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Palm Beach Post To Cut 300 Jobs

Wed Jun 25, 2008 at 11:40:04 AM

It's been a long time coming, but Palm Beach Post publisher Doug Franklin handed down the bad news today (thanks to Pulp readers for posting it). Bottom line:

-- 300 jobs will be cut company-wide.
-- 130 newsroom jobs will be cut.
-- Buyouts are being offered to employees with at least five years vested in the pension plan.

This is worse than expected (100 newsroom jobs had been floated here a couple of times). It's gut-wrenching. Here's the memo:

June 25, 2008

To: All Employees of Palm Beach Newspapers, Inc.
Re: Reduction in Workforce Plans

I am writing today to advise you of the changes that will begin taking place throughout our company this week.

Our plan is to reduce our workforce of 1,350 by more than 300 full-time equivalent positions across The Palm Beach Post, Florida Pennysaver, and La Palma. The Palm Beach Daily News will not be affected. The reductions will impact most departments throughout the company, as well as most levels in the organization. Roughly 130 of these reductions will come from The Post's newsroom; with more than 60 each in Advertising and Production, and more than 40 in Circulation. Roughly 80 positions throughout the company are already vacant through attrition, and many of these open positions will be eliminated to help us achieve the needed staff reduction.

The first phase of this workforce reduction will be a voluntary separation plan offered to most employees with a minimum of five years of pension vesting service. The voluntary offers may be limited in certain departments based on business needs. After we see the number of volunteers, we may limit departures in some departments to avoid disrupting essential services. We hope the voluntary phase of our plan will account for most of the necessary reductions. After the voluntary effort, we will move to involuntary staffing reductions in August to reach the appropriate staffing levels.

We have said often in recent weeks that we need to become a smaller company. This is a time of great change, challenge and uncertainty in our business; and the steps we are about to take are indeed difficult and painful to make. But they are necessary changes if we are to remain a strong and profitable company. A prolonged slump in our advertising revenues, increased competition from the internet, and an overall difficult economic environment have combined to make this type of cost reduction necessary. This is indeed an economic 'perfect storm.'

Since April 1, we have been working on plans to make our company more efficient and more nimble. You've no doubt seen the many changes and consolidations that have been taking place throughout the newspaper to conserve increasingly costly newsprint. In addition, we'll soon merge the Classified Call Centers, Ad Make-up and Ad Art departments of The Palm Beach Post and Florida Pennysaver. We're also looking at opportunities to close or consolidate some of our buildings in the market, evaluating new partnerships for both printing and distributing of some of our products, and exploring ways to generate more profitable revenue through advertising pricing discipline and innovation. In addition, for all employees of PBNI, we will be evaluating the possibility of foregoing salary increases in 2009. These are but a few of the steps we'll take to accelerate our transition back to profitability in 2009.

I recognize that this memo represents the "bad news" many of you have been expecting for some time, and I am sorry that we have been unable to share the specifics of the plan before today. We have all worked diligently over these past two years to offset our revenue losses by reducing payroll and operating expenses where we could, but this has simply not proven to be enough. We are among the last metro newspaper companies in Florida to announce staff reductions. We now face the reality of saying "good-byes" to many of our loyal friends and colleagues who have served PBNI so well.

We should take this opportunity to salute our past, and recognize the many successes that we've shared in recent years as a result of the hard work and dedication of so many people here. We've been blessed with fabulous resources and great latitude to do our work-probably more than we should have expected for a newspaper of our size. We took those resources and produced a great slate of products with them-and this is something that we can be proud of forever. None of this would have been possible without many talented people working together to create the greatness we achieved.

We are, and will remain, the #1 multi-media option for our advertising customers, readers, and website visitors in our market. Despite our current revenue challenges, I am quite certain that when we come through this difficult period, we will be better poised to take advantage of the rebound this marketplace is sure to enjoy. We continue to live and work in a growth market with a great up-side. Our websites are experiencing record page view growth. Despite the declines in print circulation in recent years, our total audience in print and online is stable and growing. We're investing in niche products, and will continue to explore new ways to capture new audiences.

For those employees eligible for the Voluntary Separation Program, your department head will have a schedule of when and where the individual information packets will be distributed. This will be available to you today. I ask for your cooperation as we move through this process as swiftly as possible. If you have additional questions, please feel free to contact me or Linda Murphy in Human Resources.

I thank you for your patience over these past few months, and look forward to better days ahead. To those who will be leaving us, we remain committed to going about this difficult process in a caring and compassionate way.

Doug Franklin
Publisher
The Palm Beach Post
Palm Beach Daily News
Florida Pennysaver
La Palma

Category:

260 Comments:

xxx says:

Holy s**t! That's basically half of the newsroom/second floor!

