head Down" Scandale to vice president, The Record and North Jersey Media Group's laughable Web site -- northjersey.com -- sure read like they are being put together by demoralized, low-paid workers.
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And you did not even mention that The New York Times today scooped the Record, supposedly North Jersey's newspaper, with a Bergen County story. The Times page 1 story talks about the Bergen County jail and how immigrants were treated (or allegedly mistreated) there. That's right down the street from the Record's headquarters (according to their staff bax but not reality). Maybe the Record can call the Times for the details and run it on page A-14 tomorrow after the obits.
ReplyDeleteImagine that, a prominent national newspaper scooping the Record in its own backyard!
I’m sure John Rowe is happy you printed what he may have said.
ReplyDeleteIt was common knowledge in the newsroom, and I'm sure it's been circulating outside the newspaper for a couple of years.
ReplyDeleteI find your decision to name that sports reporter as the source of this particular workplace rumor to be not-so-classy, sir. Whether it is or was common knowledge is debatable.
ReplyDeleteYou are entitled to your opinion. I would rather not deal in anonymous sources for material I use in "Eye on The Record."
ReplyDeleteThen its better to deal in hearsay?
ReplyDeleteYes. I guess you could say that. This isn't a court of law. The newspaper is full of hearsay every day.
ReplyDelete