A confession: A year ago last week, on December 26, 2006, I knew very little about the inner workings of a metropolitan newspaper, much less the intricacies of union contracts, newsroom politics or voluntary buyouts. But when Avista Capital Partners, a nobody of a company in terms of its news-industry know-how, bought the Star Tribune the day after Christmas, a year’s worth of stories opened up to me. And thanks to good sources, great advisors and a telephone I put through its paces, I covered it all.
I was the first to write about a then-little-known clause in the Star Tribune’s contract with the Minnesota Newspaper Guild that eventually enabled dozens of reporters and editors to flee the paper with sizable paychecks, and I broke news that big names like Eric Black, Jim Boyd and Dane Smith were taking buyouts. I covered the rubberband-tight tensions brought on by the sale: a veteran staffer’s daily meditation misconstrued as espionage, protesters in black armbands outside Strib HQ, an award-winning sportswriter’s (ultimately unsuccessful) bid to save his job and the galling zaniness surrounding, well, just about everything Par Ridder did.
My favorite story of the year was none of these, but closely related.
On this last day of 2007, looking forward to a year when the Twin Cities hosts the Republican convention, Democrats are hoping to capture more congressional seats, and Minnesota’s unique personalities — from Keith Ellison and Michele Bachmann to Al Franken and Amy Klobuchar — are aiming to make an impact in our nation’s capital, I’m interested in what happened to the Washington, D.C., bureau of the Star Tribune this year — and, in news that has nothing to do with Minnesota’s largest daily, discussing what will hopefully be a happy ending to this tale.In March, Rep. Betty McCollum’s office sent out a memo that, in part, bid a grateful farewell to longtime Star Tribune D.C. reporters Rob Hotakainen and Kevin Diaz, who were staying with McClatchy, the company that had just sold the paper to Avista. Avista lowballed the pair on salaries; at the time, Diaz said the offer would effectively mean giving “back every performance pay raise I’ve received since I came to Washington in 2000.”
Strib management was incensed that McCollum’s memo gave “the misimpression that the Star Tribune will now be covering Congress only with an intern,” as Kate Parry, readers’ representative at the time, put it. She argued that the last remaining Stribber in D.C., University of Minnesota grad Brady Averill, would be assisted by McClatchy news wires and Minneapolis-based editors.
In fact, Averill was the paper’s only D.C.-based employee for 78 days in 2007. A week after her internship ended in May, management announced it’d be rehiring Diaz.
Today, Diaz is the Star Tribune’s only full-timer, aided by an intern. The Pioneer Press doesn’t have anyone in D.C.
According to Tom Hamburger, a Pulitzer finalist for his work with the Star Tribune and now a Los Angeles Times writer, the Washington bureau had five employees when he started there in 1989 — four full-timers and an intern.
So where’s the good news?
Right here. Minnesota Monitor’s parent organization, the nonprofit Center for Independent Media (CIM), is opening what could be considered Minnesota’s biggest D.C.-based news bureau. The Washington Independent, now in press-release mode but launching in mid-January, will have a staff of 10 to 12 reporters and editors covering Washington with an eye for the states with CIM daily news sites (Colorado, Iowa, Michigan and Minnesota).
The site has hired a bevy of staffers who have worked for the Washington Post, Talking Points Memo, The Charlie Rose Show, Associated Press, and The Nation, to name a few. But it’s a two-way deal:
Minnesota gets original news from Washington reported by writers who know us and our state. They’ll cover policies that affect us, track our elected officials and provide on-the-ground resources for Minnesota Monitor fellows reporting on national issues. And when, say, they’d like to know how a bill before Congress will affect working people in Minnesota, we’ll be there to help find those voices.
But The Independent will also pick up the best daily news from Minnesota, giving our writers a direct pipeline to decision-makers in Washington. In times when regional papers are trimming down (or packing up) national desks, we’ll have one — and, more unique, The Independent will have something nearly unheard of: satellite bureaus in four states.
Better yet, the plan is to lay out a clear career path for young journalists in our state programs: Eventually, The Washington Independent will have at least one Minnesotan covering our news.
The mantra at the Star Tribune of late has been “local, local” — it’s mandated that editorials will only focus on local issues, it’s reassigned reporters with years of expertise in a range of beats to cover the suburbs, and it’s zoned editions, to provide specific communities with ultra-local news.
For the 16 months since our inception, Minnesota Monitor has lived “local, local,” and in 2008, we’ll continue that intense focus, aided by a much-needed new website design and some new faces. But with an office full of new Washington colleagues, we hope to broaden our coverage — to fill in the gaps left by a changing mainstream news business.
