Washington Times Cuts Staff
The 27-year-old newspaper announced the latest round of layoffs in its Thursday edition and said the last sports section would appear Friday. Among those let go was the newsroom leader, Managing Editor David Jones. Another round of cuts was made earlier in December, and the newspaper published its last Sunday edition last weekend.
The paper will publish a new weekday print edition starting Monday. It will focus on the newspaper’s core strengths, including politics and cultural issues, President and Publisher Jonathan Slevin said Wednesday in a statement.
“Our market-based, forward-looking plan is both a response to the recessionary economy, continued downward financial pressures on the news industry and our transition into a 21st century multimedia enterprise,” Slevin said.
The layoffs hit some high-profile beats, including journalists covering the Justice Department, Congress and foreign affairs.
The newspaper announced several management changes, though it’s not clear who will oversee the newsroom operation. Christopher Dolan was appointed Wednesday as national politics editor and Brett Decker as editorial page editor. Jeffrey Birnbaum, the managing editor for digital operations, resigned that post but will continue as a columnist.
The Times did not break down the cuts, but laid-off staffers described what they learned from colleagues.
Several departments at the newspaper are being all but eliminated, said photographer Allison Shelley. All nine staff photographers were cut, along with the assistant managing editor of photography, she said. Only two photo editors will remain.
The graphics and Web department staffs were cut nearly in half, and nearly all metro reporters were laid off, Shelley said. Only six copy desk editors would remain, she said.
While newsroom cuts had been expected for weeks, the photography layoffs came as a surprise.
“I don’t think anyone expected the entire staff of shooters would be laid off,” said photographer Katie Falkenberg, who worked at the Times for three years.
In the sports department, the entire staff of about two dozen journalists was cut, staffers said. The revamped publication would include some sports features, though, according to the publisher.
“We worked hard to put out what we thought was a really good section that stood up to (The Washington Post) and anyone else, despite our lack of staff,” said Mark Zuckerman, who covered baseball’s Washington Nationals for the newspaper. “We were the No. 2 sports section that acted like a No. 1 sports section.”
Washington Redskins beat writer Ryan O’Halloran announced the section’s fate Wednesday on Twitter.
“Times sports section is kaput,” he wrote. “Make sure to call and cancel subscriptions after Friday.”