How in the hell are they going to continue daily operations?

Anon says:

@xxx: I think it's safe to say they won't be 'continuing daily operations' as you know it.

Kathryn says:

I am a former Postie. If they cut 130 positions in the newsroom, who the heck will be LEFT?? I am thinking of everyone at the PBP today. There IS life after daily newspapers but it is so much better to make that decision on your own instead of corporate hacks making it for you.

Eunuch says:

Too bad. They had a very soild paper for its size, and a respectable newsgathering organization.

I just don't understand how a staff that small will cover news in a competitve market of 1 million-plus people in the second largest county (physical size, that is) east of the Mississippi.

xxx says:

True that everyday operations will cease as we know them and will most definitely change. What I want to know is how those that are left behind will have any desire to work twice as hard later this year, even moreso now that the memo says they may not even bother with raises.

Morale has to be at an all-time low.

dr_augusta says:

I am wondering, what has been the total loss of jobs for the 3 big papers combined now ( SS, the Post and the Herald) , or in the near future?

- 30 - says:

Depending on whose numbers you choose to believe - and why should we believe any of them these days - the total newsroom staff is somewhere between 300 to 400 full time positions. That's inclusive of all personnel: reporters, editors, photogs, copy editors, clerks, everyone.

With today's announcement of 130 positions to be sliced from editorial, that means that the direct loss from the Post's newsroom will be minimum 30% and possibly as much as 40%, depending on the actual staff totals.

Holy shit.

Regardless of how many more memos touting "better days ahead" get handed down from upper-management, today's announcement officially kicks-off the beginning of the end for the Palm Beach Post. Anyone can see that.

R.I.P., Palm Beach Post. It was great while it lasted.

anonymous says:

As another former Postie, I just want to say how my prayers are with my former colleagues. One day, hopefully, we will look back at this time and see that these cuts were short-sighted and fear-based. These times call for brave leadership in our industry. Unfortunately, such courage is not to be found among managers at the Post and Cox.

Anonymous says:

What kinda buyout package are they offering? The usual 2 weeks of pay for each year?

Vicious cycle has started says:

They are gutting the newsroom, which will make for a much lower quality newspaper/website, which will result in the further erosion of circulation and advertisers. Which will result in further cuts and on and on. I'm a hardcore newspaper reader and longtime subscriber. I'm not sure I will be a subscriber this time next year. To all of you on the staff that will be leaving, good luck and thanks for the great work.

Dave T. says:

As a former Postie (that's seriously what we're called?) my heart goes out to all the kind folks in the newsroom that are impacted by this.

I was always impressed with the quality of reporting in every department.

Good thing I got onto this thing called the Internet.

KeysSaurian says:

Wow.
Next will come marching orders to those who remain to please remember to file regular updates to keep the internet fresh, while also seeing about finding multiple sources to expose city hall corruption. Oh, and on your day off, we'd really appreciate it if you could shoot some video at the Kiddie Fair. Maybe some pix, too. And by the way, don't put in for OT.



KeysSaurian says:

Wow.
Next will come marching orders to those who remain to please remember to file regular updates to keep the internet fresh, while also seeing about finding multiple sources to expose city hall corruption. Oh, and on your day off, we'd really appreciate it if you could shoot some video at the Kiddie Fair. Maybe some pix, too. And by the way, don't put in for OT.



bring back ritterbusch says:

UGH...POSTIE?! I am not a "Postie". I am a former employee of The Palm Beach Post Advertising Department. Spoke to one my good friends at The Post who had a mandatory meeting at 1pm today. They were very nervous, I feel bad for all the people about to get axed. Viva Waxelbaum!!

BocaWayne says:

Survivors will envy the dead. Very sad.

sk says:

What's up with the quotes on "bad news" and "good-byes."

What a dumbass, this publisher.

Stephen says:

Amazing that this didn't come sooner in small doses like it did at the Herald and S/S. This is bigger pill to swallow.

The other question is how is this going to affect revenues? 60 advertising (profit center, for you scribe types) and production staffers will be leaving, how much revenue were they directly responsible for generating? Do they really think 60 less advertising and ad builders (production) are going to help matters? It's virtually impossible to keep generating the same or greater revenues w/ fewer reps and ad builders. I just see the big 3 newspapers as becoming black holes, where the implosion has just about reached critical mass. Should have a been a science writer instead of an ad man. Oh well, glad to be off the sinking ship. I jettisoned myself last year.

Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker says:

Is the Post's South County burea DOA as feared?

Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker says:

Is the Post's South County bureau DOA as feared?

