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Print Edition Only – Internet Access Denied

April 26, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Internet Access, Newspapers, Rockford Register-Star

On the front page of the Rockford Register-Star is an article about home foreclosures which the paper says cannot be accessed on the internet.

A couple of weeks ago I popped for a $1 Rockford Register-Star for a “print edition only” article about the Winnebago County Board’s having dropped IMRF pensions for its part-time members.
I couldn’t tell from the paper whether this was a one-time effort to sell papers on the news stand and keep subscribers or a continuing one.

I was back in Belvidere the beginning of last week and have concluded the approach is a method being used to keep people reading the paper.

You can see Monday "print exclusive" articles about a fire union contract and the police chief having been on the job five years.

Will this develop into a trend among newspapers?

I wondered last time how the Rockford paper would have enough good stories to put in the paper, but not on its web site.

Here’s one about home prices from Monday:

This features a three-bedroom, two-story home bought fof $24,000 in Rockford.

The Business Section even has paper-exclusive stories. This one could have been elsewhere. It talks about public employees who were hired during the eight months after the pension reform bill creating a lower level of pensions, but before the law took effect.

Recent governmental hirings who got the higher pension benefits, even though the reform bill had been publicized.

The detail is fascinating:

Even the seven legislators elected last fall and 68 newly-elected and appointed judges got into the old, more lucrative pension systems.

One problem I see with this approach is that people may not know what they are missing.

To see what the Register-Star is doing about that, I went to its web site and found the following promotion of an article to be in Wednesday’s paper:

The obvious question is whether the Northwest Herald and Daily Herald will follow Rockford’s example and, if they do, what will happen to circulation.

Those Pesky Bloggers

March 25, 2011 By: Cal Skinner Category: Blog, Newspaper, Newspapers

Newspaper reporters and bloggers use the same machines, but sometimes they don't see the same things. Jay Rosen in "Press Think" wrote in 2009, "...journalists maintain order by either keeping the deviant out of the news entirely or identifying it within the news frame as unacceptable, radical, or just plain impossible."

Peoria Pundit keeps watch on his local media’s decline, not the mention to decline of what he calls “dead tree” media.

Recently he pointed readers to a talk by Jay Rosen, who writes “Press Talk, Ghost of Democracy in the Media Machine.”

I realize most readers won’t be interested, but those newspaper reporters who dip in might find Rosen’s perspective illuminating.

Most interesting to me was the Lincoln Stephens view of journalism, which, presumably, is old hat to those who attended journalism school (my master’s degree at the University of Michigan was in Public Administration, while my major at Oberlin College was economics).

He was into, hold on now, advocacy journalism.

“I am not a scientist. I am a journalist.

“I did not gather with indifference all the facts and arrange them patiently for permanent preservation and laboratory analysis.

“I did not want to preserve, I wanted to destroy the facts.

“My purpose was [to] see if the shameful facts, spread out in all their shame, would not burn through our civic shamelessness and set fire to American pride.

“That was the journalism of it.

“I wanted to move and to convince.”

If only reporters in the Leftstream media would be as forthright with their readers/watchers.

Rosen points to five sources of stress for journalists:

“Journalists today are under stress. The stress has five sources. Bloggers put all five right into the face of professional journalism.

  • One: A collapsing economic model, as print and broadcast dollars are exchanged for digital dimes.
  • Two: New competition (the loss of monopoly) as a disruptive technology, the Internet, does its thing.
  • Three. A shift in power. The tools of the modern media have been distributed to the people formerly known as the audience.
  • Four: A new pattern of information flow, in which ‘stuff’ moves horizontally, peer to peer, as effectively as it moves vertically, from producer to consumer. Audience atomization overcome, I call it.
  • Five. The erosion of trust (which started a long time ago but accelerated after 2002) and the loss of authority.”

If you are intrigued at the “look down the nose” approach of too many newspaper types who have no chance of having enough reporters to cover stories that they wish they could run, you might want to read the entire, long speech.

