Exclusive: Local Chief Meteorologist Leaving TV Station
Jeff Derderian GoLocal Media Critic
Exclusive: Local Chief Meteorologist Leaving TV Station

Campagna confirmed that he is in fact leaving the station as of July 31st. "At the appropriate time, I went to channel 6 management with a reasonable proposal that I thought would allow me to stay at the station for, at least, the remainder of my contract (Aug 2013). The station dismissed my proposal out of hand, and we agreed to terminate the contract on July 31."
Campagna is the Chief Meteorologist on the 5, 6. and 11pm broadcasts and it had been his wish to stay at the station but apparently the two sides could not come together for a variety of reasons. While Campagna won't say either way - sources close to the situation tell GoLocal that salary and other benefits remained as some of the major sticking points. Some employees feel since new ownership took over at the station - the focus has gone away from keeping people who were higher paid and had longevity in the market. In particular the station's vacation policy is a sore point with some long term employees who say why should a person who has been there for 10-days get the same vacation as someone with 10-years.
"I am extremely grateful"

Campagna is a Bristol native and still lives there with his wife and family. He went to St. Philomena School in Portsmouth, and Bishop Connolly High School in Fall River. What Channel 6 loses is a local guy who understood what local weather means to people. Like John Ghiorse did, and like how Steve Cascione, Mark Searles over at Channel 10 and Tony Petrarca at Channel 12 do.
The Replacement

Will The New Faces Work ?
What remains to be seen is if this new round of faces will work at Channel 6. In recent months you have seen some well known faces fade from the screen. Long time Channel 6 sports guy Don Coyne, Jim Corbin who did weather, also main anchor Allison Alexander was shown the door by new management.
Channel 6 has added new people - and resources - but the question remains if younger, less experienced, and different are better. Providence is such a unique place when it comes to TV news unless these new hires can really make some headlines - and break stories and not just report them - Channel 6 faces an uphill battle.
For Tzianabos, to his credit, he is a realist saying to GoLocal recently that the focus must be on making the station relevant. But, if the owners are just focused on profit and hiring cheap help - the answer becomes clear. Get used to staying in 3rd place.
As for Campagna, no firm direction from him on what he'll do next just yet.
"As for my next move, I'd love to continue forecasting for New Englanders. I'll be exploring some ways to continue providing accurate weather updates in a way that best serves the public's changing needs and desires."
