Tuesday, December 13, 2011

LA Times editor steps down after 4 years

LOS ANGELES — Russ Stanton, who led the Los Angeles Times to three Pulitzer Prizes in the midst of massive staff layoffs, has stepped down as editor and executive vice president, the newspaper announced Tuesday.
No reason for his sudden departure was given. Stanton will be replaced on December 23 by Trinidad-born Davan Maharaj, who is the newspaper’s managing editor and has been with the Times for more than 20 years.
Neither Stanton nor the newspaper immediately indicated whether Stanton was fired or resigned. A statement from the newspaper did not provide a reason for the change or indicate Stanton’s future plans.

Stanton was known as a “clear and outspoken” advocate for the journalism profession, said Bryce Nelson, journalism professor at University of Southern California’s Annenberg School. His abrupt departure indicates that the Times is still undergoing financial tumult that led to the short-lived tenures of several of Stanton’s predecessors, Nelson said, noting that Stanton lasted longer than other editors immediately before him.

“There’s a lot of turmoil about revenue, the power of the online edition, the role of the print edition,” Nelson said. “This is going on in every American newsroom but it’s been especially anguished at the Times.”
Stanton, 52, joined the Times in 1997 as a business reporter in Orange County. During his four years as editor, the newspaper was among many faced with declining circulation and advertising revenue. Its newsroom staff shrank from more than 900 people to about 550 and its parent Tribune Co. is still working to emerge from bankruptcy protection.
At the same time, the paper expanded into digital realms and became a 24-hour operation with more than 17 million readers each month around the world, the paper said.
The Times won three Pulitzers under Stanton’s stewardship, including the coveted Public Service Award in 2011 for exposing a huge municipal scandal in the suburban city of Bell. In the wake of reports about city officials voting themselves exorbitant salaries, several stepped down and are facing criminal charges.

Maharaj, a 49-year-old Trinidad native, will become the paper’s 15th editor. He holds a political science degree from the University of Tennessee and a master’s degree in law from Yale, the newspaper said.
Maharaj has worked at the paper for 22 years in Orange and Los Angeles counties and in Africa. He was an assistant foreign editor and then business editor before becoming managing editor in 2008. “Living on Pennies,” his six-part series on poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, won the 2005 Ernie Pyle Award for Human Interest Writing.


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