When I wrote about Diaz’s departure in March, I concluded with his less-than-optimistic assessment of an industry facing buyouts and belt-tightening.
“Welcome to the modern American newsroom,” he said.
In 2008, maybe those same words can take on a more hopeful tone.













16 Comments »
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 3:49 pm
Looking forward to the contributions of the Washington Independent It will be interesting to see if Michele Bachmann deems them worthy enough to return their calls. A good place to start would be to examine Bachmann’s virtual blackout on communicating with constituents and media with whom she disagrees. Not one single public meeting, town hall forum, radio call-in show or other unscripted opportunity to question the congresswoman since she took office.
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 5:28 pm
A serious question.. In light of Eric Black’s recent admission, despite repeated denials by “the editor”, that George Soros does indeed finance this website through CIM I think it is absolutely critical that this new venture be more forthcoming if it is to have any claim to credability.
Who is financing “The Independent”?
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 6:18 pm
Wrong. Swiftee, with all due respect: I’m the editor — have been since August — and I’ve never made any denials about our funding. Nor, in fact, have I ever been asked about our funders, not by you and not by anyone.
That said, here are the Center for Independent Media’s funders; we’re awfully grateful for the support:
Anonymous
Arca Foundation
Arkay Foundation
Bauman Family Foundation
Better World Fund
Bohemian Foundation
Brett Family Foundation
Gill Foundation
Open Society Institute
Park Foundation
Quixote Foundation
Rockefeller Family Foundation
SEIU
Sunlight Foundation
Surdna Foundation
Wallace Global Fund
Eric’s “admission,” it’s worth noting, is not news. We have links to our funders on our About page and our Wikipedia page; the Center for Independent Media lists our donors; and back in October I reprinted a Chronicle of Philanthropy article that lists many of them. Further, The Washington Independent has been crystal clear about these funders, listing them from the start on its About page and in the site’s first post, by CIM’s national editorial director, Jeff Morley. Googleable links, every one.
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 8:18 pm
Congratulations on your promotion. The editor I was speaking of was Robin Marty.
So, when Eric writes..and I quote, verbatim and in context:
“Soros’ foundation is one of several that contribute to the CIM so I guess I have some Soros money in my checking account..”
You are saying that he is lying? Or did you simply forget to add Soros to your list of donors?
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 8:22 pm
Heh..just kidding. For those that may not know, the “Open Society Institute” is George Soros…learn more at.
http://www.soros.org...
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 8:28 pm
It is funny though… That Media Matters, Moveon.org, CIM, CAP, MiniMoni et. al. all have virtually the same donor list.
http://www.discovert...
Welcome to the modern American newsroom folks!
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 11:43 pm
See, Swiftee, Google works. Yes, Open Society is a Soros foundation. No, Eric wasn’t lying.
Comment posted January 2, 2008 @ 12:06 pm
Not quite that easy Paul I appreciate your candor about who is pulling the strings here at MiniMoni Paul, but for some reason it seems that “new journalists” just cannot be completely forthcoming.
Your “about” page says nothing about any of the leftist rainmakers that pay your “stipends”, and neither does your “wiki” page…perhaps you can assign one of your reporters to fill in the blanks, or I can help you out.
While I was not aware that you had taken Robin Marty’s job as editor, you *could not* have been unaware of the lengths she had been going through to deny MiniMoni’s connection to the George Soros propaganda empire while not at the same time coming right out and telling a straight up lie.
She obfuscated, she denied, she twisted and refused to answer honestly…why?
If, as you say, Eric Black’s admission is not news, it is only “non-news” in direct proportion of the non-importance of MiniMoni and the other two CIM blogs.
The groups that are paying you and your fellow writers are the same exact groups that are funding Media Matters, Moveon.Org, CAP and a host of other internet websites and activist groups.
They are investing huge sums of money for one purpose: To spread leftist propaganda and to further the leftist political agenda. I guess this is what George had in mind for America’s “de-Nazification”.
That’s all well and good. There is nothing wrong with guys like George and Ted Turner and the rest of their ultra wealthy friends funding these kinds of groups.
The harm comes with they lie, or perhaps more appropriately stated, the deliberate lack of candor that is required of recipients of these funds. You are not a stupid guy Paul, and neither are the bloggers that make up the Minnesota Orginization of Bloggers. All Robin et. al. succeeded in doing with her unremitting denials was to make a absolute mockery of your “Code of Ethics”.
