bigpicture
Peter Bradley
Editorial Director
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Karen Bachrach
Executive Editor
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Toby Gooley
Managing Editor
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David Maloney
Senior Editor, Special Projects & eContent
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Mark Solomon
Senior Editor
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Susan Lacefield
Associate Managing Editor
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James Cooke
Editor at Large
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Steve Geary
Editor at Large
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George Weimer
Editor at Large
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Keisha Christopher
Director of Creative Services
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Jeff Thacker
Director of eMedia
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Columnists:
Clifford F. Lynch
Don Jacobson
Shelly Safian
Kenneth B. Ackerman
Art Van Bodegraven
Barry Brandman
all the news that’s fit to post?
Gary Master
Publisher
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Mitch Mac Donald
Group Editorial Director
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Jim Indelicato
Group Publisher
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AS AN OLD NEWSPAPERMAN—OLD ENOUGH THAT I PREFER THAT
term to journalist—I’ve been lamenting of late the decline of great
American daily newspapers. The ascendance of the Internet, the decline of
display and classified advertising, and a population that increasingly looks
elsewhere for news have all conspired to do enormous damage to that
unique business. And it is unique—mainly because of its dual reason for
being. A great newspaper is a private profit-seeking enterprise that also
plays a crucial public service role as the intermediary between the worlds
of government, business, entertainment—you name it—and the public.
I can remember the days in my parents’ house scrambling in the morning to be the first of five brothers to grab the sports section—and then
pouring the cereal with the section firmly under my arm in defense
against lurking siblings. In those days, even as television news was in its ascendancy, you never felt you
truly grasped even the biggest story until you read
about it in the paper.
It is a bit ironic, I suppose, that I chose the topic for
this month’s column as the result of an Internet story
forwarded by a colleague. For someone who began his
career in the business, the story on the newspaper
industry’s collapse by former Chicago Tribune
managing editor James Warren as part of The Atlantic
magazine’s Think Again project was sad indeed ( www.theat-
lantic.com). The decline of newspapers is a loss not
only for those who own them and those who worked
for them. I truly believe that it is a loss for us all.
Why this commentary in a magazine that focuses on
distribution management? Simple. As newspapers continue their slide and
devote fewer resources to news, it becomes the responsibility of magazines
like this one to inform, illuminate, and explain business and public policy
issues that affect our readers. As one example, as debate builds over what the
nation ought to do about its highways, ports, intermodal connectors, waterways, and railroads, it is my hope that we can continue to provide news and
analysis on that topic. We are fortunate to have a staff with long experience
and, I believe, excellent journalistic instincts to help us achieve that.
We certainly have our own challenges. We’re working hard to develop
our own set of ways to reach readers online. We’ve begun offering digital
delivery of the print magazine. Other products are forthcoming. But our
core mission remains to provide readers with well-crafted stories that offer
credible and useful information.
I don’t expect any reader to keep DC VELOCITY tucked under an arm
while getting coffee in the morning. But I do hope you continue to value
its arrival on your desk, or your desktop.
A PUBLICATION OF
Editorial Director