Readers Write: Newspapers offer marketplace of ideas

The Island Now

Congratulations to Newsday first published on Sept. 4, 1940 on your 76th Anniversary.
In the 1960s, New York City was blessed with over 12 daily newspapers sold at several thousand neighborhood newsstands.
Prior to the 1962 newspaper strike of 114 days, New Yorkers had numerous newspapers.  These included the New York Post, New York Daily News, New York Journal American, New York World Telegram & Sun, New York Mirror, New York Times, New York Herald Tribune, Long Island Star Journal, Long Island Press and Staten Island Advance.    
I still remember many of Newsday’s competitors from decades ago such as the Long Island Star Journal, Long Island Press and Suffolk Sun who have come and gone.
How fortunate that we live in one of the few remaining free societies, with a wealth of information sources available.  Most American cities and suburbs are down to one local daily or weekly newspaper.  
Newspapers and magazines have to deal with increasing costs for newsprint, delivery and distribution along with reduced advertising revenues and declining readership due to competition from the Internet and other new information sources.
In Queens, Nassau and Suffolk — there continues to be ongoing circulation battles between a number of daily newspapers.  
Readers can select from Newsday along with the New York Times, Post and Daily News.  There is also national editions of USA Today and the Wall Street Journal along with freebies such as AM New York and Metro New York.  
More people turn to all news radio, national network news such as ABC, CBS, NBC along with their local affiliates, News 1 (New York City), News 10/55CBS (Long Island), News 12, FOX-5, WOR-9, WPIX-11, PBS along with cable new stations such as CNBC, CNN, FOX, BBC and the Internet for late braking news which can sometimes become stale by the time it reaches print the next day.  
A growing population of new immigrants support their own newspaper, radio and television stations.
Weekly newspapers based in Great Neck such as our own Great Neck News and other Blank Slate Media publications serving New Hyde Park, Herricks, Albertson, Searingtown, Williston Park, Garden City, Mineola, Manhasset, Port Washington, and Roslyn have the ability to concentrate exclusively on local neighborhood news.  
There is also Dan’s Papers, Anton’s Newspapers, Herald Community Newspapers chain and others doing the same.
Daily newspapers concentrate on international, Washington, Albany business and sports stories.  
They have few reporters assigned to cover local neighborhood news stories.  These reporters have to compete against colleagues for limited available print space.  
This puts even more pressure on the remaining reporters to fight for every column inch in their respective newspapers.
There is intense competition between international, state, county, city, local, business, sports, entertainment and other sections of every daily newspaper. It is continues to become more difficult for daily newspapers to provide real detailed coverage of local news on a daily basis.  
As a result, many daily newspapers such as the New York Times, Daily News, and Post frequently miss significant news and political stories from our local Great Neck villages and unincorporated neighborhoods.  
Our own Great Neck News provides more in depth coverage than daily papers of local community news.
Many of us have a continued thirst for news not only from Washington, Albany,  Mineola County Seat (Nassau County) and Manhasset Town Hall along with neighborhoods and local issues, which impact our daily lives.
Your weekly newspapers also provide opportunity and training for reporters.
You never know who might move on to work for other daily newspapers.
If you really want to be informed of what goes on in the neighborhood, read your local weekly community newspaper.  Patronize their advertises and shop local.  
They help your friendly newspapers survive and neighborhood prosper.
I continue to be grateful that our own Great Neck News and Newsday along with other daily and weekly newspapers, afford me an opportunity to express my views, as well as differing opinions.  
Thanks to you, ordinary citizens have the freedom to comment on the actions and legislation of elected officials.  
Public officials use taxpayers dollars to promote their views, via mass mailings of newsletters, news releases, letters to the editor and guest opinion page columns.  
In many cases, they are produced or written by campaign or office staffers who are paid for by taxpayers. The rest of us have limited time to submit a letter.  
In the marketplace of ideas, let us hope there continues to be room for everyone, including Newsday, the Great Neck News and all the other newspapers.  
They all fill a valuable niche in the information highway.
Larry Penner
Great Neck

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