Post Toastie says:

Maybe Post Toastie would be a better name for the survivors ... they're going to feel like toast when they drag home at the end of their 12-hour shifts.
Thank God I got out when I did.
My advice to Doug Franklin: Why don't you take your fat paycheck and shove it? I'm sure about 25 percent of the job cuts could be saved if one fat cat (you) left. You got everyone into this mess; why don't you get everyone out of it?

Soulie says:

Actually, Franklin has only been there a couple of months. I think the troubles predate his arrival.

greg smith says:

Franklin is the hatchet man, obviously. He's there because Anne Cox
Chambers' estimated $12 billion net worth isn't enough. Cox Ent. pulled in $15 billion last year. Poor starving wretches.
And please don't tell me the Post isn't making money, even if it has a few bad years until housing recovers.
Doug dung is a liar, I think. This is Doug dungshit. He talks of returning to profits next year. I'd like to see the profit/loss statement. Does anyone know somebody in accounting? Let's see the numbers.
Even if you were losing a bit this year, the Post has been a top Cox cash cow. A business may trim staff in bad times, but it doesn't do suicidal bloodletting like this.
You're poised to steal readers from SS and the Herald as they gut their newsroooms. You've got the best demographics in the nation: retirees still subscribe, and they'll keep moving to Florida (hurricanes permitting) and greasing the developer gravy train.
It's all about money.
My heart goes out to all Posties. Good luck to the newsroom tonight getting the paper out.
-- Greg Smith, ex-Cox sucker (m.e. in AZ in 70s.)

Please... says:

Judging from Post Toastie's comments for the Post's three-month-tenured publisher ("You got us into this mess," "I'm sure about 25 percent of the job cuts could be saved if one fat cat (you) left") it was a good thing for all parties considered that she left the Post when she did. The idiot to non-idiot ratio there is way too high as it is.

Angela says:

Though I no longer work in South Florida, this is painful to read. I spoke to a former SS colleague today who told me about rumors swirling around there about more cuts. This is awful, and with the state of the economy...good grief! What a tough pill to swallow. It really makes me want to cry.

Big Dog says:

I love how the PBP covered the layoffs in a very small story on its website. The news of more than 300 jobs being lost would be a major story if it happened anywhere else.

Sports Ed says:

Why do these corporations think that dumbing down the paper, killing the content, hiring young no-nothing (cheap) hacks for writers is going to save the industry? Publishers: Classifieds aren't coming back! Get over it! Instead of gutting the paper to make up for it, beef up your content. Make it better. You might find circulation will stop eroding if you actually give customers something meaty and meaningful in content instead of the usual crap.

Carolyn says:

Well...half the communists are finally gone.
Vote Democrat and get on a lifetime of unemployment.

Syd Dursse says:

This is great news for the business. Now non-newsworthy issues can be eliminated. Just the facts, mam!

grasscatcher says:

You elitist pukes make me sick! What about all the other people at The Post? They are people with kids, bills AND a work ethic that made The Post something to be proud of, you all use The Post to further your personal agendas.
The web has freed us from your biased, naive bullshit writing, hopefully those that remain will give us what WE want to read not your past drivel

BigArch says:

Do you think that just maybe if you quit being so liberal/socialist/communist you might not loose so many readers. Since most papers with the liberal/socialist/communist slant is losing, it would seem to be self evident. I quit taking your paper years ago and when your people called wanting me to re-new I laughed quite loud.

John in Louisville says:

Isn't media consolidation just great for our [alleged] "democracy." Who needs investigative journalism??? What the American public wants and needs is infotainment like on MSNBC....People don't want to read...As Britney Spears says: Just trust the President to do the right thing and don't ask questions.

JOHN PARKER says:

ANNE COX AND ALL HER LEFT WING FRIENDS CAN'T TELL HE TRUTH IN REPORT SO THE PEOPLE GOT UP AND LEFT.

Michel Raffoul says:

This was comong for years. The Post's extreme liberal editorial policy was bleeding into the hard news stories, so much so, that the news content could no longer be trusted. I was, and still am a subscriber for 20 years, but haven't been happy with this paper for a long time.

Moon Unit says:

I am looking forward to your internet version and hope reporting on the Palm Beaches might be less left sided.

dtr says:

I'm also a former Post staffer.

The Post has, for some considerable time, a staff much larger than its circulation might suggest. That's a tribute to management, and the once good times South Florida used to know. But it also set the newspaper up for a horrible fall.

It's fairly evident the direction newspapers are taking and waiting for so long to trim staff knowing this direction makes a traumatic cut necessary. It's good that the Post resisted for as long as it did, but it's also somewhat naive to think things were going to turnaround in a way that this could ever be avoided. Massive cuts like this are bad business because there's an inescapable smell of death that permeates the air around the product.

