Washington Post Co. said it plans to offer buyouts this year to employees of its flagship newspaper, as declining ad revenue is expected to bring a second unprofitable year at the paper. Meanwhile, the New York Times Co. Thursday said it will cut pay for editors and managers by 5% through the end of the year and will ask the same of its unionized newsroom employees. The buyouts at the Post, which employees learned of in memos sent Thursday, will be extended predominantly to newsroom, production and circulation ...
Washington Post Co. said it plans to offer buyouts this year to employees of its flagship newspaper, as declining ad revenue is expected to bring a second unprofitable year at the paper.
Meanwhile, the New York Times Co. Thursday said it will cut pay for editors and managers by 5% through the end of the year and will ask the same of its unionized newsroom employees.
The buyouts at the Post, which employees learned of in memos sent Thursday, will be extended predominantly to newsroom, production and circulation ...
... here’s his solid evidence that adaptation has worked in the past: "During the Little Ice Age, both the Vikings and the British adapted to the cold by changing. I suppose that one possible adaptation response of Viking retrenchment and British expansion is that we’re conducting the hearing today in English instead of Norwegian."
... here’s his solid evidence that adaptation has worked in the past:
"During the Little Ice Age, both the Vikings and the British adapted to the cold by changing. I suppose that one possible adaptation response of Viking retrenchment and British expansion is that we’re conducting the hearing today in English instead of Norwegian."
Federal officials postponed poisoning a mile-long stretch of the Rio Grande's banks this week after residents complained that doing so posed health and environmental risks on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border. U.S. Customs and Border Protection said it wants to eradicate the invasive Carrizo cane infesting many portions of the Rio Grande's banks between Texas and Mexico. The lanky cane provides cover for immigrants crossing the border illegally and poses a danger to Border Patrol agents trying to stop them, said Chuck Prichard, spokesman for CBP's Laredo sector.
Federal officials postponed poisoning a mile-long stretch of the Rio Grande's banks this week after residents complained that doing so posed health and environmental risks on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection said it wants to eradicate the invasive Carrizo cane infesting many portions of the Rio Grande's banks between Texas and Mexico. The lanky cane provides cover for immigrants crossing the border illegally and poses a danger to Border Patrol agents trying to stop them, said Chuck Prichard, spokesman for CBP's Laredo sector.