Right in the centre - News must be reliable, verifiable

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By Ken Waddell

Neepawa Banner/Neepawa Press

If all goes according to plan, by the time you read this column, I will have made the following presentation to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage in Ottawa: 

We have been involved full time in newspaper publishing since 1989, when we started up The Neepawa Banner from scratch, in competition with The Neepawa Press, which had been publishing since 1896. In 2010, the Neepawa Press was sold to a major corporation. I declined to sell to that same corporation and by 2015, they sold the Neepawa Press to us. We are pleased to be able to store 120 years of history in our archives.

I am very pleased to comment on the four assigned topics today.

Access of local communities to information

Information for local communities has to be accurate and presented in an accountable fashion. That is why local media is so very important. Information has to be trustworthy and the only way to assure that is with local accountability. Is the information reliable and verifiable.

Who said this?  Who wrote this?  

If information is not reliable and verifiable, it’s at best useless and at worst, dangerous. In the newspaper business, that means that ownership, or at least the role of publisher, has to be locally based. The ideal is local ownership by a person or group of people who have a strong local, vested interest, who can put some boots on the ground to gather the verifiable news.

Consequences and impacts of concentration in the media (positive or negative)

Concentration in the media has been very bad for local communities both large and small. The corporate shareholder agenda is too easily subverted into chasing maximum quick cash and away from providing news and information. The publisher has to be prepared to risk and invest in staff, facilities and equipment to make a newspaper that is worthy of reading. Most corporate agendas slip quickly into cost cutting that reduces both the reliability and quality of the product which quickly spirals the newspaper into further cutting. If a paper isn’t growing, it’s dying.

Impact of digital media on 

local information

Digital media is a set of tools that helps the newspaper industry. We were the first community paper in Manitoba to adopt digital photography, full page pagination and electronic transfer of pages to our printer’s facility located a two hour drive away. The web, Facebook, Twitter and emails have become our daily fare in gathering and transmitting information. We often release our stories onto our website and FB even before the print edition hits the streets. Despite this, print remains the foundational component of our business model. Two of our papers are the largest circulation papers in rural south-western Manitoba and our third paper, in the community of Rivers, is number six.

How do we see the future, where is the industry going?

Local newspapers are alive and well if they stick to their name: local, news, papers. 

As noted above, news has to be accountable and verifiable. Newspapers are like a three legged stool. The three legs are reliable, verifiable news, a strong editorial or opinion section and advertising. A publisher can provide the reliable, verifiable news. A publisher can and should provide a strong editorial or opinion section. A publisher cannot supply the ads. Newspapers can’t go it alone. A newspaper’s fate is in the hands of the customers.

Advertisers need to think about the end results of their ad placements. The problem that is faced by newspapers and their advertising customers is that ads have to be placed locally or the local newspaper won’t exist. Newspapers don’t just magically appear. They have to have ads to survive. More and more papers are free distribution as it is difficult, if not impossible, to get or preserve enough subscriptions to create the critical mass, the level of circulation to make it worthwhile for an advertiser to want to buy an ad.

It’s especially important for governments and businesses to realize that every dollar spent on non-local websites and Facebook leaves the community, the province, the country. Facebook’s headquarters in Menlo Park, California is not spending money in small town or small city Manitoba. Facebook doesn’t hire local people, spend at local businesses or support local sports and community organizations

 If businesses and governments cut off the advertising leg, the stool will fall over and Canada’s communities, both large and small, will tumble down as well.