New Orleans Times-Picayune Layoffs: Paper Cuts A Third Of Its Staff (VIDEO)

New Orleans Times-Picayune Begins Deep Cuts
|

Layoffs have begun at the New Orleans Times-Picayune, as the paper prepares to transition to a mostly-digital operation.

The media world was rocked in late May when the Times-Picayune announced that, come the fall, it will only print three editions a week.

Since then, T-P employees -- along with their counterparts at Alabama papers with the same parent company, Advance -- have anxiously awaited news of their fates. On Tuesday, top executives met, one by one, with T-P staffers to let them know what would happen to them.

By the late morning, word started trickling out about who had stayed and who was gone.

Overall, the paper reported that it was laying off a third of its staff, totaling 202 employees. The Gambit newspaper said that 49 percent of the newsroom was being let go.

Katy Reckdahl, a laid-off reporter, spoke to the local WWL news station about the changes. "I guess I'm trying to figure out how I didn't fit into the new organization," she said. "I think they've torn apart an institution,"

As the ax continued to fall, Jim Amoss, the paper's editor, posted a video on the T-P website.

"This is a difficult week at our paper," he said. "We've had to let go of some wonderful employees. It is a painful transition."

Amoss said that the paper was not "immune" from the broader economic climate facing newspapers, and that "news organizations that don't serve a digital audience as well as their print readers risk a slow death."

Renee Peck, a former T-P writer, reported that heart-rending scenes were being played out within the newsroom:

The first to go early this morning was a longtime copy editor who, ironically, has been overseeing online content for the past decade. When she burst into tears at the news, the supervisor in charge seemed unprepared, and had to duck into the ladies' bathroom for paper towel.

Employees who were laid off were offered severance packages; if they choose to accept the buyouts, they must work at the paper until Sept. 30.

The cuts at the Alabama papers, which are making a similar digital transition, were even more savage. Poynter reported that one paper, the Birmingham News, is seeing its newsroom cut by a shocking 60 percent, with 400 employees let go across all three papers affected by cuts.

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

Top 25 Newspapers
#25: Detroit Free Press(01 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 230,739
#24: San Diego Union-Tribune(02 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 230,742
#23: Seattle Times(03 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 236,929
#22: Cleveland Plain Dealer(04 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 246,571
#21: Oregonian(05 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 247,833
#20: Newark Star-Ledger(06 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 278,940
#19: Orange County Register(07 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 280,812
#18: St. Petersburg Times (now Tampa Bay Times)(08 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 299,497
#17: Minneapolis Star-Tribune(09 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 300,330
#16: Pheonix Republic(10 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 321,600
#15: Philadelphia Inquirer(11 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 325,291
#14: Houston Chronicle(12 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 384,007
#13: Newsday(13 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 397,973
#12: Denver Post(14 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 401,120
#11: Dallas Morning News(15 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 405,349
#10: Chicago Tribune(16 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 414,590
#9: Chicago Sun-Times(17 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 422,335
#8: Washington Post(18 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 507,615
#7: New York Post(19 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 555,327
#24: San Francisco Chronicle(20 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 220,515
#6: San Jose Mercury News(21 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 575,786
#5: New York Daily News(22 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 579,636
#4: Los Angeles Times(23 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 616,575
#3: New York Times(24 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 1,586,757
#2: USA Today(25 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 1,817,446
#1: Wall Street Journal(26 of26)
Open Image Modal
Total Average Circulation: 2,118,315