Readers will react much more poorly to the knowledge that the newspaper laid off 40 percent of its newsroom, but also such a staggering reduction is going to cause massive organizational problems that I can't imagine it won't make things worse.

Jim B says:

And the resentments just keep on coming. Where do people think that a job, with this newspaper or anywhere else, is an entitlement. Where was the appreciation for the years of pay checks (sorry, direct deposits these days)? The world doesn't need a few more left wing hacks slewing out Obama BS. We need fewer. Three cheers.

Bill says:

A massive amount of global warming carbon is expended by the Post in producing a printed copy of their paper. From the machines used to cut down trees, the machines transport those trees, the processing of the trees into paper, transporting the paper to various printing plants, the refining process of the inks, and the cars driving around our city every morning delivering these large carbon footprint papers.

Finally, rubbish trucks and landfills must dispose of the rubbish that the Post has become.

The Post is an enormous source of carbon, causing global warming. The Post needs to get the paper out of Newpaper !
=

Tim Patrick says:

The LIBERAL PRESS in the beginning throes of Death - GREAT!!!!!!

For all those lefties losing their jobs - McDonald's is hiring.

Post Toastie says:

Er, 'scuse me, Please, but so what if Doug Franklin has only been at the Palm Beach Post only three months. He's a Cox man, and they all had a hand in it. He's as guilty for promising the unrealistic profit margins to shareholders as the next one, whether he did it here or in Dayton. And that's what all of this is really about. I'd say the idiot ratio where you are is the highest -- I'm not a she.

Post Toastie says:

Er, 'scuse me, Please, but so what if Doug Franklin has only been at the Palm Beach Post only three months. He's a Cox man, and they all had a hand in it. He's as guilty for promising the unrealistic profit margins to shareholders as the next one, whether he did it here or in Dayton. And that's what all of this is really about. I'd say the idiot ratio where you are is the highest -- I'm not a she.

August says:

The Soup Kitchen menu is Beans, with bean gravy; just read this again everyday. Absolutely No Seconds! The Staff Buffet is Gourmet Roast Duck with a peach salsa in the VIP ROOM of the soup kitchen (The showered homeless will be serving; no tipping allowed)

The shelter line begins at 6:00pm, and be ready for a drug/alcohol test. Mandatory AA/NA meeting at 7:30pm, mandatory Evangelical Christian church service at 9:00pm, 20 men at-a-time group shower at 11:00pm. Wake up at 5:30am, out-the-door at 6:00am. Sorry, but we are out of bus tokens and washer/dryer tokens until next month. Congratulations to the staff at the shelter for cutting the budget 30%, thus 30% huge bonuses for all staff. God bless you!

Vera Quinn says:

What's the address of the soup kitchen & shelter? I'm going to need it; I lost my job.

David Baker says:

Although the layoffs are regrettable, as a reader I railed at the walls when I was a subscriber to the PBP. I could list a hundred reasons why, here's just two:

1) Failure to report about what was behind the laying a gas line from here (WPB) to South Bay, which then took a strange "detour" toward Canal Point (US Sugar) before it ever reached South Bay.

2) Why it took so many years to first rebuild, then subsequently replace, the "middle bridge" to Palm Beach.

I used to wonder, do the Post's "reporters" ever leave the office? And how many people does it take to copy and paste the AP wire?

If not for the Drudge headline/link, I wouldn't be here commenting at all.

me says:

I'm laying odds on the fact that these jobs are being outsourced to India and/or the Phillipines. The reason I say this is because my husband works for our local McClatchy paper. First, it was the customer service department. Now, the Circulation and Advertising jobs are being re directed overseas as well. Sadly, after 8 years, he is loosing his job as well. I find it all pretty disgusting that foreigners are getting jobs that are being done perfectly well by Americans. It's all about saving the bucks for the CEO's. They don't care about loyalty or anything else.It amazes me how foreigners can control local newspapers while being in a foreign country.

Mark Wilcox says:

Post employees - look in the mirror. Your "reporting" is so one sided that it is better described as a liberal opinion journal. Moderate and conservatives turned to other outlets and revenues declined. Your paychecks come from customers not the managers you despise.

Darrell says:

GOOD!!! Now the liberals can get a real job, perhaps selling carbon credits for Al Gore.

JERRY CICCONE says:

Good riddance to a LEFT WING RAG. The sooner it dies the better! Stick that in your pipe and publish it!

