Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Global News Cuts Nearly 80 Jobs, Mostly In TV, As Part Of Move To Online Coverage

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2018 01:26 PM
    Corus Entertainment cut nearly 80 jobs, mostly in traditional TV production, at Global News newsrooms across Canada as part of a restructuring geared toward boosting online coverage.
     
     
    Global News will add about 50 new positions, mostly journalists who will file for new, local versions of the company's news website in Ottawa, Kitchener, Guelph and Barrie, the company said in a story posted on Global News online. The company already operates 18 local websites.
     
     
    “With digital platforms, our audience no longer is tied to just the locations where we have TV and radio licences, so we will be adding journalists to cover local news in markets where we see opportunity created by the recent closure or consolidation of local newspapers," said Troy Reeb, senior vice-president of Global News and Corus Radio.
     
     
    Employees who lost their jobs and qualify will be given the opportunity to apply for the new positions, the company said.
     
     
    The company also plans to expand its international content and launch a podcast production team.
     
     
    Unifor, a union representing some Global employees, said 69 of its members who worked as reporters, anchors, camera operators, control room staff, make-up artists and other production crew lost their jobs.
     
     
    In Vancouver, 21 employees — the most of any local operation — were laid off, Unifor said.
     
     
    In Halifax, the studio will no longer produce the Nova Scotia and New Brunswick evening news, said David MacPherson, president of the Maritimes unit of Unifor local M1, which represents workers at global.
     
     
    It will be anchored and broadcast from Toronto as of Monday, he added.
     
     
    "Out studios will be empty after the morning show ends at 9 a.m."
     
     
    The company's broadcast revenues continue to shrink, Unifor said, and the outlook is bleak if the government fails to act now. It called on Canada's broadcast regulator to make strong local coverage a binding condition of having a license.
     
     
    “The CRTC paved the way for the cuts announced today by watering down the obligations for big media companies like Corus to protect local news and it’s proving disastrous," said Jerry Dias, Unifor's national president, in a statement.
     
     
    VANCOUVER TAKES HARDEST HIT IN GLOBAL LAYOFFS
     
    The Unifor union says Vancouver is taking the biggest hit as dozens of Global News jobs are cut across Canada.
     
     
    Corus Entertainment, which owns Global, is cutting nearly 80 jobs as part of a restructuring plan geared toward boosting online coverage.
     
     
    Unifor, which represents some Global employees, says 69 of its members who worked as reporters, anchors, camera operators, control room staff, make-up artists and other production crew lost their jobs.
     
     
    It says 21 employees were laid off in Vancouver, the most of any local operation.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Outspoken Professor RICK MEHTA Stokes Free-speech Debate At East Coast University

    Outspoken Professor RICK MEHTA Stokes Free-speech Debate At East Coast University
    An associate professor at Acadia University is facing a growing backlash over incendiary social media comments, stoking a national debate about free speech on campus amid calls for his ouster from the Wolfville, N.S., school.

    Outspoken Professor RICK MEHTA Stokes Free-speech Debate At East Coast University

    Australia Files WTO Complaint Against Canadian Wine Sales Measures

    Australia Files WTO Complaint Against Canadian Wine Sales Measures
    TORONTO — Australia has filed a complaint about Canada's rules around wine sales with the World Trade Organization.

    Australia Files WTO Complaint Against Canadian Wine Sales Measures

    Crown Seeks 1-2 Year Sentence In B.C. 'Quick Wins' Ethnic Outreach Scandal

    Crown Seeks 1-2 Year Sentence In B.C. 'Quick Wins' Ethnic Outreach Scandal
    VANCOUVER — A special prosecutor says a former government communications director for British Columbia's Liberal party should serve a community sentence of 12- to 23-months after he pleaded guilty to breach of trust.

    Crown Seeks 1-2 Year Sentence In B.C. 'Quick Wins' Ethnic Outreach Scandal

    Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs Growing In Halifax Area, More Officers Needed: RCMP

    Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs Growing In Halifax Area, More Officers Needed: RCMP
    HALIFAX — The Mounties say prolific growth in the presence of outlaw motorcycle gangs in the Halifax area is behind their request for more front-line officers.

    Outlaw Motorcycle Gangs Growing In Halifax Area, More Officers Needed: RCMP

    Extreme Depth: Explorers Map Out B.C. Cave Believed To Be Deepest In Canada

    Extreme Depth: Explorers Map Out B.C. Cave Believed To Be Deepest In Canada
    FERNIE, B.C. — A member of a team of explorers has reached a record depth in a cave near Fernie, B.C., that is believed to be the deepest in Canada.

    Extreme Depth: Explorers Map Out B.C. Cave Believed To Be Deepest In Canada

    'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club

    'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club
    Jodi Moskal, an electrician who also ran for the provincial Progressive Conservatives in a byelection last year, has been researching clubs in Winnipeg that once allowed only men but changed to admit women.

    'I Shouldn't Have To Have A Husband:' Winnipeg Woman Criticizes Men-Only Club