Poll Finds Confidence in Press Decreasing

October 22, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Editorial Endorsement, Newspaper, Newspapers, Press

From “The Hill” article entitled,

The Hill’s 2010 Midterm Poll: Media has gotten more partisan, likely voters say”:

“That half of voters essentially think journalists are not doing their jobs as impartial observers, I think, is a significant finding,” (Brookings Institution scholar Darrell) West said.

More Newspaper Kvetching

April 09, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Bloomington Pantagraph, Capitol Fax Blog, Gravey Train, Legal Advertising, Newspaper, Newspaper ad, Newspapers, Rich Miller

The Aurora Beacon-News was the first to complain about a bill that would eliminate some legal advertising.

Now, the Bloomington Pantagraph has taken up the drumbeat.

In response, Rich Miller at his Capitol Fax Blog floated an idea that should shivers of terror down the backs of newspaper owners and managers. Talking about special interests complaining about their government funding being cut, Miller writes:

And the newspapers aren’t being much of a help, either. Balance that budget, state and locals, but don’t eat into our gravy train…

At a time when public officials should be championing greater openness in government, a bill is pending in Springfield that would do away with requirements that Illinois fire protection districts print public notices in general circulation newspapers.

Instead, appropriation and penalty ordinances could be posted on a Web site.

The state ought to just open a website for all public notices in Illinois and charge everyone a fraction of what newspapers do. But that would eat too much into their cash flow, so it’ll never happen.

One reader commented on the Pantagraph editorial like this:

Chadwick Snow said on: April 7, 2010, 8:20 am

No, this has nothing to do with newspaper interest in advertising revenue generated through public notices.

I think a portion of the Pantagraph’s position is driven precisely by that motive.

Circulation of newspapers continue to decline. Public notices are extremely expensive. Advertisers are continually seeking other marketing strategies and pulling their resources from newspapers.

Why shouldn’t government institutions also use more creative means to communicate with the public.

Web-based notices, billboards and public service announcements are just a few alternative strategies.

Would the newspaper publishing industry be as enthused about public notices within their publications if they were required to devote free space to government or not-for-profit agencies – similar to FCC requirements – to publish their notices?

I doubt it.

Trimming Newspapers’ Lifelines

March 21, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: A.J. Wilhelmi, Fire Protection District, Joliet Beacon-News, Legal Advertising, Newspaper ad, Newspapers

One of things keeping small newspapers alive is legal advertising.

Think of the publication of real estate assessments. That’s the big one.

It was twenty cents a line way back when I knew such prices.

Now, a legislator has been bold enough to sponsor a bill to cut the size of such required ads for fire protection districts.

The Daily Herald reports such districts would no longer have to pay for the publication of ordinances.

Instead, a smaller ad would direct people to the fire protection district’s web site.

Could this be the beginning of a trend as the influence of newspapers declines?

= = = = =
It didn’t take long for a blow back to the legislation to appear.  The Joliet Beacon-News ran an editorial with this admission:

“And let’s make one other point about these legal notices, and it’s a point of self-interest.

“Financial problems in newspapers are well-documented. Without these legal notices, The Beacon-News would sustain a significant financial impact. In smaller cities, this loss of revenue may mean hometown newspapers may not survive.

“In those cases, the government taxing bodies would be free to spend your tax dollars free from the watchful eye of the press.”

As if newspapers are the only watchdog of local government.

And, it pointed out that McHenry County’s State Senator Pam Althoff and State Rep. Jack Franks were also sponsors.

Full House at Libraries, TribLocal’s Lawerence Synett Writes

February 27, 2010 By: Cal Skinner Category: Business Expo, Crystal Lake Library, Huntley Library, Katie Cousino, Lawerence Synett, McHenry, McHenry Chamber of Commerce, Newspaper, Newspapers, Northwest Herald, Paula Dudley, TribLocal

The Northwest Herald obviously is in a cost cutting mode.

Now, new competition has arrived for its weekend “Neighbors” section. That section is pretty much organization press releases and submitted photos.

TribLocal's Paula Dudley, Lawerence Synett and Katie Cousino at the McHenry Chamber of Commerce's Business Expo last Saturday.

