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Editor’s note: The United Methodist Reporter
and United Methodist News Service, the denomination’s official news
service, are financially separate entities but have worked together
over the years. We have been competitors as well as collaborators,
sharing coverage of developments ranging from General Conference to
disaster response. United Methodist News Service will miss that
relationship and holds the United Methodist Reporter staff in prayer.
A UMNS Report
By Heather Hahn*
3:00 P.M. ET May 20, 2013
Staff of The United Methodist Reporter from the early 1990s gather
outside the Dallas office for a group photo. Photos courtesy of The
United Methodist Reporter.
View in Photo Gallery
Update: CircuitWriter Media LLC announced June 6 that it has entered
into an agreement with UMR Communications Inc. to purchase the rights
and digital assets of the United Methodist Reporter. The new partnership said it will continue the work of the Reporter on the Internet and through other digital means.
United Methodists across the United States are expressing a sense of
loss and sharing memories at the news that UMR Communications,
publisher of the United Methodist Reporter, will close May 31.
“The United Methodist Reporter will be missed by so many,” said the Rev. Adam Hamilton, senior pastor of the United Methodist Church of the Resurrection in Leawood, Kan. The weekly newspaper in 2012 named Hamilton as “United Methodist of the Year” for his leadership.
“I looked forward to its inspirational stories, its willingness to
present both sides to difficult issues, and the ideas and insights it
offered,” Hamilton said.
After years of financial struggles, the board of UMR Communications unanimously voted May 16 to shutter the Dallas-based nonprofit, ending a publication that has been covering Methodism since 1847.
In addition to publishing a national United Methodist newspaper in
print and digital formats, UMR Communications has provided printing and
communication services to churches, annual (regional) conferences and
other nonprofits.
The closure will cost the jobs of 26 employees, some of whom have worked with the ministry for more than four decades.
The closure also will affect 45 conference and church publications,
which print with UMR Communications and integrate the Reporter’s
content with their own.
“Across Methodism, ‘Reporter’ is the epitome of a household name,”
said Kevin Sparkman, communications coordinator for the Tennessee
Conference, which published its newspaper with UMR Communications. He
learned of the closing on the morning of May 16.
“As a U.M. communicator, it will be strange to go about my daily
business without referencing that term on an official level. The crew
in Dallas was a pleasure to work with — their expertise,
professionalism and publications were an asset that the church will
miss.”
Alan Heath, chief executive officer of UMR Communications since
August 2011, said that based on responses he has received, he believes
the Reporter will be remembered for providing “its readers with a
connection to the larger church.”
“Now that it is passing in its current form, its legacy will be
built,” he said. “Often, we don’t really see the value of a person or
an institution or, in this case, an independent voice, until after it’s
gone.”
Decreasing demand for print
At one time, the ministry published nearly 300 conference and church
editions of the newspaper, Tom Palmer, the board chair, said in the
Reporter.
Those editions have dwindled as more conferences and churches have
opted to drop print and distribute information exclusively online as a
less expensive and potentially “greener” alternative.
The 2008 economic crisis only accelerated that process, Palmer said.
“We now no longer receive enough revenue from our publishing and
printing operations to sustain the overhead needed to maintain the
ministry,” he told the United Methodist Reporter’s editor, Sam Hodges.
UMR Communications’ closing comes about a month after the last of the denomination’s Cokesbury stores, the retailers of the United Methodist Publishing House, shut their doors. To help customers around the country, the United Methodist Publishing House now is relying on the Cokesbury website and community resource consultants. Like print publications, bookstores also have been facing increasing financial pressure from online alternatives.
The Rev. Larry Hollon, the top executive of United Methodist
Communications, which operates United Methodist News Service, noted
that UMR Communications “is affected by the same financial conditions
that have also affected U.S. News and World Report, TV Guide and a host
of other print publications.”
Heath told UMNS he sees the end of the Reporter as an indication of
the “maturing” of The United Methodist Church in the United States.
“The generation that has grown up with print media and has a greater
appreciation for it is quickly transforming into a ‘cloud of
witnesses’ as they enter the church triumphant,” he said.
“Technology, economics, changing demographics and a host of other reasons are contributors to the passing of this great voice.”
A legacy of connection
For many United Methodists, the loss of the Reporter is a personal one.
“When I heard the news, it was like the death of a family member or
friend,” said Mary Brooke Casad, former executive secretary of the Connectional Table, which coordinates the denomination’s ministry, mission and resources.
As a graduate of the journalism program at United Methodist-related
Southern Methodist University, Casad wrote and edited institutional
publications for the communications council that then oversaw the
Reporter. She later served on the board in the 1980s-90s, served as a
sales representative and returned to the board in the early 2000s,
eventually serving as chair.
Her father, the late Bishop Benjamin Oliphint, helped raise money for the Reporter’s former building.
“As a young person and young writer starting out, it gave me a place
to tell my story and others’ stories,” she said. “It was exciting for
me as a journalism graduate to see this was something we had … to help
tell the story of The United Methodist Church.”
The Rev. Connie L. Nelson, director of public affairs and alumni
relations at Southern Methodist University’s Perkins School of
Theology, said she received her first copy of the newspaper’s previous
incarnation — Texas Methodist/United Methodist Reporter — as a
conference youth leader in high school.
She later worked as a copy editor at the United Methodist Reporter
in the early 1980s and eventually edited local editions of the
newspaper.
“Not only did the Reporter educate, it (also) energized: What I read
week to week opened my eyes and challenged me to be part of this great
story of United Methodism,” she said. “It was the vehicle through
which many in the denomination began to understand the larger
connection; that we were all part of a global church engaged in
proclaiming God’s profound love around the world.”
Retired Bishop Woodie W. White has written a column for the Reporter
for nine years. Like many others, he praised the newspaper for helping
to keep the United Methodist connection “connected.”
“The Reporter had become the weekly opportunity for so many to
engage in conversation and to glimpse the connection beyond the
reader's own hometown, congregation, and even world view,” he said.
“The fewer opportunities for shared experiences through shared
information and dialogue, will make more possible distrust and
isolationism. Additionally, it will increase the divide between laity
and clergy as laity will be increasingly out of the information flow.”
The Rev. Arthur McClanahan, director of communications in the Iowa
Conference, said that with the ministry’s end, his conference newspaper
will need to be more intentional about drawing in stories of the
church beyond Iowa.
“Even with the evolution of a larger group of people who choose to
read an electronic version of a ‘paper,’ we continue to have a
significant readership that prefers holding a physical copy of Iowa
United Methodist news and commentary and the stories of life in the
connection beyond,” said McClanahan, who also has served on the UMR
Communications board.
The future of communications in the church will require a Pentecost spirit, he said.
“On the day of Pentecost, each heard the story in a native
language,” he said. “Whether a digital native or a person who prefers
holding paper, the Message is ‘heard’ when all ‘hear’ (and touch).”
*Hahn is a multimedia news reporter for United Methodist News Service.
News media contact: Heather Hahn, Nashville, Tenn., (615) 742-5470 or newsdesk@umcom.org.