Australia

Channel Nine job bloodbath continues with 85 redundancies across Australian Financial Review, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, WAtoday and Brisbane Times

Channel Nine has launched a new round of job cuts, just weeks after hundreds of jobs were cut.

Nine Entertainment’s publishing arm has accepted 85 voluntary redundancies at the Australian Financial Review, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, WAtoday and Brisbane Times.

A number of experienced journalists and editors are among those voluntarily laid off.

They include AFR chief correspondent Aaron Patrick, SMH chief sports writer Andrew Webster, former Herald gossip columnist Andrew Hornery and The Age culture editor Osman Faruqi. The Australian reported.

The company has also announced plans to cut about 40 jobs at Pedestrian, about half its workforce.

The Sydney Morning Herald has learned that the company’s more niche publications are not expected to survive the cuts and that most, if not all, of their staff will be laid off.

A spokesperson for the network said that the affected employees from newsrooms, print departments and audience and commercial growth departments will leave in the coming months.

‘As announced in June, we have been working with our people to reshape the publishing industry to ensure a sustainable future in response to the challenging advertising market and the collapse of the Meta “Deal,” the spokesperson said.

The announced layoffs and a wage dispute led to about 500 union members going on strike during the first five days of the Olympic Games (photo)

The announced layoffs and a wage dispute led to about 500 union members going on strike during the first five days of the Olympic Games (photo)

Channel Nine has made 85 voluntary redundancies across its five publications as part of 200 job cuts across the company (pictured at its Melbourne headquarters)

Channel Nine has made 85 voluntary redundancies across its five publications as part of 200 job cuts across the company (pictured at its Melbourne headquarters)

‘We offer support to all employees who make the transition to our company.

“Each of these people leaves with our gratitude and appreciation for their contribution to Nine’s industry-leading mastheads.”

The layoffs are part of a $30 million cost-cutting plan for the media giant that will see about 200 of its 5,000 jobs cut.

The decision led to the Pedestrian Group boss announcing his departure, as well as plans to sever deals with Vice, Refinery29, Gizmodo, Lifehacker and Kotaku.

About 500 journalists across the country went on a five-day strike on the eve of the Paris Olympics to demand better pay and working conditions.

Nine Entertainment's publishing arm has accepted 85 voluntary redundancies following a recent journalist strike

Nine Entertainment’s publishing arm has accepted 85 voluntary redundancies following a recent journalist strike

Tory Maguire, managing director of Nine Publishing and head of The Australian Financial Review, The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald, Brisbane Times and WAtoday, said in June that the end of the Meta deal also had implications for the publishing sector.

“This week … the Meta deal ended and the significant revenue from that deal has stopped,” she said.

‘While we are encouraged by our constructive discussions with the federal government about enforcing the code, the only thing that is certain at this time is that we do not have an ongoing agreement with Meta.

“The advertising market remains challenging and while publisher and sales teams are working together on a range of new initiatives, our FY25 forecast reflects the market outlook.”

The earlier staff cuts and a proposed 10.5 percent pay increase over three years led to the Nine’s heavily unionized staff going on strike during the first five days of the Olympics.

Editors returned to newsrooms across the country after top executives agreed to an additional one percent pay raise and demands were made.

These included the ethical use of artificial intelligence, a commitment to reporting on diversity in the workplace and agreeing to negotiate a fair deal for freelancers.

The announcement of restructuring at Nine came in the same week that Seven West Media laid off 150 staff in a major round of job cuts, with three senior managers leaving the company.

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