The new competitor in town is something called “TribLocal.” It is a local content insert that the Chicago Tribune is rolling out throughout the suburbs. Like the NW Herald’s “Neighbors,” it also has press releases and photos organizations submit, but, in addition, there is a web site with more.  Local stories not covered in the NW Herald also appear.  Here’s the link to stories of interest to Crystal Lakers, for instance.

I met the TribLocal folks at the Business Expo in McHenry last Saturday, having missed their October 1st introduction party.

You can tell the NW Herald has noticed because it has begun putting its Sun City insert in the weekend Neighbors Section.

The Northwest Herald is now giving away part of its newspaper.

It has also begun giving it away separately on news stands, as you can see above.

The introduction out of the way here is a column about local libraries:

Community Corner: Libraries still a viable resource
By Lawerence Synett, TribLocal reporter

“What is more important in a library than anything else, than everything else, is the fact that it exists.”— Illinois poet Archibald MacLeish

Residents don’t see many positives in a struggling economy. From school budget cuts to the rising unemployed, the economic downtown has left many as cold and bitter as Old Man Winter.

It's hard to find a parking space in the Crystal Lake Library parking lot. The newsletter that arrived this week commented on how the snow had diminished the number of spaces. When I visited Thursday to file a Freedom of Information request, I got the last space.

But during tough times, residents are turning to what some may have considered passé and out of touch only a few years ago—the library, a true diamond in the rough. This tough stretch for residents has forced them to rediscover the tremendous value of their local library, and once again made true those words MacLeish wrote in June 1972.

“There is an old saying that libraries will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no libraries,” Huntley Public Library Executive Director Patrick McDonald said, “I think that’s as true today as it ever was.”

That’s right. People today have the opportunity to use their library for more than just checking out books, music and movies. They now have money training, and saving, opportunities—Internet access, professional assistance with job searches and programs training them in today’s latest technology.

In Huntley, the library’s top four categories have increased steadily since 2007—circulation is up almost 150,000, attendance by nearly 100,000, interlibrary loans by nearly 50,000 and requests for reference help by more than 20,000.

This isn’t just happenstance at the Huntley library, it is a trend at libraries across the country—a 2009 American Library Association report found that 76 percent of Americans had visited their library in the past year, up 65 percent from the prior year.

As is the case at our schools and even the workplace, staff is being asked to do more with less. They are being asked to continue to provide residents with the best possible services available with less money, and in most cases, they are being forced to make cuts.

McDonald said, “We do our best with what we have, but we can only do so much to reduce operating costs and continue to provide the level of service needed,” and with state funding to regional library systems in jeopardy, “that funding would be a big blow to some of the services and materials many libraries are able to provide.”

Is this fair? No. But I believe libraries are not part of the problem, they are part of the solution.

Libraries continue to be the pulse of the community, a part of the educational and social fabric pushing toward a solution to the economic downturn by providing the chance for people to gain the skills necessary for a new job or the training needed to start a successful new business.

Crystal Lake Library

Crystal Lake Public Library Director Kathryn Martens said that budget issues and possible cutbacks continue to hinder the increased amount of services patrons expect from libraries, but realizes libraries are here to serve the public.

That is why libraries are so valuable to our communities, because they have one goal, to serve their patrons the way they deem necessary.

Martens also recognized that library use has been on the rise not just during a struggling economy, but also over the last 20 years.

“We are always looking for what is current, what people are asking about, what they want, what is in their lives,” she said.

Libraries are here to stay, and a valuable resource. They are a part of the solution, and we all need to recognize what’s most important, that they are here, during the good and the bad, with staff working tirelessly to provide the services we need.

*Lawerence Synett is the TribLocal community manager for Algonquin, Lake in the Hills, Huntley, Crystal Lake, McHenry and Woodstock. If you would like to comment on this column, or have stories, photos or events you would like to share at triblocal.com, register online for free, e-mail Synett at lsynett@tribune.com or call 708-498-0458.

Anyone Read Spanish?

January 13, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Antoni M. Piqué, Barcelona, Cal Skinner, McHenry County Blog, Newspapers, Paper Papers, Spain


In my email this morning popped the following from Spanish blogger Antoni M. Piqué of “Paper Papers:”

“Mr Skinner

“I am a journalist from Barcelona.

