I have written about the importance of the local press for democracy before on this site. Here in Brent we have the
Brent and Kilburn Times, owned by the Archant group and the
Wembley and Willesden Observer, owned by Trinity Mirror. In some parts of the north of the borough the
Harrow Times also circulates.
The number of reporters on the
Brent ands Kilburn Times has reduced from the paper's heyday and readers will have noticed that the number of pages has also been reduced. It is sold in newsagents but also distributed free at some supermarkets, estate agents and elsewhere. It does not always contain a letters page which is often a good indicator of a newspaper's engagement with readers.
The
Wembley and Willesden Observer is rather different as it is a local edition of the
Harrow Observer series and despite having a great local reporter in Hannah Bewley is usually dominated by news about Harrow. A reader has to double check on stories beginning 'The Council...' to see which Council is involved - more often than not it is Harrow.
The paper's door-to-door distribution in Brent is very patchy and its price of 90p where sold is unpopular with readers when they discover it contains very few Brent stories.
Trinity Mirror has gone through a difficult period and earlier this month told West Londoin staff that the
Fulham and Hammersmith Chronicle,
Westminster Chronicle and
Kensington and Chelsea Chronicle were to close.
Trinity also announced that their titles in Uxbridge, Hounslow and Ealing are to switch from door-to-door to 'pick-up' only. The
Harrow Observer will remain distributed door-to-door but as I mentioned earlier this does not cover the whole borough of Brent. The newspaper's office is being moved to Watford.
Trinity are going through the process of making staff including reporters, photographers and sales staff redundant and the outcome for the WWO is awaited with some trepidation.
Clearly this is a gloomy picture, not only for the staff concerned, but for the health of local democracy and the important role local newspapers play in holding local councils to account.
Laura Davison, national organiser of the NUJ said about Trinity's closure announcement:
This announcement has come as a terrible shock to the hardworking
staff of these titles.The speed of it means there is little time to look
at meaningful alternatives to closure.Trinity Mirror should not simply
be able to shut down these titles and lock them away after years of
starving them of resources.It will leave some communities with no local
paper, depriving them of a way to access information and hold local
power to account. Readers and the Trinity Mirror journalists who serve
them, deserve better.
Martin Shipton, chair of the Trinity Group chapel (NUJ branch), said:
These closures would leave many communities in the outer
London area without a local paper, as well as Fulham, a significant and
densely populated part of the capital. There is a compelling need for
journalistic scrutiny of the budget of local authorities which cover the
circulation of these papers. Instead of shutting them down, Trinity
Mirror should be investing in quality journalism, for which the public
undoubtedly retains an appetite.
I agree.