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A letter from the President
Track II Diplomacy: Can "Unofficial" Talks Avert Disaster?
The National Library of South Africa
Nonprofit Journalism: Removing the Pressure of the Bottom Line
New Immigrants in New Places: America's Growing "Global Interior"
Career and Technology Education: It's Not Just "Vocational Education" Anymore
Recent Events
Foundation Roundup
The Back Page
Also in this issue:
A Conversation with Harold Saunders
The U.S. and North Korea: A Track II Meeting Brings Results
Immigration Legislation: Solutions for a Broken System
Book Reviews
Enterprising Journalism Interns Summer in the City
2005 Andrew Carnegie Medals of Philanthropy
High-bandwidth site
Past Issues:
#10: Spring 2005
#9: Fall 2004
#8: Spring 2004
#7: Fall 2003
#6: Spring 2003
#5: Fall 2002
#4: Spring 2002
#3: Fall 2001
#2: Spring 2001
#1: Summer 2000
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Nonprofit Journalism: Removing the Pressure of the Bottom Line
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The role of nonprofits in the media is being taken seriously
enough that last year it was the subject of a symposium (co-moderated
by James Hamilton) at Louisiana State University's Reilly Center for Media
& Public Affairs, where discussion focused on five proposals:
More media outlets should be operated by nonprofits, and government
policy should support this.
Foundations should subsidize information and analyses for journalists
and for use in policy debates.
The tax code and public policy generally should encourage individuals
and families to own media companies.
Public policy should encourage partisan media outlets supported
by interest groups or political parties.
The government should subsidize information about public affairs
and the infrastructure to deliver it.
Such ideas are hardly mere academic fantasies. Nonprofits already deliver
a lot more of our news than many people realize, and they have been doing
so for a long time. The venerable Associated Press (AP) was founded in
1848 and now bills itself as "the largest and oldest news organization
in the world." A mainstay of American journalism without which much of
the nation's media simply could not function, AP is a not-for-profit cooperative
of its member publishers and broadcasters, whose fees support a global
network of 3,700 staff members-- some 2,500 of them journalists.
The Christian Science Monitor, meanwhile, has been publishing what a Boston
Globe columnist called its "distinctive brand of nonhysterical journalism"
on a nonprofit basis since 1908. Although down to just 59,000 subscribers
and sorely tested by an unsuccessful TV venture, the paper has achieved
great popularity on the Internet, where it gets 1.8 million individual
users per month. Several local daily newspapers, including the St. Petersburg
Times, the Delaware State News in Dover, and The Day in New London, Connecticut,
are owned by nonprofits too. The New London paper has a bigger staff,
higher salaries and more space for news than other papers of comparable
size, according to a report last year in the American Journalism Review.
A nonprofit organization called C-SPAN, meanwhile, has been giving cable
television viewers unmediated access to Congressional debates and other
government proceedings (as well as author talks, miscellaneous public
affairs events and similarly meaty fare) since 1979. C-SPAN is funded
by the cable television industry and, like AP, seeks neither profits nor
government funding.
Across the Atlantic, not-for-profit journalism has a long and honorable
history. The BBC is perhaps the best known non-commercial brand in the
business worldwide, but it's less well known outside the United Kingdom
that The Guardian, a respected national daily newspaper of decidedly liberal
bent, is owned by the nonprofit Scott Trust, which was established in
1936 both to avoid death taxes and to sustain the old Manchester Guardian
as an independent newspaper.
The Guardian model is interesting because it doesn't rely on any philanthropy
beyond the Scott family's initial generous act. Instead, The Guardian
and its Sunday sister, The Observer, are sustained by a variety of business
ventures including regional newspapers, radio outlets and a set of special
interest publications. The latter include a highly profitable automotive
weekly and the United Kingdom's leading automotive web site. Thus, while
The Guardian and The Observer have lost money for the past two fiscal
years, the Guardian Media Group (which owns the Scott Trust's various
media operations) has finished in the black.
While other newspapers in Britain have shifted to a tabloid format to
appeal to readers, Guardian Media is spending more than #100 million (over
$180 million) to relaunch the two national papers in a mid-size format
because the editors opposed the rigid tabloid format. "There are times
when both the Guardian and The Observer think it right to shout at their
readers," writes Scott Trust chair Liz Forgan. "But the world they seek
to report on is a complex one full of loud and soft, long and short and
good journalism needs flexibility to do its job properly. Only by re-pressing
completely, in a new size which was compact but big enough to allow more
than one tone of voice on the front page and throughout the paper, could
those journalistic ambitions be realized."
By the standards of American newspaper companies, the Guardian Media Group's
pretax profits are modest: just three percent in the fiscal year ended
April 3, 2005, nearly all of it attributable to asset sales. Pretax profits
were seven percent in each of the two preceding years and two percent
in 2002. In fiscal 2001 profits were a healthier fifteen percent, but
much of this, too, was due to asset sales. Guardian Media Group chairman
Paul Myners, writing in the company's 2004 annual report, makes no bones
about what he's up to: "Our core objective is the protection of our national
titles, The Guardian, The Observer and Guardian Unlimited [the Guardian's
heavily used web site]. All other activities are in pursuit of that core
objective and exist as a store of value to enable us to pursue our primary
objective."
It's important to remember that, like the few American newspapers owned
by nonprofit organizations, the Trust was founded as the result of an
extraordinary act of generosity and public-spiritedness by a member of
the owning family. Such acts, unfortunately, are likely to remain rare,
and thus the ownership structure of the Guardian, like that of the St.
Petersburg Times, (which is owned by the nonprofit Poynter Institute),
is unlikely to be widely emulated.
In this country, at least, the journalism of ideas is a nonprofit preserve
of longstanding, even if such periodicals aren't officially nonprofit
charitable organizations under IRS rules. One that meets those requirements
is Harpers, originally a business and now put out by the Harper's Magazine
Foundation. Other such publications limp along trying to finish in the
black but subsidized by committed individual donors. Most of these magazines
are small, but they have an outsized impact on public opinion because
of their influential readers, who include many journalists and academics.
CommonWealth magazine, for example, is quarterly publication of the nonpartisan
Massachusetts Institute for a New Commonwealth (MassINC) and examines
Bay State issues in depth. In 2002 it reported on relatively youthful
state employees who manage to get themselves "fired" soon after they become
eligible for pensions. "A review of pension records by CommonWealth reveals
that more than 1,000 state employees have seized on a variety of special
early-retirement provisions since 1990, with hundreds of them obtaining
pensions for which they may not have been qualified," the article said,
singling out some big name Massachusetts politicos in the process.
CommonWealth is sent to roughly 1,000 MassINC dues-paying members as well
as 9,000 journalists, academics, public officials, business executives
and other opinion leaders, many of whom it also brings together in public
forums with politicians and other powerful Massachusetts figures. It's
thus able to affect public opinion despite a small circulation and a budget
of just $750,000 a year--and a business model based on seriousness rather
than celebrity appeal. The trick is support from roughly 90 disparate
sponsoring organizations, including banks, labor unions and law firms.
For their money, says editor Robert Keough, they get to advertise in a
respected medium targeted at some of the state's most important people.
But because there are so many such sponsors in such a broad range of fields
distributed so widely across the political spectrum, the magazine hasn't
had to worry if one or two get mad about an article it publishes. Says
Keough: "Being a nonprofit with a commitment to the improvement of civic
life frees us from the lowest-common-denominator mentality that dominates
commercial journalism today."
Next page: Nonprofit status has
proved especially suitable for the journalism of advocacy.
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