This week's edition |
Where does that leave us in Brent? As part of Archant's shift towards digital and its cut back in jobs a junior reporter (we used to call them 'cub reporters' in the old days) will be all that is left. He will face the daunting task of reporting on a major London borough of 325,000 people (and growing), one of the most diverse in the country, with great potential as well as major social problems, covering huge and often controversial regeneration projects, and an almost 'one party' Council that needs fearless scrutiny.
Some people have told me of their envy for Camden residents who have the lively Camden New Journal and say we need a local paper like that in Brent. Local papers are under financial pressure through loss of readers, loss of advertising and competition from the social media, but they also need good management and excellent distribution. Both the latter appear to be missing. I was told by a newsagent on Kilburn High Road only last week that he had stopped stocking the Brent and Kilburn Times because distribution was so unreliable. It is given away at some supermarkets, stations and estate agents but there are no longer house to house deliveries and the paper is often not to be found in newsagents.
All that said, local newspapers need to be supported by residents, not only through buying them but through writing letters, phoning in stories and encouraging a robust attitude towards upsetting local big wigs.
As someone remarked to Lorraine on Twitter, 'If you don't put some backs up you are not doing your job.'