• @demlet@lemmy.world
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    1411 months ago

    I work for a plant that prints local papers. They are an invaluable source of local news, and you are correct, the internet is slowly killing them. It’s a real loss for civic engagement. People really need to pay attention to what’s happening locally. National stories are sexier, but we actually have much more control over what happens in our own neighborhoods and towns.

    • Richard
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      311 months ago

      But what keeps a local newspaper from creating an online service over which the papers can be bought, maybe even for a lower price because manufacturing costs are no longer extant?

      • @BigNote@lemm.ee
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        111 months ago

        In a word the answer is cost, or economic viability. Local papers can’t operate for free, even strictly online. It costs money to hire and maintain a functional staff of college-educated reporters and editors who are willing to live and work in small towns and rural communities.

        Without classified ads/advertising, a physical subscription base and real newsstand sales, where is the money supposed to come from?

        The answer is that it’s not there at all, and that’s why local news has basically died over the course of the last two decades.

        If you can think of a new workable revenue model for local news, by all means please do tell. The entire nation is screaming for a solution, though many of us may not know it.