Sad says:

It is true that the Post has a high staff rate in relation to its circulation, but wasn't it management that chose to hire to the current numbers? There seems to be no responsibility higher up. It's your fault that too many of you took positions here!
The last Cox annual report distributed throughout the newsroom made everything sound wonderful. Gave the impression that media holdings are "adjusting" and looking for new opportunities. Cox continues to grow and make record profits in the billions.
Doug Franklin is a hatchet man working for the private side of a giant company. There are no unreasonable shareholders to answer to. There is no mentally unstable Zell at the helm. This is all about money, and it's completely their choice to do this so severely.

Tom Smith says:

Attn: former post employees

Your liberal/leftist bosses put THEIR agenda ahead of YOUR jobs.

daddynichol says:

Here's a suggestion for all those who think that the paper OWES people a job.

Why not pool your money and start your own paper? Show 'em how to succeed. Pay top salaries, $20.00 hour minimum wage base, free medical care and a fully funded retirement plan!

If you know how a business should be ran "to be fair and exhibit social justice", then pull out your check book and get to writing those big numbers.

Larry Penut says:

Who cares? The media is the only entity who creates news.
This isnt news.
Cuts like this happen every day in other industries and they dont report it to us.
Yes, its a shame. stuff like this is always a shame because it hurts people.
But quit creating news.
Its as bad as the way msnbc went nutzoid on tim russert coverage.

Hey media...get over yourselves!


Jeannie says:

I am cancelling my subscription.

sensible says:

Look, the nasty right-wingers have crawled out of Pat Robertson's rear, and onto this blog. If this is a liberal/conservative thing, why are RW rags like the Washington Times and Boston Herald also struggling?

This is about newsprint costs, a sagging economy (nice work by your president) and mismanagement by a bunch of fat cats who ran the media business.... and usually voted your way.

Anonymous says:

to larry penut: this is a media blog, if you don't like it, go to a non-media related blog. Perhaps knitting?

good grief says:

There's an OBAMA '08 sign in Anne Cox Chambers' front yard. Guess she figures he'll find y'all some jobs while she hangs on to her spot as #12 on the Forbes billionaire list.

Big Ten J-School Grad says:

Although I never worked at the Post, I know people who did, and they were compensated very poorly for their literary talent and their dedicated service to the paper and the community.

The problem with the Post started back in the 90's when they were slow to adjust to the internet and its impact on reading habits, while a resurgence of illiteracy and lack of time limited many others to TV news.

In recent years the Post veered off from the true north of journalism (i.e. factual objective 5W and H features/stories) into some unknown Timbuktu by dreaming up a lot of valueless and otherwise forgettable fluff pieces and fillers to keep the high value customers from drifting away to the TV and internet for news and information.

The Accent section was dumbed down to contain a variety of empty essays exploiting cultural and class-conscious hobbies of the wanna-be rich. It was as if the coverage was driven by retail and entertainment company press releases in one continuous giant commercial tie-in campaign.

Some extensive coverage of sports (mega contracts, arrests, cheating and scandals, personality cults) was generated, all fashioned for maximum hype value. Again the product promotions, sports venue endorsements, and superstar payouts became the main topics of discussion.

A number of columnists and editorial personnel were directed to become less like 4th estate scribes and reporters and more like larger-than-life media personalities. They were allowed to flog their published materials for free in the Post.

Finally, instead of using employees, the Post turned to national syndicators for several sections. How comforting for the multitudes of part time employees to wonder why the Post shunned their untapped productivity.

I watched the unending proliferation of typos, and misjudgements as reported by the ombudsman, and shook my head in disbelief each time I uncovered another error.

This layoff was the inevitable and ultimate BOHICA. Goodbye Posties, past, present and soon-to-be!

50ish Big Ten J-School Grad

Wow pulpy, you got linked on the front page of Drudge Report.

Brace yourself.

J

urgh says:

This is what happens when news ceases to be news. Newspapers increasingly are being spoon-fed from those in power and are not doing the investigative reporting necessary to actually break stories important to their readers. Go up the SE Florida Coast and it is littered with the jobs of newspaper people: The Miami Herald, The So. Florida Sun-Sentinel and now the Palm Beach Post. Maybe the survivors will redouble their efforts to create a product that people actually will look forward to reading in the morning. That means doing some hard reporting and breaking news. How about trying that for a change?

Ron says:

To all you Posties. Just keep telling us how rotten everything is. That way when people start tightening their belts and eliminate wasteful spending, your liberal rag is one of the first budget cuts they make.
Looks like your Marxist ideology that your paper lives by, does not apply to the real world when people have a choice of where to spend their money. Unlike the big government thieves your paper idolizes, you cannot force us to buy your paper, like the government forces us to pay taxes.

I'm suffering from a huge dose of schadenfreud.

The day that nice big Post building near Belvedere & Dixie has a 4 sale sign on will be a great day.

Diane says:

daddynichol is correct.

