Mobile navigation

News 

Newsquest reverts headline writing to local titles

Newsquest's decision to revert headline writing to local titles, after admitting more than 80 per cent written at its production hubs had to be rewritten, shows the failure of moving subbing to hubs, says the National Union of Journalists.

Chris Morley, NUJ Newsquest group coordinator, said this week’s revelation that a key part of the subbing process is to officially revert back to local centres showed the hub experiment was failing and significant changes were now needed.

He said: “Large numbers of experienced and highly talented sub editors who knew their towns and cities inside out were discarded by Newsquest through wasteful redundancy, many with years of loyal service, to create the two hubs.

“The NUJ warned loudly and clearly that producing local papers hundreds of miles away would hit quality. We warned that the staff, often inexperienced, being recruited to the hubs, especially at Newport, were placed in an impossible position by the company with lack of training and support and having to contend with vast numbers of titles.

“The results were all too unfortunate to behold and now it seems the shrinking band of remaining editors have at last accepted that the NUJ warnings were valid all along and lack of quality is undermining their titles with the reading public.

“It makes a mockery of course of the recent Investors in People award given at Newport. It is now really vital that this added workload, which will be passed back to local centres, must be recognised by Newsquest through the recruitment of additional staff to ease the burden on its over-pressed journalists around the UK.

“Great damage has been done with the faith placed in a failing hub experiment by senior managers but it is not too late for Newsquest to give its local teams the resources they need to produce quality journalism that the public will be attracted to.”