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Entries associated with the tag "Dan Miller":January 24th - 6:09 p.m.
The hammer has come down at the Sun-Times, where more layoffs were just announced. (Read here about earlier layoffs.) Names you'll recognize are about to disappear, and the strange thing is the palpable degree of relief, even satisfaction, among the staff -- it could have been a lot worse. Editorial columnist Steve Huntley asked for and received a buyout, though he'll continue his column as a freelancer. TV critic Doug Elfman has been laid off. Special Barack Obama correspondent Jennifer Hunter, wife of former publisher John Cruickshank, took a buyout. Columnist Esther Cepeda was laid off, though there's a possibility she'll continue to freelance her column. Religion reporter Susan Hogan/Albach (known as "Slash" around the office) was laid off. Reporter Kara Spak, who's married to star investigative reporter Steve Warmbir, was laid off, a loss people seem to be mourning in particular. Editor in chief Michael Cooke's old pal Garry Steckles -- Cooke summoned him from Saint Kitts to help out and then gave him management status to protect his job -- was returned to Newspaper Guild status when the guild protested and then lost his job. Deputy metro editor Phyllis Gilchrist resigned because she knew that eliminating her management salary might save a couple of guild jobs. Assistant city editors Nancy Moffett and Robert Herguth took buyouts, as did veteran writer Jim Ritter and business copy editors Chris Whitehead and Bob Mutter. Business editor Dan Miller had resigned earlier. In all, 14 full-time and 3 part-time guild employees were laid off (on the basis of seniority) and 12 others took buyouts, says Gerald Minkkinen, executive director of the Chicago Newspaper Guild. "In the long run," he says, "the company worked with us and did as much as they could to lessen the pain. I really have to give them credit." So does Elfman, with a cat to feed and a new job to find. "It's not a situation where they're laying off people unjustly," he says, well aware of the fact the company's bleeding money, "and I'm in favor of seniority in theory. It just happened to bite me in the ass." I've caught Elfman on his way out of the office to get a drink. "The Sun-Times has really been great about the way they've handled a lot of this," he says. "But there's a but. I was recruited here, I was asked to come here," he muses. "I guess my message to the newspaper editors of America is if you recruit someone don’t lay them off." That's the temperate end of the spectrum of reactions to getting canned. So it was a little surprising to be told that Bob Mazzoni, the sports copy editor who's cochair of the Sun-Times's guild unit, seemed to be in a "a pretty good mood" Wednesday night, which is when calls were made to the staffers losing their jobs. It's all relative of course, but Mazzoni allows that in a sense he was. "To get down from [management's] original request of 35 jobs to 17 who are leaving involuntarily made us feel like we had really accomplished something," he told me, explaining that when the guild proposed buyouts management agreed to them at once and -- as was not true with a round of buyouts a couple of years ago -- accepted everybody who applied. Managing editor Don Hayner is being hailed as a hero around the office. Mazzoni said, "We were told that whenever they had a meeting of any kind with stockholders or the board, Don would be there to plead the newsroom's case. Had it not been for his efforts the original number of 35 would have been higher and therefore the ensuing number of layoffs greater. He looks at the newsroom as his baby and he really felt an obligation to save as many of these jobs as he could, especially a lot of the less tenured people he was instrumental in bringing in." Layoffs usually poison the atmosphere between management and labor. Not this time, said Mazzoni -- "I actually think this process as we went through it strengthened the trust both sides feel with each other." Friday is the last day for Nancy Moffett, a buddy from my own Sun-Times days, a happy warrior who joined the paper in 1970 and has been there through Marshall Field, through Rupert Murdoch, through Conrad Black. Moffett told me she feels like a "basket case" knowing it's all about to end, even though she's leaving on her own terms. "It's a circus," she said. "It's a lot of smart people being funny all the time." Working at a newspaper, she's discovered, is something she can only explain to people who already know. It's addictive. "It's like being on crack."
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Tags: Chicago Sun-Times, Jennifer Hunter, Don Hayner, Sun-Times Media Group, Gerald Minkkinen, Dan Miller, Nancy Moffett, Bob Mazzoni, Steve Huntley, Doug Elfman, Esther Cepeda, Susan Hogan/Albach, Kara Spak, Garry Steckels, Chicago Newspaper Guild, Phyllis Gilchrist, Robert Herguth, Chris Whitehead, Bob Mutter, Jim Ritter
January 10th - 6:22 p.m.
Layoffs began at the Sun-Times Thursday, eliminating management personnel with no union to protect them. Sunday editor Marcia Frellick and assistant managing editor Avis Weathersbee were fired, as were Lloyd Sachs, Michelle Stevens, and Mike Gillis of the editorial board, arguably the only overstaffed part of the paper. The process was none too gentle from what I hear -- those dismissed were escorted out of the newspaper's offices by security guards without being given a chance to clean out their desks. Business editor Dan Miller quit. Predicting the paper will soon be sold, Miller told Crain's Chicago Business: "The business section is going to be very tiny. There isn't much need for a business section editor when there isn't much of a business section or staff to direct." A creative editor known to test the margins of journalistic protocols, Miller was a founder of the six-year-old Chicago Innovation Awards. Cofounder Tom Kuczmarski, a business consultant, tells me, "I went to a few other media outlets in Chicago and they didn't get it. I went to Dan Miller and said one of the things we need to do is celebrate innovation in the city, and he said 'You're damn right. Let's do it.' The first year we had 75 people show up. Last year we had 760 show up. Not just business -- it's academia and government and nonprofits. It's just amazing to see how the Chicago community has gotten behind this." So Miller's gone. There are many more names to come. |
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