Local News Legislation
California Common Cause is committed to helping build a resilient, accountable, and inclusive future for local news in our communities.
The local news industry in California is struggling to survive. In cities across the state, newspapers are folding or consolidating and remaining newsrooms are being hollowed out after mass layoffs.
The lack of information flowing to our communities impacts everyone – every group advocating in the public interest or for underserved communities is a stakeholder in ensuring a thriving local press. Preserving and strengthening a durable and diverse local press, including print and online publications, traditional media and ethnic media, is more important than ever to the future of our democracy.
Over the last decade and a half, the dominance of online classifieds and digital advertising have undermined newspapers’ traditional local advertising revenue model. Mergers and layoffs have also led to many surviving local newspapers becoming shells of their former selves. In the last 15 years, the number of newspaper reporters has decreased by almost 60%. Many local papers now exist in name only, sometimes as branded editions of much larger news outlets, with little or no dedicated local journalism presence.
The gaps in local news coverage presents a crisis for California’s local and state democracy in several critical ways:
- Depressed Civic Participation: Newspaper closures and staff reductions are associated with decreased civic participation, less informed voting, less interest in political participation, and lower voter turnout.
- Silenced Diverse Voices: Newspapers serving people of color, immigrant communities, and other marginalized groups provide these communities with a voice and help identify and elevate issues of importance.
- Undermined Political Accountability: Local news plays a critical watchdog role in keeping local government accountable and uncovering corruption.
- Undermined Business Accountability: Newspapers also serve a check against powerful non-governmental institutions, like businesses that exploit workers, cheat consumers, or harm the environment.
- Increased Polarization: Without local journalism, voters are more likely to rely on more biased sources for news information, like social media, partisan news publications, cable TV, or talk radio. One study found that newspaper closures increases partisan voting patterns.
California Common Cause is a strong watchdog when it comes to protecting our elections and democratic institutions. Our voting rights work includes pushing back on election deniers and peddlers of misinformation, and working to assist voters as they cast their ballots and educate themselves on civic issues in order to do so. All of this requires a healthy, thriving local press. In particular, responding decisively to combat election disinformation, increasingly the threat of our time, requires strengthening and sustaining our local news ecosystem in California.
MOVING TOWARDS SOLUTIONS
California needs a plan of action for building a resilient, accountable, and inclusive future for local news in our communities. Policy approaches being explored with our partners working on the local news policy solutions include, but are not limited to:
- Requiring local government agencies and departments to spend at least 50 percent of existing advertising and communications dollars on community and ethnic media. Advertising with an emphasis on community and ethnic media allows for city departments and agencies to reach diverse communities, does not add costs for the city, and does not make funding dependent on the content produced.
- Creating local grants programs modeled off of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. High levels of secure funding for public media systems and strong structural protections for the political and economic independence of those systems are consistently and positively correlated with healthy democracies.
- Establish a program that would keep community newspapers that are in danger of closing or being sold to chains or hedge funds in the hands of local actors invested in providing local, community-rooted journalism. When owners decide to sell, they’re often stuck choosing between selling to a large corporate chain or hedge fund or shutting down and leaving their communities vulnerable
OUR RESEARCH
In early 2024, California Common Cause published Local Voices On Local News: Community Perspectives and Policy Recommendations for Strengthening San Francisco’s Journalism Ecosystem, a report that uncovers what San Franciscans are saying about their news needs, includes perspectives from independent, locally-owned publishers, and explores public policy solutions that can close the civic information gaps among the city’s most marginalized residents.
The report, known as a community information needs assessment, documents a community listening process California Common Cause undertook over five months to understand San Francisco’s local news landscape and the information needs of its communities. The listening process included over 175 people across the city through 12 focus groups and 26 interviews.