Everyone in the newsroom in every media organization seems to think they know better how to run the business than the owners. Yet most of them have only the haziest idea of how a business actually works, having never run one, and many even take a perverse pride in ignorance of the economic world (which of course is full of evil conservative corporate types).

The only numbers of interest are their salaries, which should invariably be bigger. Too many people at newspapers have spent too long drawing a middle class salary by picking up the phone or using e-mail (many no longer leave the office most days) and asking questions about someone else's work (some report, study, poll, or press release) and writing a few hundred relatively coherent words, with perhaps a few clever phrases, on deadline.

Sure, there's some daily stress involved, but most ER nurses are probably under more stress. There's a knack to it, but it's pretty easy for any person of normal IQ to master. Reporting is not a "skill set" that is going to be of much value in the broader world, and this is perhaps the rudest shock for those being laid off. For most of them, their best choice will be one they rejected earlier in life: English teacher.

Assuming people are still bothering to learn English.

So yes, start your own newspaper. The tax hikes on the 'rich' that you cheer, the union rules and labor laws, environmental rules and diversity mandates ... all the causes you cheer, do actually have costs. Start trying to run a business under those conditions.

And for all of you who cheered upheaval in other spheres of life (out with the old! break down the barriers! open things up to new people, new ideas, new ways of doing things, evict the entrenched interests!), OK, now it comes home. And suddenly many newsroom people find themselves talking about stability, continuity, tradition. They've discovered their inner conservative.

Better late than never.

liberal, conservative, whatever says:

Whoa, this comment thread took a crazy Drudge-driven turn! Creative use of grammar, punctuation, and capitalization, guys. Definitely no over-educated elitists here!

Is there any point noting that Palm Beach County is a liberal place where Democrats outnumber Republicans by well over 100,000 voters, making a liberal newspaper not terribly out of place? Or is that one of those pesky "facts" we all hate so much?

Politics? Please! Bottom line: Americans are rejecting traditional newspaper journalism, period. Left-wing, right-wing and every wing in between. Media company executives snoozed through the 1990s and most of the 2000s, and now they're squeezing what they can out of their dying properties.

twinstick says:

Gee, do you suppose all that liberal bilge that this paper has been passing off as news might have something to do with this??? Oh, of course not...

Rubicon says:

Yahoo! Another left wing anti-American liberal biased "rag" bites the dust. Good riddance! They have been peddling their blame America first crap all over Palm Beach county for years. Anyone who wants a fair view of the news has gone over to the net long ago. Only curiosity here... is how long it will take for other liberal trash sheets to follow before they realize that Americans are proud of their country and are tired of being preached to by condescending elitist little twerps with journalist degrees from Brown University. Contrary to what they delude themselves into believing, this is not about the internet but is a growing reflection of the publics deisire for unbiased and fair reporting. Hasta la vista America bashing baby!

Bernie says:

Let me guess; Palm Beach, in the morning, has buses and buses loaded with illegals streaming into town to work for the rich people and they speak no English. That never gets reported in the paper.

Starbucks is hiring! says:

I'm sure all you laid off lefties can get jobs at your 2nd favorite place. Starbucks.
And the workplace chatter will sound just like the Posts newsroom. All liberal, all the time.

ej says:

Like most "news" papers; I would imagine that it was full of liberal "sky is falling junk"; so, what do you expect? They need more liars at the DNC so pony on over. I only get the news because my wife reads the ads; otherwise, what's the point?

Fox says:

Liberal or not, all those employees are people and it's the editors in charge of what goes in the thing -- not Joe Schmo reporter.

If you're actually happy about 300 people losing their paycheck, you should be shot.

Winston Smith says:

Wow. Judging by the caliber of these comments, no wonder newspapers are in trouble. Perhaps flash cards would be more at these people's level.

West Lake Worth says:

I have lived in South Florida for 25 years and I am not the least bit suprised the paper has to cut its staff. Most people in West Palm Beach have become disgusted with the totally one sided viewpoint this paper has chosen to print. When will the print media understand that we want the facts of the stories without the less than subtle political slant. But it appears the print media doesn't get it (look at the NY Times dropping numbers). I guess the last of the era of unbiased reporting no matter what your political bent died with Tim Russert. A journalist and Democrat that you could depend on being fair to both sides. How Rare, but yet how respected by everyone. It's a shame that editors don't understand all the public wants is fairness and honesty in reporting without the bias,give me a paper that does that and I'll subscibe. I only wish I knew of one?

Ship Em Back says:

Tired of N l G G E R S ?

