AP staffers hold ‘byline boycott’ to protest proposed cuts

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The AP union says members are also demonstrating unity by wearing red shirts and signing a petition asking management to reconsider a pension plan freeze and increases in medical payments by more than 40 percent.

Press release

POSTED ON Dec. 14

NEW YORK – Hundreds of journalists at The Associated Press are taking part in a national “byline boycott” and are signing a petition protesting proposed cuts at the news cooperative.

Guild members and supporters are removing their bylines from news stories and photo credits. They’re also demonstrating unity by wearing red shirts and signing a petition asking AP management to reconsider a pension plan freeze and increases in medical payments by more than 40 percent.

“Guild members have increased productivity, embraced new skills, and have made many financial sacrifices,” said NMG President Tony Winton. “Members are saying AP has to do better if it wants to preserve and protect quality journalism.”

After failing to make payments into the pension plan for years, AP wants to freeze the benefit, which was paid by salary deferrals. The Guild says the proposal would undermine retirement security for almost all workers. AP also wants workers to absorb $1 million in medical plan costs even though workers adopted cost-savings measures two years ago. AP told the union that it can afford to absorb the increase – it “just doesn’t want to.”

About 1,200 AP employees in the U.S. are represented by the News Media Guild, a local of The Newspaper Guild-Communications Workers of America. The union represents reporters, writers, editors, broadcast staff, technology employees and business office employees.

The current two-year contract expired Nov. 30.

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  • Anonymous

    A byline boycott? Red shirts? You can’t be serious. That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard. I bet management is quaking in their Bruno Magli shoes. The only people they’re hurting with this silly boycott is themselves. How exactly does turning in work you did without your name attached hurt the AP? The shirts on the hand I actually get. Red is the perfect color for left-wing Pinko cry-babies.

  • Anonymous

    Connie, The Associate Press is a not for profit organization. They are not allowed to make a profit.

  • Anonymous

    Connie… The Associated Press is a non-profit organization. They are not allowed to show a profit.

  • Anonymous

    My paper once had a byline boycott. City editor said that day was the cleanest copy he ever saw since nobody was trying to write cute.

  • Anonymous

    I was in the Newspaper Guild for over 30 years and never did understand the sense or efficacy of byline boycotts. The reader doesn’t give a rip, and the only ones harmed are the reporters and photographers themselves. As far as the red shirts go, how childish can you get?

  • Anonymous

    Which is better, cuts in benefits and keep your jobs or no cuts and lose your jobs. Your option.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_MJ64FISF2YL452DBBEYXWXN77Q Sunshine Connie

    Awwwwwwww POOR BABIES!!! Their SOCIALIST UTOPIAN DREAMS are being dashed so their employer can maintain profits and they can keep their JOBS. They are holding a “byline boycott” because those of us who read their tripe send comments that hurt their little red souls.

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