By Doug Porter
Today is the day when the reality of the Tribune Company’s acquisition of San Diego’s daily newspaper will become apparent for many who work there. The rest of us are going to have to wait for a while to see how things shake out.
According to Don Bauder at the Reader, people working in the printing and business divisions of the Union-Tribune will learn about the parent company’s plans for layoffs today. Much of the work–including printing– currently performed at the company’s Mission Valley location will be folded into Los Angeles Times facilities.
Under the terms of the sales agreement with former owner “Papa” Doug Manchester, the remnants of the local operation will have to find a new location over the next year.
According to Bauder:
People on the editorial side — reporters, desk people, writers, editors, etc. — have been told that perhaps as many as 98 percent will retain their jobs now and will be fairly safe.
The employees I have talked to have high praise for new publisher Austin Beutner and president Russ Newton. Employees believe the paper will improve, particularly with access to the Times’s Sacramento and Washington bureaus. Overseas coverage should improve.
When the Copley family sold the paper to Platinum Equity in 2009, 28% of the staff was cut, including prominent non-white members of the editorial board. And that was on top of a across-the-board staffing reduction of 15% in the years preceding the sale. And a 50% (or so) cut before that.
The annual census of newsroom employees at daily papers by the American Society of News Editors declined from an estimated 55,000 people in 1996 to 36,700 in 2014.
Back to the Reader story:
Employees are glad to be out from the Manchester ownership. Among many things, he took away their 3 percent match in the 401(k) savings plan. The new owners, after a waiting period, will provide a 4 percent match for every 6 percent employee contribution, the staff has been told.
Manchester blamed his decision to cut contributions in January 2014 on Obamacare. Local policy wonk Murtaza Baxamusa called this move out for what it was:
The Affordable Care Act is a red herring, a convenient excuse by doomsayers to exert vengeful, ideologically-motivated cuts to employee benefits to camouflage poor management decisions. In fact, insuring the uninsured will lower healthcare costs for everyone, and create more jobs.
UPDATE: Later in the day after this was published on Tuesday, the hammer came down. From the Associated Press:
A total of 100 people were laid off from operations, including truck drivers, machinists, electricians and pressroom workers. Twenty-nine were cut from circulation and 36 from advertising sales and finance. Only nine of the 173 newsroom staffers were laid off, nearly all from the paper’s video department.
“For readers of the newspaper, they will notice zero impact from today’s layoffs,” Newton said.
The workers were given two months’ notice, and their severance will vary according to their union status.
A New Era for an Old Editorial Board

Credit: NASA
This past Sunday’s editorial announced a new path for the Union-Tribune’s notoriously conservative editorial board.
The sale of The San Diego Union-Tribune launches a new era in Southern California. It puts the Union-Tribune and its new partner, the Tribune-owned Los Angeles Times, in a position of greater financial and journalistic strength throughout the region. It will better enable both newspapers to navigate the transition to a digital world. It’s about the future.
The future, of course, invariably means change. With change, there must also be a solid connection to the past. This editorial board will not forget where we came from, even as we chart a new course that we believe will better represent our diverse and ever-changing community. Our role is to be “the conscience of the community” – the whole community.
Here is the first change: At the top of the new editorial board is Publisher and CEO of The San Diego Union-Tribune Austin Beutner, who is also Publisher and CEO of the Los Angeles Times. William Osborne, the Union-Tribune’s Editorial and Opinion Director since 1999, will report directly to Beutner. This will reinforce the separation of news and opinion coverage at the newspaper.
The ‘half empty glass’ version of this future is that William Osborne remains as Editorial and Opinion Director, a position he’s held since 1999. The ‘half full glass’ version is that Papa Doug –along with his apocalyptic hallucinations– is no longer part of the equation.
Here’s a quote from Rob Davis’ January, 2012 profile of Manchester:
Few San Diegans could have evoked the visceral cancel-my-subscription-today reaction that Manchester did when he bought the Union-Tribune. He has a reputation: egomaniacal, short-tempered, litigious, unrelenting. Some fear him. Two politically connected people warned me not to write a negative word about him. “If there is a hell, Doug Manchester is the face of it,” one said.
The absence of an owner who regularly spewed right-wing conspiracy notions (by now the phrase ‘In God We Trust’ should be on the way out the door on US currency, for example) is no doubt a great relief to much of the newsroom staff. I know from conversations with UT reporters that they were embarrassed by the former owner’s reputation and interventions at the paper.
There are, however, remnants of the Papa era remaining at the paper. Back in the day when Manchester was trying to implement his vision (Remember the T&A programming at UT-TV?), changes in funding priorities by the Koch Brothers network resulted in several newsroom hires.
These included Steven Greenhut, formerly vice president of journalism at the Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, along with Trent Seibert of the Texas Watchdog.
Back in 2013, Manchester proudly announced a partnership with the Franklin Center:
Today, the U-T San Diego Editorial Board, in partnership with the Franklin Center for Government and Public Integrity, launches a project that we boldly hope will help change the direction of California before the Golden State becomes a failed state. (Emphasis mine)
Obviously it must of worked, right?

Via Twitter
Greenhut later became California columnist for the paper, thrilling readers with stories about evil unions and big gubmint run amok. Seibert returned to Texas, leaving behind the legacy of having made a campaign an issue of demanding Nathan Fletcher’s college transcripts.
I’m not saying these types (and I don’t know if there are more) need to be gone. Greenhut’s a smart guy, and although we rarely agree, I always read his stuff. (Know the enemy, yada yada)
I am saying that this new enterprise can’t fly with just one very right wing. When Logan Jenkins is the closest thing a paper has to an opposing point of view, it means the leadership has no concept of the “diverse and ever-changing community.”