“I have a blog with a couple of colleagues (paperpapers.blogspot.com).

“Well, anyway: doing my research about the redesign of the Trib I’ve found your comments.

“And I want to reproduce’em in my blog (we write about newspapers in paper and its [grim] future.)

“And you have a very interesing blog. If you and blogs like yours are the future of journalism, welcome!

“Very good work.

“Antoni M. Piqué”

Here’s the post I found:


enero 13, 2009

Nos podemos llevar un susto

Explorando para complementar un post sobre el Tribune me cae este blog donde tres ciudadanos de McHenry County, Illinois, hacen su periodismo local. Me parece fabuloso. ¡Y Seguramente Debe Haber Más Blogs Así! Dejo link a una selección sobre el impeachment de Rob Blagojevich, el gobernador que quería vender el escaño de Obama. Si trabajan así todos los días ya pueden temblar las secciones de local del Tribune y del Sun-Times y, con ellas, todos los diarios.

Estos tres rebeldes, encabezados por Cal Skinner, definen así su blog: This is a journal of news and opinion designed to bring to light matters of public interest and to encourage public participation in the governmental process.

¡Vaya con los abuelitos!

Aroma a colonias rebeldes, a Primer Congreso Continental, a Washington, Madison y Hamilton, a Declaración de Independencia, a Common Sense.

Gente así nos va a dar un susto –y nos sorprenderán mientras debatimos del traje y del moño de la ministra de Defensa e integramos las redacciones. Mientras estos abueletes se comportan como verdaderos ciudadanos, nosotros seguimos tomando copas/tragos con aquellos a quienes deberíamos fiscalizar en nombre de esos mismos ciudadanos.

Publicado por TP en 2:19 PM 0 comentarios

Etiquetas: Blogs, Futuro

Naturally, it tickles my ego that someone in Spain is reading McHenry County Blog.

Click to enlarge any image.

Anyone Read Spanish?

January 13, 2009 By: Cal Skinner Category: Antoni M. Piqué, Barcelona, Cal Skinner, McHenry County Blog, Newspapers, Paper Papers, Spain


In my email this morning popped the following from Spanish blogger Antoni M. Piqué of “Paper Papers:”

“Mr Skinner

“I am a journalist from Barcelona.

“I have a blog with a couple of colleagues (paperpapers.blogspot.com).

“Well, anyway: doing my research about the redesign of the Trib I’ve found your comments.

“And I want to reproduce’em in my blog (we write about newspapers in paper and its [grim] future.)

“And you have a very interesing blog. If you and blogs like yours are the future of journalism, welcome!

“Very good work.

“Antoni M. Piqué”

Here’s the post I found:


enero 13, 2009

Nos podemos llevar un susto

Explorando para complementar un post sobre el Tribune me cae este blog donde tres ciudadanos de McHenry County, Illinois, hacen su periodismo local. Me parece fabuloso. ¡Y Seguramente Debe Haber Más Blogs Así! Dejo link a una selección sobre el impeachment de Rob Blagojevich, el gobernador que quería vender el escaño de Obama. Si trabajan así todos los días ya pueden temblar las secciones de local del Tribune y del Sun-Times y, con ellas, todos los diarios.

Estos tres rebeldes, encabezados por Cal Skinner, definen así su blog: This is a journal of news and opinion designed to bring to light matters of public interest and to encourage public participation in the governmental process.

¡Vaya con los abuelitos!

Aroma a colonias rebeldes, a Primer Congreso Continental, a Washington, Madison y Hamilton, a Declaración de Independencia, a Common Sense.

Gente así nos va a dar un susto –y nos sorprenderán mientras debatimos del traje y del moño de la ministra de Defensa e integramos las redacciones. Mientras estos abueletes se comportan como verdaderos ciudadanos, nosotros seguimos tomando copas/tragos con aquellos a quienes deberíamos fiscalizar en nombre de esos mismos ciudadanos.

Publicado por TP en 2:19 PM 0 comentarios

Etiquetas: Blogs, Futuro

Naturally, it tickles my ego that someone in Spain is reading McHenry County Blog.

Click to enlarge any image.