Providence Journal Hires Top Lobbyist to Protect Mandate on Legal Notices

GoLocalProv News Team

Providence Journal Hires Top Lobbyist to Protect Mandate on Legal Notices

Top Lobbyist Joe Walsh, Paid Nearly $100k
In the midst of the recent controversies at the State House about special interests, one New York-based company has spent nearly $100,000 on a top lobbyist to repeatedly block efforts to rescind an outdated law that costs cities and towns -- and the state -- hundreds of thousands of dollars a year.

For the past three years, the Providence Journal via the Daily Newspaper Association has paid top lobbyist Joe Walsh nearly $100,000 to block legislation intended to repeal the requirement for legal notices to be published in the newspaper of record.  

According to the Rhode Island Secretary of State’s database of Rhode Island Corporations, no such entity exists. Moreover, the contact email in the state lobbying database for the RI Daily Newspaper Association is none other than Walsh’s secretary. The phone number listed for the organization is a phone number at the Newport Daily News, but those answering the phone say there is no such thing as the "RI Daily Newspaper Association."

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Walsh, the former Mayor of Warwick, is one of the most powerful lobbyists on Smith Hill. He and his firm have given candidates and elected officials more than $120,000 in political donations. Walsh represents the Construction Industries of Rhode Island, Rhode Island Automobile Dealers Association, and the Rhode Island Builders Association, to name a few.

In 2016, Walsh's firm will earn in excess of $500,000 in fees according to state reports. 

Efforts Foiled

In recent years, both Governors Lincoln Chafee and Gina Raimondo submitted budgets to remove the provision -- and each year, the requirement has remained. 

Dan Beardsley of the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns confirms that the organization representing the municipalities across Rhode Island supports the repeal of the legislation.

The requirement to use newspapers is decades old, as the legislation was passed well before the Internet was created. The requirement does not reflect where readers collect most of their information or that newspapers circulations have plummeted.

Railing Against Insiders and Special Grants and Legislation

For the Providence Journal, who has been railing against insider legislation, the use of a top lobbyist to block the repeal is counter to the newspaper's news coverage and editorial coverage that has been critical of insider deals and special grants. Providence Journal's Dave Butler, the Managing Editor, did not respond to request for comment. 

Print Now Ranks at the Bottom of Where Consumers Spend Time

The Providence Journal's circulation has continued to collapse, dropping from a weekday average in 2006 of 159,788 (according to A.H. Belo’s Annual Report) to a Monday-to-Friday average of 59,000 (according to WPRI’s Ted Nesi) — a 63% decrease. The drop in Sunday circulation is even more profound over that time — 212,971 to just 78,000.

According to Mary Meeker’s Report using 2014 data, as a percentage of time with different forms of media, online now constitutes 48% of consumers time (Internet and mobile) and print has now dropped to 4%.

Today, social media is the driving force to consumer engagement with news content.

 

Social media news use: Facebook leads the pack


Rhode Island's Changing Media Landscape

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