Oct. 2, 2012 — What an appropriate theme for this year’s celebration of National Newspaper Week, Oct. 7-13: Newspapers: The cornerstone of your community.
There are more than 7,000 weekly newspapers across the country — including the Lassen County newspaper you are reading right now — that are devoted to protecting and defending your right to know by thoroughly covering the issues and lifestyles of the people living in those communities. And with the ever-increasing number of ways we can obtain information, the role of community newspapers becomes even more important.
But don’t just take our word for it. Read what congressman Mike Rogers from Michigan said on this very issue in a recent column appearing in the Michigan press:
We can get our national news on cable television, catch the weather on local broadcast stations, listen to talk radio on the AM or FM dial and follow our favorite blogs on the Internet, but where do we turn for local information that directly impacts our daily lives? More often than not, it is community newspapers.
Technology has transformed how we gather information in the 21st Century. News cycles run 24/7, tablets and laptops are becoming smaller and smart phones keep getting smarter.
As a result most traditional large newspapers are struggling to stay alive — they are more and more frequently printing only two to three times a week, personnel and content are shrinking like never before, and more information is shifted to online editions.
Yet local community newspapers are thriving because they have persistently weathered the storm year in and year out to remain a fixture in our everyday lives. As our societies become more complex and diverse with growing numbers of ways to obtain information, the role of local newspapers in informing our communities becomes even more significant.
We count on them to regularly check in with the courts and police stations. They print announcements on births, deaths, engagements, marriages, anniversaries, church news, job openings, school information and service club endeavors.
They publish notices of local municipal meetings. They print tax increases, notices of changes in laws and property rezoning — all issues that most directly affect our pocketbooks by determining how our hard-earned tax dollars are spent at the local level and how are local officials are representing us.
They help run the local economic engine and provide a marketplace for the community. They offer local small businesses with an effective and affordable means of connecting with local consumers. They print sales at the supermarket, coupons for discounts at local stores, real estate listings and classifieds for everything from a used car to a neighbor’s garage sale.
It is also personal. Communities feel a sense of ownership in their local newspaper, and the people who report the news are often our friends and neighbors down the street.
News aggregating websites such as Drudge Report and the major news blogs are great at offering up major national and international news and analyses, but they simply do not provide the information on issues that impact us at the local level. It is especially true for the elderly and those with low incomes who often have less access to computers and transportation.
They normally only publish once a week, but community newspapers remain the one constant source of local information. In good times and in bad, they stay focused on us as a community.
Now more than ever, community newspapers are an important binding thread of our cities and towns.
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- Susanville Taxi agreement to be terminated
- Country Showdown deadline nears
- Undercover buy program nets nine suspects, small amount of drugs
- Sheriff’s Office conducts sex registrant sweep
- Two former Lassen County residents murdered in Fernley
- Beautification work completed one project at a time
- Lassen High School Football Boosters plan to raise funds for Arnold Field
- Grizzliette Show is a huge success
- Calfire Lassen-Modoc-Plumas Unit declares fire season
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