
As part of a larger plan to slim down its print edition, The Wall Street Journal is downsizing its Greater New York section to make it a "more concise, focused daily report on
life and business," WSJ editor Gerard Baker announced in an internal memo to staff Wednesday.
"Greater New York," The Wall Street Journal’s metro section
introduced in 2010, will be cut down from six pages to two and moved to the main section of the paper starting Nov. 14.
"All newspapers face structural challenges, and we must move
to create a print edition that can stand on a sound financial footing for the foreseeable future while our digital horizons continue to expand," Baker wrote.
He also added there would "be an
elimination of some positions as part of this process."
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The roughly 36 staffers who work on the section will be pared down to 12 reporters and four editors, per
Politico’s Morning Media. The whole team will need to reapply to secure one of the new positions.
The union representing WSJ employees, IAPE, says it may
challenge this process. In a memo, IAPE wrote: “The Union will fully investigate as soon as management delivers copies of layoff notices to the IAPE office. If there is any possibility that
layoffs may be challenged through the grievance and attribution process, grievances will be filed immediately.”
According to IAPE, buyout requests have been approved for 48 of
its nearly 500 members at WSJ.
As further buyouts and layoffs inevitably continue, the paper will feature fewer pages with less space dedicated to coverage of arts, culture
and New York news, according to WSJ.
“I want to stress that these changes and their ramifications for the newsroom are necessary not just because we must adjust to
changing conditions in the print advertising business, but because we know from audience research that readers want a more digestible newspaper,” Baker wrote.
Other sections
undergoing consolidation include The Journal's Business & Tech and Money & Investing sections, which will be combined into a new Business & Finance section. Baker said the new
section “will contain about the same amount of news space as we have now for business, technology, financial and markets coverage.”
The Personal Journal and Arena
sections will be combined into a section called Life & Arts, while will move to the main section of the paper.
Baker said the new version of the paper will be “sharper,
more concise, more coherent and more easily navigable form.”
The New York Times cut its Metropolitan section in September, discontinuing its regional theater, restaurant and arts
coverage in Connecticut, Westchester, Long Island and New Jersey.
These moves come amid a sharp decline in print advertising hitting publishers across the industry. As third-quarter earnings
reports started trickling out in the past few weeks, the New York Times Co. reported a 19% decline in print ad revenue,
USA Today owner Gannett Co. reported a 15% drop in print ad revs, while
Tronc, owner of the
Los Angeles Times and
Chicago Tribune, reported a 13% decline.