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November 20, 2008

AP May Cut Up to 10%

Ap_logo E&P's Joe Strupp has just confirmed an earlier Web report: Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley told some employees today that the AP could lose up to 10% of its staff by the end of 2009, but likely through attrition not layoffs.

AP spokesman Paul Colford confirmed that Curley had made such comments during an employee town hall meeting today, adding that "he was met with applause at the end of the meeting." 

Colford noted that the employee reduction would likely occur through attrition because the news cooperative has been under a hiring freeze for several weeks.

He said the organization employs 4,100 people worldwide, including about 3,000 in editorial positions.

Colford also issued a statement:

"The Associated Press, like virtually every business in the world, is defining strategies for operating in these complex and difficult financial times. All areas and ways of doing business are being reviewed. The AP, which recently instituted a strategic hiring freeze, may need to reduce staff over the next year. If so, it hopes to achieve much of the reduction through attrition.

"While we are looking for new efficiencies in the way we operate, AP's mission as the essential global news network does not change. Plans for the rollout of regional desks in the United States, which will provide deeper, more relevant coverage for our members, will continue, with hubs being developed in Chicago and Phoenix joining those already announced in Atlanta and Philadelphia."

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I think the "attrition" is a bit of a red herring. They can say they are in the midst of a hiring freeze or won't replace people who leave, but what they won't tell you is that they will probably make it very hard on personnel who make higher salaries, placing them into other jobs they don't want, demoting them, etc. It's commmon practice among employers who want to seem all nicey-nice to the outside world

One can only view this as more good news. The AP has been wrong about it fact more often than it has been correct.

I wonder if Pravda is hiring???

They might cut back on vice presidents. In the AP that wasn't at war either with the members or itself, you could hand each vice president a dime and still have change from a dollar. The same task in The Essential AP would take a fiver and they'd hire a consultant to explore the emerging issue of making correct change by producing a 500-page analysis for $5000, plus expenses.

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