Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970
The Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970 was an Act of the United States Congress, signed by President Richard Nixon, authorizing the formation of joint operating agreements among competing newspaper operations within the same market area. It exempted newspapers from certain provisions of antitrust laws. Its drafters argued that this would allow the survival of multiple daily newspapers in a given urban market where circulation was declining. This exemption stemmed from the observation that the alternative is usually for at least one of the newspapers, generally the one published in the evening, to cease operations altogether.
In practice two daily newspapers published in the same city or geographic area combine business operations while maintaining separate—and competitive—news operations.
History
The first joint operating agreement was between Albuquerque Tribune and the Albuquerque Journal in Albuquerque, New Mexico, signed on February 20, 1933. Their agreement became typical of the type—both papers were printed on the same presses at different times of day. Classified advertising sales were consolidated, as were distribution. A joint entity to perform these functions was created, with equal representation on its board from both papers. Newsgathering and editorial operations remained completely separate, although located under one roof in different portions of the same building.Arrangements similar to this allowed most medium-sized United States cities to have two daily newspapers until fairly recently. The number of joint operating agreements, as well as the number of evening-published daily newspapers, has declined considerably in recent years, due to the ongoing consolidation of the newspaper industry as a whole, and the decline in readership and interest in evening newspapers in particular, which many observers have attributed to television and the internet, of which the former seems to be magnified by the presence of several 24-hour-a-day news operations on cable television. There have been 28 Joint Operating Agreements to date. The Chattanooga Times and the Chattanooga News-Free Presss joint operating agreement became the first to be terminated on August 27, 1966.
The Newspaper Preservation Act was touted as a relief measure to allow multiple newspapers competing in the same market to cut costs, thus ensuring that no one paper could have supremacy in the market by driving the other out of business. However, mounting evidence suggests the passage of the Act was less about protecting editorial diversity within community newspaper markets than about inflating the profit margins of national newspaper chains. By quietly and informally taking on some behaviors of a cartel, large newspaper chains were able to sustain artificially high profits while driving independent newspapers out of business. Note that many of the papers listed in the sections below have the same few ownership groups. In fact, President Richard M. Nixon initially opposed the passage of the act as being antithetical to the essential practices and character of free market capitalism.
He reversed himself upon receiving a letter from Richard E. Berlin, CEO of the Hearst chain of newspapers and magazines. In the 1969 letter, Berlin intimated that failure of the law to pass would carry political consequences and hinted that support from Nixon would conversely help the President and his allies. The Nixon Administration supported the Act's passage, and in the 1972 Presidential Campaign, every Hearst newspaper endorsed Nixon for reelection.
Cities with newspaper joint operating agreements
- Detroit, Michigan—Detroit Free Press and the Detroit News
- Las Vegas, Nevada—Las Vegas Review-Journal and the Las Vegas Sun : as of November 2005, the Sun publishes as a daily insert inside the R-J
- Salt Lake City, Utah—Deseret News and The Salt Lake Tribune
- York, Pennsylvania— York Daily Record and The York Dispatch
Cities with terminated newspaper joint operating agreements
- Albuquerque, New Mexico—The Albuquerque Journal , and The Albuquerque Tribune folded in 2008
- Anchorage, Alaska—Anchorage Daily News publishing, and Anchorage Times folded in 1978
- Birmingham, Alabama—The Birmingham News publishing, and Birmingham Post-Herald folded in 2005
- Charleston, West Virginia—Charleston Gazette and Charleston Daily Mail merged into the Charleston Gazette-Mail in 2015.
- Chattanooga, Tennessee—Chattanooga Free-Press and Chattanooga Times papers dissolved JOA in 1966, restored JOA in 1980; subsequently merged in 1999. Surviving paper named Chattanooga Times Free Press, merged paper maintains separate editorial pages
- Cincinnati, Ohio—The Cincinnati Enquirer publishing and The Cincinnati Post/Kentucky Post
- Columbus, Ohio—Columbus Dispatch publishing, and Columbus Citizen-Journal folded in 1985
- Denver, Colorado—Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News ended in 2009.
- El Paso, Texas—El Paso Times publishing, and El Paso Herald-Post folded in 1997
- Evansville, Indiana—Evansville Courier, and The Evansville Press folded in 1998. Surviving paper named Evansville Courier & Press
- Fort Wayne, Indiana—Fort Wayne News-Sentinel and the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette : News-Sentinel shut down 2020.
- Franklin, Pennsylvania and Oil City, Pennsylvania—Franklin News-Herald merged into Oil City Derrick in 1985
- Honolulu, Hawaii—Honolulu Advertiser and Honolulu Star Bulletin 2000 JOA terminated, both published until 2010 when the two papers merged into the Honolulu Star-Advertiser
- Knoxville, Tennessee—Knoxville News Sentinel publishing, and Knoxville Journal became weekly in 1991
- Miami, Florida—Miami Herald publishing, and Miami News folded in 1988
- Nashville, Tennessee—The Tennessean publishing, and Nashville Banner folded in 1998
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette publishing, and The Pittsburgh Press folded in 1992
- Richmond, Virginia—Richmond Times-Dispatch and Richmond News-Leader both owned by Media General until the afternoon paper, the News-Leader, folded in 1992
- San Francisco, California—San Francisco Chronicle and San Francisco Examiner 1999 JOA terminated when Hearst purchased the Chronicle and sold the Examiner. Both newspapers still publish, though the Examiner is now a free tabloid.
- Seattle, Washington—Seattle Post-Intelligencer and The Seattle Times —
- Shreveport, Louisiana—Shreveport Times publishing, and Shreveport Journal folded in 1991
- St. Louis, Missouri—Post-Dispatch publishing, and Globe-Democrat ended when the Globe-Democrat was sold to Veritas Publishing Corp. in 1983; Globe-Democrat'x again operated independently until folding in October 1986.
- Tucson, Arizona—Arizona Daily Star and the Tucson Citizen
- Tulsa, Oklahoma—Tulsa World publishing, and Tulsa Tribune'' folded in 1992