When a newspaper gets useful…

There is an interesting post by Jeremy Harris at the Auckland Transport Blog – “Independent Inquiry On Sydney’s PT“.

Sydney has higher PT use than Auckland though for two main reasons:

Apart from that our cities are relatively similar transport-wise, there is almost no grid road system in Sydney and public transport services are disjointed, with a mixture of public and private providers and with no clear public planning agency and accountability.

Apparently the Sydney Morning Herald got annoyed with the dithering and sponsored a independent study on what could be done to improve transport systems in Sydney. You can read more about the summarized results in the post at ATB (the draft report is 500 pages). But they can be even more summarized as

In short all of the things that this current government isn’t doing. It looks to me like Steven Joyce has no more long-term plan for Auckland’s transport woes than funding motorway construction companies and property developers outside the city, plus of course political point scoring.

As Jeremy says:-

What I found striking reading the report is how it could have been written for Auckland. Of the six points above not a single one doesn’t apply to Auckland and would be beneficial if introduced here. We should look at adopting many of it’s recommendations and recognise how they replicate the systems in cities with good public transport as diverse as London to Curitiba.

I can’t see a price tag for the study, but I wouldn’t expect it to be that expensive. Frequently people are happy to give up their time when they know it helps make a difference. And one of the benefits of the net is that it can help to massively reduce costs of collaborative efforts. You only have to look at sites like this to understand why. This site since its inception in August 2007 has cost somewhere in the order of $2500 in actual cash. All of the effort and time spent has been done in voluntary collaborative effort by many people who often know quite a lot about what they’re writing on. Frequently they’re over shadowed by the quality of the commentators.

But what really intrigued me about this story on Sydney was that a newspaper did something more useful for their city than simply report news and run waffle to protect their advertising streams which seems to be the NZ Heralds  campaigns.  Speaking as a person who has grown up with the net during my adult life, I started finding our newspapers largely irrelevant a long time ago.

Many newspapers simply slipped into repeating press statements, overseas news, and vacuous gossip long ago – all of which I can get faster, cheaper, and usually better on-line.  The opinion pieces are often interesting, but frankly there is better informed material around the blogosphere by people and sites (like ATB) who actually know what they’re talking about. Newspapers have the capability to go more in-depth on issues than TV, and are a lot less shallow than radio (apart from NatRad), but they seldom exercise it.

These days I find that I merely skim NZ Heralds online site or a paper copy while getting coffee looking for the few stories that are genuinely interesting. Most of those are local Auckland city news. I probably spend almost as much time weekly on reading Auckland City Harbour News which has really local material that I can’t get anywhere else.

I spend far more time reading my online subscription to global systems like The Economist, experts-exchange.com and a few others because they have authoritative material. Most of my reading is on-line, pretty specific, in-depth, usually free, and relies on the cross-reference linking in the articles. Programmers get virtually all of their technical material by researching from the net these days.

None of those attributes describes the material in the NZ Herald (especially their almost complete lack of links). I’m probably further into the bleeding edge than most simply because that is where I’ve been most of my life. However I suspect that newspapers will either have to adapt to the changing world or go the way of the dinosaur.

This is a worldwide trend with mere repeaters of stories like the NZ Herald steadily shrinking. Meanwhile global publications with informed new material like the Wall Street Journal and The Economist are managing to reduce their losses or even gain new subscribers. The genuinely local papers also appear to be doing fairly well because they are hooked into their communities.

I suspect that the Sunday Morning Herald is aware of that localizing trend, and I’m frankly envious of Sydney for having a paper doing local research. That is the type of material that I’d get a subscription to read.

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