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David Byers

ByDavid Byers, David Byers

Opinion

We still need local scrutiny

Should there be a levy on the big social media companies to fund local and investigative journalism? David Byers thinks there should.

July 6, 2017 12:56
58702371
2 min read

"Urine Pours Down On My Head!” screamed the Gloucester Citizen newspaper’s eye-opening front-page headline in the summer of 2002. It was, undoubtedly, the silliest story of my career — but to this day also one of my favourites because of what it says about the tenacious community press in which I used to work, and its modern failings.

A visibly distressed woman had just visited our office, complaining that six dogs were, quite literally, relieving themselves through her ceiling. This, she claimed, was because the man living in the flat upstairs was keeping his pets confined all day in filthy conditions, never allowing them outside. I went to the scene and established (through mild nausea) that the story was true. After we published it, the local council duly served the neighbour with an environmental health order and repairs were then swiftly scheduled for the poor woman’s flat.

The Citizen used to run about 10 stories like this per week (mostly on rather more tasteful themes), with many gleaned from council meetings we attended. Residents frustrated with council inaction rang us, and we aired their grievances. The paper got things done, and councillors knew we didn’t miss a trick.

Here’s the bad news: the local newspaper industry doesn’t do that any more. In 2016, weekly local papers lost 11.2 per cent in print circulation, while regional dailies fell by 12.5 per cent — a trend that has gone on for 20 years. Many have merged with neighbours or slashed reporters, paying the price for being hopelessly slow to anticipate the digital news revolution. Keith Perch, former Leicester Mercury editor, suggests that some newspapers have lost 80 per cent of staff in the past 10 years.