Since the late 20th century, like other media business organizations, the newspaper has faced reductions in circulation and revenue; it has undergone restructuring and layoffs.
Declining circulation The paper's circulation declined from the 1980s through about the first decade of the twenty-first century, then dropped precipitously in the following decade or so; the following figures (using circulation numbers derived from the same source, though made public only in other sources and in a patchwork fashion) show that in the 24 years between 1983 and 2007 the paper's circulation dropped by 33% (daily) and 11% (Sunday), while in the next 12 years between 2007 and 2019, it lost a further 79% and 62% of its daily and Sunday circulation.
Reductions in newspaper size and delivery On December 18, 2005,
The Plain Dealer ceased publication of its weekly
Sunday Magazine, which had been published since 1919. Its demise was attributed to rising expenses and the poor economy. The editor of
The Plain Dealer, Doug Clifton, said that stories that would formerly have appeared in the
Sunday Magazine would be integrated into other areas of the paper. In June 2008, the paper announced that it would cut four sections and an average of 32 pages per week. In August 2013,
The Plain Dealer reduced
home delivery from seven days a week to four: Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. It continued to publish an edition seven days a week that is available in electronic form at Cleveland.com, and in print at stores,
newsracks and newsstands.
Closure and transfer of bureaus The Plain Dealer formerly operated a variety of news bureaus. By the middle of 2014, both the state capital bureau in Columbus and the
Washington bureau were shifted to the Northeast Ohio Media Group, as shown by the affiliations of their bureau chiefs.
Elimination of staff, 2006–2020 In the early 2000s,
The Plain Dealer employed almost 350 reporters and editors; by 2020 that number was zero. The elimination of its entire staff took the form of a series of cuts between 2006 and 2020, described below.
2006–2009 buyouts, staff cuts, and pay decrease Between October and November 2006, about 64 employees, or one-sixth of those in the newsroom, accepted a buyout offer to leave the newspaper, reducing the newsroom staff from 372 to 308. In 2009, employees agreed to accept a 12% pay cut in exchange for a two-year no-layoff agreement.
2013 cuts In December 2012, members of the
Newspaper Guild reported that
The Plain Dealer management had told them that, after the January 2013 expiration of a no-layoff provision in the union's contract, it planned to eliminate about one-third of the newspaper's staff and cut 58 of 168 union positions. Later in December 2012, the guild endorsed an agreement with
Plain Dealer management accepting the expected layoffs of 58 journalists starting in May 2013, but restoring some of the pay cut union members had accepted in 2009, setting a severance package, and minimizing future layoffs through 2019 (to "just one more modest downsizing"). The agreement also allowed work to "flow freely" between
The Plain Dealer and Cleveland.com, in particular changing the rules to allow work of non-union staff of Cleveland.com to be published in
The Plain Dealer. On the morning of Wednesday, July 31, 2013, after having been told in April that layoffs expected for May were "on hold" until the summer, The union filed a complaint with the NLRB which it settled in August 2014.
2019 cuts The Plain Dealer announced plans to lay off a third of its remaining unionized staff in December 2018 as part of a transition to a "centralized production system". In March 2019, the paper laid off twelve (or fourteen) editors and reporters, and also outsourced its production, dropping another 24 jobs. Eight veteran reporters volunteered to take buyouts to spare others losing their jobs. "It's just the falling circulation numbers in print, they continue to hamper us", Quinn said. "So we'll—you hate to see them go, they're veteran people, it's a lot of experience. Nothing matters more. But if it fits for where they are in their lives, and we can save some money, we're going for it." Rachel Dissell, a vice president of the News Guild, addressed Quinn's remarks, saying "we are baffled how print circulation can be blamed for buyouts at a digital company that we've been told again and again over five years is a separate entity from the Plain Dealer." Their departures were delayed by two weeks, however, because of the
COVID-19 pandemic, leading to what was described as "a farewell blitz of vital reporting" on that topic by the soon-to-depart staff. On April 6, 2020, the Plain Dealer's editor announced that ten of its fourteen remaining reporters would be assigned to cover Ohio counties outside of Cleveland, rather than
Cuyahoga County. The ten reporters asked to be laid off instead, and on April 10, 2020, they were. This left the Plain Dealer with a staff of four union journalists: investigative journalist John Caniglia, travel editor Susan Glaser, art critic Steven Litt, and sports columnist
Terry Pluto. The same day, after three months of serving as Plain Dealer editor and overseeing this period of layoffs, Tim Warsinskey announced that he would be starting in a new role as the senior editor for Advance Local, the parent company of Cleveland.com on June 1, 2020. These layoffs were the culmination of a drop over 20 years in membership in the United States' first News Guild (Local 1 of that union) from 340 members to zero. ==Politifact Ohio==