Religious Press Suffers Major Blow With Planned Shuttering Of CNS, Catholic New York
NEW YORK— The Catholic press — in print, online and television — is one of the most active and vibrant in the United States. It is often well-funded and essential to understanding Catholicism, but the changing journalism landscape — spurred on by the internet — has made it tough for even religious media to thrive.
This trend manifested itself recently with the pending closures of two highly venerated and popular Catholic news organizations: Catholic News Service and Catholic New York.
Catholic New York was one of those publications that used CNS stories. That’s one thing that connected the two. The other was that both news organizations were run by the church hierarchy. CNS, founded in 1920, is a wire service with reporters and editors that write up stories for subscriber newspapers across the country. The other, Catholic New York, was the official newspaper of the archdiocese and one of the largest of its kind in the country in terms of geographical reach and circulation.
READ: Catholic Bishops Meet In Secret To Discuss ‘Culture War’ Issues: What Does It Mean For The Church?
CNS announced two weeks ago that it was shutting down a main part of its operation in “a dramatic reorganization of its communications department” — including the closure of the Washington, D.C., and New York offices.
In meetings with newsroom staff, James Rogers, the chief communications officer of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the Washington office would be closed at year’s end. The Rome bureau will remain open and continue to report on the Vatican.
A statement released by the bishops’ public affairs office added:
Over the next few months, the USCCB Department of Communications will undertake a significant realignment to better utilize the resources entrusted to the Conference by the faithful in a manner that fits the communications environment today. Sadly, this will impact a number of staff. We are grateful for the time and dedication of the committed team of communicators at the Conference who serve the Church; job transitions can be difficult, and as this is a personnel matter, further detail will not be discussed at this time.
On the heels of that May 4 announcement, Catholic New York, founded in 1981, said on May 19 that it would cease operations. The biweekly newspaper will publish its final issue on Nov. 17, as the archdiocese said it is moving toward unveiling a new digital communications program. It has yet to announce what that will be but set a timeline for launch as early as 2023.
“We know that this is a painful decision for many, beginning with the excellent team who have dedicated themselves to producing an outstanding, award-winning periodical — one of the best, if not the best, Catholic newspapers in the country,” said Monsignor Joseph LaMorte, vicar general and moderator of the curia, and John P. Cahill, chancellor of the archdiocese, in a statement. “We will work with them during this period of transition and will help them find new positions in the archdiocese wherever possible.”
This signals a major shift for CNS and Catholic New York, two of the church’s biggest news organizations. It’s very possible that the bishops have done a poor job keeping up with what Catholics in the United States — both on the doctrinal left and right — want to read. It also leaves a void that will be filled by sites often motivated more by politics than faith.
Tom Dermody, the editor of Peoria’s Catholic Post, told America magazine that a lack of information as to how the USCCB plans to fill the content void adds uncertainty to an already stressful publishing environment.
“It is difficult to imagine no longer having the good work produced by its domestic operations as a foundation for what we do to keep our readers inspired and informed, especially about all that is happening in the church beyond our diocese’s borders,” he said. “And not knowing what the USCCB is planning to offer to fill the void in a reorganized communications department adds to the concern of many of us.”
David Gibson, director of Fordham University’s Center on Religion and Culture, argued that closing CNS will “have a terrible practical effect because diocesan newspapers and websites across the country depend on CNS content to fill out their page with news about the church in other dioceses and around the world. Like their secular counterparts, local Catholic media have fewer resources to cover church news, and while those dioceses can ill-afford to pay for Catholic News Service, shutting CNS’ domestic operations is akin to cutting off your town's newspaper from the Associated Press and Reuters wire feeds; their already thin offerings would shrink even further.”
Clemente Lisi is a senior editor and regular contributor to Religion Unplugged. He is the former deputy head of news at the New York Daily News and teaches journalism at The King’s College in New York City. Follow him on Twitter @ClementeLisi.