Visit N l G G E R M A N I A . C O M

jj says:

The former Post publisher was resistent to change. He relied on others who worked with him for decades who too, liked their lives and the way things were. He'd spend endless hours at his desk on the fourth floor writing hand written notes rather than walking around the building, understanding the business and being engaged with the day to day business rather than his personal status and ego. His inner circle was also resistent to change and rewarded with his affection for being so. As a result, the Post fell way behind in embracing technology and the digital world. I would imagine to this day, sales reps are filing paper expense reports and writing up ad tickets by hand. They are creating error after error and spend days later trying to clean up in anguish over a problem that shouldn't have been theirs in the first place. Classified pages omited on some days because of a mistake, ooopsy.

Doug Franklin is dealing with the hand he has been dealt. Something needs to happen or the paper will go out of business and no one will have a job. Many of the positions in ad ops could've been eliminated over the years through attrition as they digitized their processes. However, that day has now come and gone.

Rubicon says:

To Winston Smith: LOL! It seems you were absent the day that the "flash card" instructors explained how to properly structure a sentence. Back to "grammar" school for Mr. W. Smith.

Winston Smith says:

Rubicon: Can you please diagram that sentence for us?

Kim Estrada says:

UH!!!! I'm so sorry you lost your jobs you worthless pieces of propaganda. Give it up, you're a bunch of liberal losers. Enjoy your unemployment. I hope you starve!!!

lenofus says:

No one likes to see people lose jobs. But for 20 years, my wife made me subscribe to this rag that positions itself a little left of Castro. How about the other folks? You know. Americans? Maybe that lame cartoonist can do portraits on the sidewalk and donate to the less fortunate.

You forgot about everybody else. You jammed your agenda down our throats. The truly important stories that effected the little man you neglected. Schultz bikini waxing John Kerry. The editorials that chastised everything to the right of the deep left. Who the hell wants to be lectured on a daily basis?

My sympathy to those now unemployed. The editors can suck a lemon. Maybe now, I can cancel the rag.

JerEl says:

The same thing is happening to the only paper in Panama City, FL. My question is why they don't cut the ad rates by 40% (or the same percentage as the personnel cuts) since they claim ad revenue is way down. That would help the small business owneer and generate more $ for the bottom line.

Marlin Durham says:

Goodness gracious ya'll. Anyone with brains knows that if you continue to spue forth the liberal crap, people just won't buy. Too bad Doug Franklin never realized that the top stories to cover are:

1. A wall isn't necessary to keep illegals out - simply stop all benefits to them, overnight!
2. Water vapor (H2O) constitutes 95% of greenhouse gasses, CO2 less than 2%. Know the SCAM and knowing it will keep your newspapers in business!
3. Democrats have stopped every effort for the past 10 years to:
a. Build nuclear power plants,
b. Drill for oil offshore,
c. Open shale oil reserves which contain 3 times as much oil as UAE countries combined, and
d. Get the hell out of education so that States can get rid of failing teacher's unions and start getting our kids proficient in English, Math, Physics, Chemistry, History and Business.

START COVERING THE ABOVE ITEMS, ALONG WITH OTHER CONSERVATIVE TOPICS, AND I PREDICT YOU'LL BE HIRING BACK ALL OF THOSE YOU ARE PRESENTLY FIRING!

THAT'S ALL!

Conservo says:

Why can't the Post just raise the price of the paper? Shouldn't that produce the income needed to keep everyone employed? Why worry about falling sales and ad revenues when you can raise the price of the paper to compensate? If liberals think raising taxes makes us more prosperous and is the solution to our economic and social woes, should not the same strategy work for the Post?

greg says:

Are the dungheads done for the night? One advantage of the Arizona desert: Pacific time zone, if only half the year.
It's frightening watching the semi-literate right-wingers and teen-not-quite-ready-for-brains hijacking the conversation before everyone could talk.
These Karl Rove ejaculate wannabees who dont't even comprehend grammar much less the ability to form original thoughts are one huge reason papers are dying.
I am so worried about this nation uninformed. What could be worse for the demo process?
This thread drudgified says it all . . . Rock on, Post. There must be a Valium somewhere in one of these bottles . . .

greg says:

Newspaper finance 101: it's not the newsstand/subscription price.
It's ad revenue. Display ads, what you see along the news stories, is king. Classifieds used to be huge before Craig's List and others but now are shrinking because of internet competition.
You can buy many strong, fat metro dailies for 50 cents. New York Times went up to 1.25. That doesn't come near to the cost of reporting, editing and printing.
When the economy tanks, so do ad sales. Makes sense, no? When that happens, papers' management use it as an excuse to butcher the newsroom to boost salaries of the top dogs and income for the owners.
They think newsrooms are a liability. They will learn. They will learn .
. .

