TV news staffing rose 4.3 percent across the U.S. in 2011, to its second-highest level ever, according to a new study by the Radio Television Digital News Association and Hofstra University. Although the industry’s total employment, 27,653, is lower than it was in 2000, staffing at the average station is higher because there are fewer stations producing news now than in 2000.
The remaining stations are going full-tilt, adding an hour of newscasts since 2009, reports the AP’s David Bauder. The average TV station now produces five and a half hours of news.
“What it tells you is the local TV business, for the most part, sees local news as more and more of its future,” Bob Papper, the Hofstra professor who did the study, told Bauder. The reporter noted:
For some stations, political advertising is a factor in making news broadcasts a more attractive commodity. Political ads are often concentrated on local newscasts, and the more newscast time, the greater chance to sell ads. For stations in states considered battlegrounds in the presidential election, politics represents a good revenue opportunity, Papper said.
The situation couldn’t be more different from the newspaper industry, where staffs and page counts continue to shrink. Newspaper staffing is the lowest since ASNE started its annual census in 1978. Several newspapers have announced plans to stop printing on certain days. Still, the newspaper industry had 40,600 newsroom employees at the last count, many more than television stations.
TV stations are generally hiring for traditional broadcast news jobs — reporters, producers, photographers and anchors — but they’re also looking for multimedia journalists and Web staff.
Top job categories for new hires:
- producers
- reporters
- web
- anchors
- photographers
- multimedia journalists
- tape editor
- weather, associate producers/news assistants and executive producer
Other findings from the study:
- Median employment “skyrocketed” in the top 25 markets and rose in markets 51 and under. It dropped in markets 26-50.
- Hiring was particularly strong at stations in the South.
- Most news directors expect their staffs to remain the same or grow this year, though news directors in the Midwest are less optimistic.
- Budgets were the same or larger as the year before at about three-quarters of stations (split almost evenly between the two).
- 59 percent of stations say they’re making money on TV news, which is the highest level since 1998.
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