Monday, January 21, 2008

L.A. Times editor fired, "significant changes" ahead

(Reuters) - The editor of the Los Angeles Times, James O'Shea, has been fired over a budgetary dispute only 14 months after he took over the post, the newspaper said on Sunday.

O'Shea, a veteran of the Chicago Tribune who was hired by the Times in November 2006, was fired by publisher David Hiller after he refused to carry out some $4 million in cuts, said the newspaper on its Web site, citing an unnamed source. The news was first reported by The Wall Street Journal.

In a separate statement late on Sunday, the newspaper said that like all newspaper companies, it was "facing major challenges in charting a course that will be successful for the future".

"In that vein, we will be making several significant organizational changes to put us in the best position to succeed."

It said as a result of these changes, O'Shea would be leaving the newspaper, and did not elaborate further.

O'Shea's firing comes one month after the paper's parent, Tribune Co, completed an $8.2 billion buyout led by Chicago real estate tycoon Sam Zell.

The deal restructured Tribune as an employee-owned company funded largely by debt.

The Times has struggled along with other media companies in an adverse newspaper advertising environment, and has cut staff and editorial resources in recent years.
 

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