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Trouble on our doorstep. Read all about it in the summer/fall edition of The Frontier Reporter

We had some political mayhem and the close of Lee Enterprises’ fiscal year, all of which has spelled trouble for the Guild. Check out new features and all the Guild news you may have from the summer and fall in the latest edition of The Frontier Reporter newsletter.
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On day of Lee Enterprises’ annual shareholders meeting, Guild issued a vote of no confidence
For the first time, The Buffalo Newspaper Guild has issued a public vote of “no confidence” in the ownership of The Buffalo News. The public statement was shared on our social media pages on April 18, 2023, the day of Lee Enterprises’ annual shareholders meeting. Read the full statement below:
The Buffalo Newspaper Guild’s Executive Committee has issued a vote of no confidence in the executive team of Lee Enterprises, the corporate parent of The Buffalo News.
The vote, which was unanimous and taken at Monday night’s Guild Executive Committee meeting, comes on the heels of a particularly tumultuous time in Lee’s three-year ownership of The Buffalo News, a period in which the Iowa-based chain has struggled with such basic tasks as paying its employees and ensuring benefits coverage.
The vote was based on a multitude of factors including, but not limited to:
- The continued pattern of disinvestment in The Buffalo News, which has included outsourcing departments from Western New York and further stripping away local control. This includes the planned outsourcing of print production to Cleveland, which will frustrate our valuable print readers (who continue to account for most of our revenue) while considerably moving up deadlines and undoubtedly causing print circulation to decline.
- The absolute lack of understanding on how to build a functional, simple, user-intuitive website and mobile app, both of which have somehow – inexplicably – managed to get worse with every new version that Lee rolls out. Our readers are tired of having to constantly log in, and we are tired of Lee managing to erect barriers to our content.
- The systemic issues of poor communication with customers and with employees. Most of our customer service operation has been outsourced from Buffalo, causing further headaches for readers and no doubt accelerating the outflow of subscribers and hindering growth. Internally, employees are rarely told of any upcoming changes, even the ones that deeply affect their personal situations.
- The complete failure of Lee’s benefits and payroll administrators, who have managed – despite a year of planning – to make a mockery of the simple practice of paying employees and delivering health, dental and other benefits. It is now mid-March, and issues still remain with health and prescription benefits that went live Jan. 1. And some employees were shorted hundreds of dollars, without explanation, in their checks Friday. One employee wasn’t paid at all.
- The fact that Lee executives have never been richer at a time when the company is marginally profitable and is actively seeking cost cuts from its employees. Lee’s top three executives all made more money in 2022 than 2021. That includes President and CEO Kevin Mowbray, whose total compensation increased from $2.17 million to $2.33 million.
The Buffalo Newspaper Guild’s Executive Committee understands the challenges of the local news business, but those challenges are made even more insurmountable in the incapable hands of Lee executives.
Transformative change requires investment and dynamic leaders capable of treating customers and employees with the same respect as shareholders.
It is clear that Lee’s current executive team has no intention of doing that.
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Unions, Lee Enterprises continue to talk about company’s proposal to print The Buffalo News in Cleveland
The most devastating of all the bad news Lee Enterprises dumped on The Buffalo News earlier this year was the company’s plans to shift printing of the newspaper to Cleveland.
The move would mean about 160 employees, members of eight labor unions at the News, would lose their jobs. That includes two Guild members who work in Prepress.
Guild President Jon Harris and Guild Administrative Officer Kim Leiser have participated in meetings with the company and representatives of the other unions about plans to outsource print production.
Lee, which announced the plans in February, has been clear that it wants to be out of the printing business. They want to implement the change around the end of their fiscal year, which is in late September.
Lee’s decision fits into an industry trend of papers being printed in plants hours away from the readers they serve.
Talks between the company and the unions are ongoing.
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Protected: Local Meeting Minutes: April 12, 2023
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Protected: Executive Committee Meeting Minutes: April 11, 2023
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Poynter article captures heartbreaking impact of Lee Enterprises on The Buffalo News
Poynter, a renowned journalism advocacy and training organization, published a deep-dive piece on what has befallen The Buffalo News since it was purchased by the media chain Lee Enterprises in 2020. And the vivid picture it painted was one of disinvestment and disillusionment.
Reporter Angela Fu highlighted how Lee has systematically laid off, outsourced and centralized many operations and recently demanded $1 million in newsroom cuts, resulting in the departure of veteran journalists and the elimination of other open positions.
She spoke with many Buffalo News Guild members who talked about what the community has lost and how reporters still manage to cover amazingly difficult stories during one of the hardest periods in the Buffalo region’s history despite being shortchanged – literally and figuratively – by an uncaring Iowa-based company.
That was evident by the fact that even Poynter reporters were surprised that Lee had no response at all to its requests to comment for the story.
This in-depth story is one every community member should read. We commend Angela Fu and Poynter for taking the time to recognize and cover our story. The Buffalo News has been an incredible community asset. But as the story tells its readers, there’s no way to know how that will continue as long as Lee continues to dismantle many elements that have made it great.
Read the story here:
https://www.poynter.org/business-work/2023/buffalo-news-owner-lee-enterprises-cuts-layoffs-outsourcing-berkshire-hathaway/ -
Guild continues tradition of helping with waterfront cleanup on Earth Day in Buffalo

Nerf darts. Tires. Plastic sheets. Hundreds of bottles, caps and snack wrappers. You name it. They found it.
A group of volunteers from the Buffalo Newspaper Guild joined the annual community effort to help beautify Buffalo’s waterfront on Earth Day as part of Buffalo Niagara Waterkeeper’s Spring Sweep cleanup.
Continuing our union tradition, two dozen Guild members and their family members gathered to remove garbage near the mouth of Scajaquada Creek in Buffalo as part of the April 22 event.
The Guild’s group helped dispose of a seemingly endless supply of tiny pieces of plastic, along with loads of other trash and junk that littered the area off Niagara Street, beneath the Scajaquada Expressway.

“A big thank you to all of our members who volunteered and to those who brought extra hands to help,” said Aaron Besecker, the Guild’s vice president of mobilization. “Waterkeeper’s cleanup is important and I’m happy the Guild continues to make a strong showing year after year.”
The Guild joins the cleanup effort as a tribute to our colleague John “Jay” Bonfatti, who passed away in 2008. Jay loved the outdoors and believed strongly in caring for the natural wonders of Western New York.
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Protected: Executive Committee Meeting Minutes: March 13, 2023
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Protected: Executive Committee Meeting Minutes: Feb. 13, 2023
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Protected: Executive Committee Meeting Minutes: Jan. 9, 2023
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Check out the Frontier Reporter – winter edition! It’s been a crazy few months. Catch up here.

This winter edition of the Frontier Reporter offers a fresh perspective from new Guild President Jon Harris, reflections on how far we’ve come, by past president Sandy Tan, and a chance to get caught up on all the big news you may have missed since the fall edition. Find out who has joined the Guild and who has left (too many). We also pay tribute to three retiring veteran reporters.
Click here to download the winter edition.