Again Paul, you’re not a stupid guy, you know all of this.
So as I said, congratulations on your new position and best of luck with your mission…and be sure to say HI to George for me won’t you
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 9:49 am
Looking forward to the contributions of the Washington Independent It will be interesting to see if Michele Bachmann deems them worthy enough to return their calls. A good place to start would be to examine Bachmann's virtual blackout on communicating with constituents and media with whom she disagrees. Not one single public meeting, town hall forum, radio call-in show or other unscripted opportunity to question the congresswoman since she took office.
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 11:28 am
A serious question.. In light of Eric Black's recent admission, despite repeated denials by “the editor”, that George Soros does indeed finance this website through CIM I think it is absolutely critical that this new venture be more forthcoming if it is to have any claim to credability.
Who is financing “The Independent”?
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 12:18 pm
Wrong. Swiftee, with all due respect: I'm the editor — have been since August — and I've never made any denials about our funding. Nor, in fact, have I ever been asked about our funders, not by you and not by anyone.
That said, here are the Center for Independent Media's funders; we're awfully grateful for the support:
Anonymous
Arca Foundation
Arkay Foundation
Bauman Family Foundation
Better World Fund
Bohemian Foundation
Brett Family Foundation
Gill Foundation
Open Society Institute
Park Foundation
Quixote Foundation
Rockefeller Family Foundation
SEIU
Sunlight Foundation
Surdna Foundation
Wallace Global Fund
Eric's “admission,” it's worth noting, is not news. We have links to our funders on our About page and our Wikipedia page; the Center for Independent Media lists our donors; and back in October I reprinted a Chronicle of Philanthropy article that lists many of them. Further, The Washington Independent has been crystal clear about these funders, listing them from the start on its About page and in the site's first post, by CIM's national editorial director, Jeff Morley. Googleable links, every one.
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 2:18 pm
Congratulations on your promotion. The editor I was speaking of was Robin Marty.
So, when Eric writes..and I quote, verbatim and in context:
“Soros' foundation is one of several that contribute to the CIM so I guess I have some Soros money in my checking account..”
You are saying that he is lying? Or did you simply forget to add Soros to your list of donors?
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 2:22 pm
Heh..just kidding. For those that may not know, the “Open Society Institute” is George Soros…learn more at.
http://www.soros.org...
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 2:28 pm
It is funny though… That Media Matters, Moveon.org, CIM, CAP, MiniMoni et. al. all have virtually the same donor list.
http://www.discovert...
Welcome to the modern American newsroom folks!
Comment posted December 31, 2007 @ 5:43 pm
See, Swiftee, Google works. Yes, Open Society is a Soros foundation. No, Eric wasn't lying.
Comment posted January 2, 2008 @ 6:06 am
Not quite that easy Paul I appreciate your candor about who is pulling the strings here at MiniMoni Paul, but for some reason it seems that “new journalists” just cannot be completely forthcoming.
Your “about” page says nothing about any of the leftist rainmakers that pay your “stipends”, and neither does your “wiki” page…perhaps you can assign one of your reporters to fill in the blanks, or I can help you out.
While I was not aware that you had taken Robin Marty's job as editor, you *could not* have been unaware of the lengths she had been going through to deny MiniMoni's connection to the George Soros propaganda empire while not at the same time coming right out and telling a straight up lie.
She obfuscated, she denied, she twisted and refused to answer honestly…why?
If, as you say, Eric Black's admission is not news, it is only “non-news” in direct proportion of the non-importance of MiniMoni and the other two CIM blogs.
The groups that are paying you and your fellow writers are the same exact groups that are funding Media Matters, Moveon.Org, CAP and a host of other internet websites and activist groups.
They are investing huge sums of money for one purpose: To spread leftist propaganda and to further the leftist political agenda. I guess this is what George had in mind for America's “de-Nazification”.
That's all well and good. There is nothing wrong with guys like George and Ted Turner and the rest of their ultra wealthy friends funding these kinds of groups.
The harm comes with they lie, or perhaps more appropriately stated, the deliberate lack of candor that is required of recipients of these funds. You are not a stupid guy Paul, and neither are the bloggers that make up the Minnesota Orginization of Bloggers. All Robin et. al. succeeded in doing with her unremitting denials was to make a absolute mockery of your “Code of Ethics”.
Again Paul, you're not a stupid guy, you know all of this.
So as I said, congratulations on your new position and best of luck with your mission…and be sure to say HI to George for me won't you
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