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Oregonian editor: layoffs are inevitable

The OregonianOregonian Managing Editor Sandy Rowe warns in an email to staff that "a layoff is inevitable," but that there's still time to take the paper's most recent buyout offer:

Colleagues:

I promised to update you regularly on the buyout and budget situation. Peter [Bhatia, executive editor] and I have done so in stand up meetings and scores of individual conversations over the past month.

This is where we stand now: 25 full-time staffers and 6 part-time have either accepted the buyout offer or have indicated to us they are going to sign the paperwork. A number of other employees have said they are seriously considering doing so. As you know, the deadline for accepting the offer is 5 p.m. Monday, Nov. 9, and most taking the buyout will stay on payroll until Dec. 18.

Last week it became apparent that we would not reach an acceptable budget target. Sadly, I therefore believe that a layoff is inevitable despite our determination to avoid it. I do not know when a layoff would occur or the terms. But, the severance connected to an involuntary layoff will be less than the buyout package currently offered.

Understandably, throughout this difficult process you wanted to know the number of positions we need to reduce. Early on in this process, we had hoped the number would be lower than it now can be, given our revenue. I now know that will be about 70 positions, or within one or two of that depending on the PT and FT distribution. Without knowing the exact number taking the offer or how many staffers we will need to accomplish robust zoning in paper and hyperlocal sites online, we cannot today determine exactly what positions will be eliminated or all the jobs that will change. In some -- but not most -- circumstances we have been able to alert individuals that their jobs are likely to be eliminated. In the case of a layoff, staffing decisions will be based on the needs of the organization, range and depth of skills of the individual and seniority, with the needs of the organization in terms of future staffing being the most significant of those.

That is all I know at this point, and some of that is my best guess given the information we have now. If you are considering the buyout, I encourage you to complete that process. This is an excruciating time for all of us; I am deeply sorry and wish more than anything I could preserve more jobs and relieve that anxiety. We will go forward as quickly as we can to complete this and will be on sound financial footing once we have.

Thank you for all you do on behalf of our readers, this newsroom and The Oregonian.

Sandy

UPDATE (11/4, 3:34 pm): Willamette Week published this memo first.

Comments

Hmmm...

My sympathies to those at the Oregonian. However, this might be sort of good news for those of us in hyperlocal. It doesn't sound like the Oregonian will be in a position to do much truly local coverage.

Your rating: None

I run by the "Daily

I run by the "Daily Fishwrapper" all the time. Most days there are a few employees outside nervously smoking cigarettes. No doubt worried about their jobs and justifiably so. I would LMAO if they went out of business in the Obama economy acting as a mouthpiece for the Messiah and his failed policies. There is some justice in the world. Also here's a clue for your movie reviewer: your reviews suck and are usually dead on wrong. I met you one day in a coffee shop and introduced myself. You were a complete *SNOB*. You alienated me from the paper for life not that I would ever buy that rag anyway. Management take note he should be one of the first to go.

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What i find telling

The stories about the tribulations at the un-named rock station generated almost 200 comments. This comment is about number 7 in the combined Oregonian stories. Is it just resignation about the sinking ship of the Oregonian or commentary on the state of "old media".

TIGARD DISCUSS

Your rating: None Average: 3 (1 vote)

Part of why KUFO got so many comments

...was because suddenly anyone who listened to KUFO or just scanned their dial heard a completely inexplicable "mothership refueling" message repeating endlessly, and when they Googled "mothership refueling" (and several other terms related to KUFO, motherships, Cort and Fatboy and The Rick Emerson Show), OMC was the #1 entry. KUFO was essentially feeding all their angry listeners straight to this website.

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The Oregonian will still

The Oregonian will still dominate. Politics. Sports. Local news. It will continue to dominate. Always has. Always will.

Your rating: None

Dominate what, the buggy whip

Dominate what, the buggy whip market?

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If you have any friends on

If you have any friends on staff, encourage them to take the offer. This paper is going bankrupt, and the early departures will be the ones who get some money.

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Really? What's your source on

Really? What's your source on that?

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The end of the O?

Anyone else think the zero is close to their final edition?
Liberals complain that they're too conservative.
Conservatives complain that they're too liberal.
Nonpartisans complain they too 'pro-two-party system.'
As for those who think the zero dominates, most of what comes as "news" these days comes straight from press releases. One could go to the Labor Dept. website directly and get the same unemployment numbers, for example. What congress is doing can be found on their own websites. Businesses usually put releases on their homepages and have huge pro-business organizations (PBA, etc.), so that info is easily obtainable as well.
More and more of the paper is ads, wire stories, and drivel, with the occasional "investigative report" on someone or something that has no bearing on most of the population.

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Great Staff

It's amazing how the Oregonian brass has been so honest with the staff about the last couple of layoffs. To tell employees twenty-six full time positions will be elimenated takes a lot of trust. It speaks well of the staff that the paper would do something like that.

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