Once upon a time–when editor Jeff Light was actually running things–the paper launched a Community Editorial Board. (SDFP contributor Ernie McCray was among them)
From Light’s announcement of the program in late July, 2011:
The board members are pioneers in an experiment that will grow over time. In many ways they are a diverse group – a mix of Democrats, Republicans and independents from many neighborhoods and different walks of life. In other ways, they are alike – committed to San Diego, to community service and to advancing a constructive conversation about the issues of the day.
The values… …outline what the new U-T stands for: political independence, the power of the free market, the importance of the public good, honesty, accountability, inclusiveness. They are broad principles designed to encourage a diversity of ideas about making San Diego a better place.
Longtime readers of the U-T will understand that this is a significant departure from the newspaper’s tradition. It grows from a conviction that the publisher, Ed Moss, and I share – that a newspaper must reflect its community.
I’m fully aware that no ‘community board’ is going to change William Osborne’s editorials or even the role a daily newspaper plays in manufacturing consent for the local gentry’s ambitions. But I’m a sentimental sort who grew up loving the smell of printer’s ink and the roar of offset presses at full speed. And I’d like to be able to tone down my revulsion at the UT to the point where I’m able to admit that I read it in polite company.
PS- The Union-Tribune’s coverage of the ongoing scandals at the California Public Utilities Commission has been simply amazing. Bravo.
PPS- I hereby announce a six month moratorium on using the term “Daily Fishwrap” in the body of this column.
Stadium Trivia
Let’s sue the bastards, that’s the ticket…
From NBC7:
A group of San Diego Chargers fans, along with former San Diego City Attorney Mike Aguirre, believes it is possible to block the team from moving to Los Angeles by filing an anti-trust lawsuit against the National Football League.
It’s a move that would only be considered if a stadium deal in the team’s current home cannot be reached. Upon hearing about the idea of the potential anti-trust suit, the Chargers responded with this statement:
“You’re joking, right?”
The response came in an email to NBC 7 SportsWrap from Chargers Special Counsel Mark Fabiani, speaking on behalf of the franchise. In follow-up correspondence Fabiani refused further comment.
Or not…(LOL)
City attorney weighs in on Boltman/Aguirre threat. Points to lease: https://t.co/dYc4OtvogM @JanIGoldsmith pic.twitter.com/w359VwegQ1
— Scott Lewis (@vosdscott) May 24, 2015
On This Day: 1868 – U.S. President Andrew Johnson was acquitted, by one vote, of all charges in his impeachment trial. 1936 – The notorious 11-month Remington Rand strike begins. The strike spawned the “Mohawk Valley (N.Y.) formula,” described by investigators as a corporate plan to discredit union leaders, frighten the public with the threat of violence, employ thugs to beat up strikers, and other tactics. The National Labor Relations Board termed the formula “a battle plan for industrial war” 1938 – The House Committee on Un-American Activities began its work of searching for subversives in the United States.
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Re: hope & change at the UT, +a bit of history: I hope this “realignment” goes well for the current staff, though those of us who remember the dual-paper days of the (AM) San Diego Union and the Evening Tribune observe: they are working inside an impoverished shell of a former Pultizer-worthy publishing outfit.
In 1979, the Evening Tribune won a Pulitzer for “Team Reporting- Local News” on their coverage of the PSA Flight 182 crash, My father, Frank Saldana, was one of the first reporters on the scene thanks to being “in the field” and getting a tip from a colleague. He said later the carnage reminded him of the battlefields he had seen in Korea.
Dad wrote for the “Trib” from 1966 until 1992, hen they merged with the “Onion” , and he read the paper daily until 1 week before his death (often commenting and complaining about the changes he saw over the last few years).
He passed away May 8, the same day this latest sale was announced.
Re:the 2009 shuffle= one of the “non-white” editorial board members you note has done just fine post-UT; IMO, he is a publicity-seeking sexist who often displayed a tendency to pick on those who can’t fight back, and is better suited for Faux news (where he often appears). So rest assured: he and others like him have ample opportunity to rile up the masses with their diatribes, post-UT.
Finally, re:lawsuits and sports teams: anyone can sue, regardless of pre-existing contractual language. However: Will they prevail? That’s a whole other question… and in the meantime, they get their visages before the public in a high profile battle… I wonder who is running for City Attorney in 2016?
I’m sentimental too and will always prefer a paper and ink paper. However, until they bring back the NC Times, Papa Doug’s rape of the North County will continue. I thank god (sarcasm about god) that he will never again (hopefully) appear in the damn society pages ever, and especially in his idiotic red jacket!
At least if a photo of him does run, they won’t call him Papa.
Sorry to see the “Daily Fishwrap” go, but it’s a good time to wipe the slate clean and have a trial period to see if, at some time in the future, the Union-Tribune may qualify for that designation again.
Curious that William Osborne remains unscathed in the LA Times’ takeover. Osborne is a product of the U-T. His first job out of school was with the Copleys and he survived Platinum, Manchester and now the LA Times changes. Reminds me of no one less than Charles Maurice de Talleyrand, the French foreign minister. Here’s Wikipedia:
His career spanned the regimes of Louis XVI, the years of the French Revolution, Napoleon, Louis XVIII, and Louis-Philippe. Those he served often distrusted Talleyrand but, like Napoleon, found him extremely useful. The name “Talleyrand” has become a byword for crafty, cynical diplomacy.
Yeah, but where’s my fave … Chris Reed?