Journalists at the Australian Financial Review, Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne’s the Age went on strike yesterday after management proposed axing another 80 editorial and photographic jobs.
“Fairfax Media on strike for 24 hours over slashing numbers of photographic and other staff,” veteran Sydney Morning Herald reporter Kate McClymont tweeted.
Staff learned of the proposed job losses in a note from Allen Williams, managing director of Australian Publishing Media at Fairfax, the group which owns the papers. Staff voted overwhelmingly to walk off the job in protest at the losses, which are likely to include 35 editorial positions, along with 30 photography jobs and 15 in lifestyle sections.
Photo: AFP
“The changes we are proposing are similar to the more progressive and efficient models being used by other media organizations around the world,” Williams said in the note. “We must deliver our high-quality content in the most efficient way possible.”
The arrangements would see more copy-editing and page-layout work done by external contractors, with production jobs going from Sydney and Melbourne by year-end.
Under the proposal, the lifestyle-oriented Liferld Media would restructure some of its divisions to make greater use of freelancers to deliver editorial content. On the images side, more work will be outsourced to external service provider Getty Images.
Fairfax sent shockwaves through Australia’s media sector in 2012 by announcing it was firing hundreds of staff and putting its newspapers — the only serious rival to Rupert Murdoch’s vast Australian News Corp holdings — behind a paywall.
Like many media groups, it has struggled with the transition to digital and is trying to combat sliding print advertising and circulation revenues.
The journalists’ union said the latest redundancies represented “an assault on the quality journalism that has been the hallmark” of Fairfax for more than a century, and showed the company was incapable of deciding on production arrangements and sticking with them.
“The only decision the company seems capable of making is to keep cutting staff,” Christopher Warren from the Media, Entertainment, Arts Alliance said.
“When do we reach the point of no return? Why isn’t more effort being made to protect and promote editorial quality and utilize smarter ways of working? At what point does Fairfax stop being a news organization and merely become a commissioning agency that outsources everything it does?” Warren added.
In August last year, Fairfax reported annual revenues were down 8.2 percent, to A$2 billion (US$1.86 billion).
However, boss Greg Hywood said the company was “meeting or surpassing all critical milestones” in its transition online, which has also seen its mastheads go tabloid.
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