When the South Idaho Press and the Twin Falls Times-News merged in August (along with four local weeklies), the editors guaranteed SIP readers that their local news coverage would not be diminished. In fact editors promised "a single, efficient publication that offers as much - if not more - local news from all 37 cities and towns in our region." In that effort, the Times editors rolled out print editions with new regional community sections focused on covering local news previously reported by these merged papers.
Last week the Times-News touted two awards the paper received from its owners, Lee Enterprises, which included an honorable mention for the "innovation" of this consolidation project.
The President's Award for Innovation award recognizes an individual or team for creating or significantly advancing a print or online idea that drives revenue, builds audiences or serves customers better.
That honorable mention, shared by all Times-News employees, recognizes what we called the Big Valley Project - the consolidation of the Times-News, South Idaho Press and four weekly newspapers into one big paper, as well as the launch of new reader-friendly special sections.
While consolidation may have been one of the few options for these papers facing, like so many across the country, a dwindling readership, receiving recognition for that consolidation from the owners whose focus is undoubtedly on the bottom-line seems especially self-serving. That's not to say that the Times-News doesn't provide quality news and isn't deserving of recognition—just the opposite. They have many quality reporters (Jared Hopkins' legislative coverage for one) and that they have taken heat for some unpopular positions (the decision to include gay marriage announcements in the wedding section for one) is admirable.
But listening to people from the area previously served by the South Idaho Press, it's not clear that the readers are pleased with this consolidation and the loss of their hometown daily. Most of these (family, friends and callers and guests from Zeb Bell's "Zeb at the Ranch" radio show) feel that they are not getting "as much" let alone the "if not more" local coverage promised.
Not having seen these regional community sections in print (I usually read online), I can't offer an opinion on the extent and depth of the content. I will say that this snip of the online Mini-Cassia section is telling (note the "No content currently available"):
Nothing news-worthy happened in the Mini-Cassia area? Perhaps the Mini-Cassia news was included in the print edition and didn't make it into the online section. Either way, it's not clear that the consolidation and death of these hometown papers is applause-worthy.