I'm Glad says:

Good, I'm sorry I got this paper to begin with. Complete liberal BS

Jeff Roe says:

This is great news. These rags just aren't listening: we don't want to read liberal pap foisted upon us by the messengers of the Democratic party. Acting as a mouthpiece for the lib's has now cost you your job. Congratulations. Let the lib's come and pay your bills for you now, idiots.

I'll paraphrase: "the chickens have come home to roost".

edword says:

Dear Post-Toaties

Conservatives are actually quite nice people-- who do not in fact hate people who are different from them--just can't stand being talked down to from clueless nincompoops with no sense of loyalty to one's country and the values it is built upon.

They also have a great deal of disposable income and are a very desirable demographic for your advertisers. Pardon my delay in passing this informtion along to you. Good luck and hang in there and dare to consider our point of view some day.

Mike in Ohio says:

For those in the newsrooms that had no clue that this was going to happen - You obviously have not been reading the papers lately. Subscriptions are at all time lows at most papers across the country. Some people have grown tired of being fed the liberal bias in print as well as in TV when there are free alternatives like talk radio. As with any industry - if you do not adapt to the changing of times you are what evolutionists would call - extinct.

Gotzvb says:

Greg, don't forget that ad revenue is based upon circulation. When the newspaper alienates almost half of it's readership, it is bound to lose some of these readers. So take your Valium you drug addled liberal. There has been a gradual erosion of the "traditionl media" which I attribute a great deal to their leftist views. I myself made a concious decision not to line their pockets years ago.

saxifrage says:

OK, I have to ask the question.

How many newsmen/women does it take to (1) edit AP articles, (2) cover Lake Worth flower shows, (3) copy the police blotter, (4) check Rush Limbaugh's calendar, (5) stake out Ann Coulter's pad, (6) shadow the Florida Supreme Court justices, and (7) rewrite DNC memos?

Emjay says:

Marlin Durham - you hit the nail on the head. The Post is such a liberal biased rag with so many ads you can hardly find the articles. The editorial page is so disgusting I'm going to cancel my subscription again. What will I use to line my bird cage with now?

U.S.M.C. says:

Good.. The PBP is liberal garbage anyways...

Scott Cohen says:

Oh well. It couldn't have happened to a more liberally biased, 4th rate newspaper.

Wow says:

Yep. Good riddance those America-hating liberals.

So what's a good ole boy flag-wavin' paper like the Orange County Register do in times like these?

They outsource copy-editing and layout to India. Go get 'em, boys!

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/orange/la-me-ocregister26-2008jun26,0,3205643.story

Morons.

Rick clay / Baghdad Iraq says:

When are Newspaper going to learn to stop being so liberal and start being fair with their reporting. Conservatives make up at least 1/2 population. If you ignore them and keep pushing a liberal view point and attacking us Conservatives then we use our power of the purse and no longer buy your newspapers. Conservative newspapers are doing well. Wake up Newsroom's, Hire conservative newsmen and women and equal out the amount of coverage you are doing and you might make some money because we conservatives spend our money for good fair products. Stay liberal Die on the vine.

Wow says:

Lesson here is "Don't like the message? Shoot the messenger," I guess. Good to see peoples' knees still jerk.

Anonymous says:

Couldn't happen to a nicer paper....

Tator says:

Live as a Liberal hack rag, die as a Liberal hack rag....good riddance.

Dammy says:

I stopped getting the PBP good five years ago. I refused to financially support a biz that insulted my POV on a daily basis and I'm not even referring to the editorials.

I know I am not alone, I was at the booth next to PBPs at the Palm Beach Boat Show and all during the show, I kept hearing people complaining to the PBP agent(s) why they refused to sign up for PBP. Guess what guys, it wasn't because the PBP was too conservative that people were rejecting it!

Who needs the PBP when I get driveway trash for FREE. Oh wait, that driveway trash doesn't insult me while demanding money. What will I ever do?

Peg C. says:

Cry me a river. This has been going on at my company (Fortune 100 co.) for years, every year, often twice a year. What makes newspaper employees think they are exempt from the realities of business and the market? We all have families, dependents, mortgages! Why are newsies special?

Newspapers particularly need a harsh dose of reality. For sure, there's no reality in their "reporting" anymore. Man, Schadenfreude feels good.

marty says:

Lets by honest!! THe millions of people being allowed into the United States. mostly illegal, cannot read or write English! Nor do they want to!! We are beginning to see the beginning of the end of the United States as we once knew it. The politicans dont care as long as they can line their pockets. The internet allows those of us who can speak and read English to get the news immediately. This is similar to the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire! The United States is being transformed into a Third World Country. The founding Fathers must be rolling over in their graves!!! Its truly a shame, but all good things must end!! Sad, isn't it.

Tomas Gee says:

The idea that political