In the newsroom: A look at gender breakdowns at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, St. Louis Beacon

This is the second in a series of posts (one from each of our geographical regions) looking at how our findings through our Gender Checks — that women have 31 percent of bylines thus far — compare to the actual makeups of these news sites’ newsrooms. The goal is to help determine what other factors may play a role in determining who bylines top-of-the-website stories.

Here’s a look at our monitored websites from the Midwest:

Midwest

During the first quarter, women bylined roughly 41.6 percent of the stories we “gender checked” in the Midwest’s geographic region. Those were distributed as 10 stories written by an individual woman and 14 by one or more man.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Stltoday.com)

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch newsroom contact list (accessed June 22) shows women as 31.3 percent of the staff members listed. The number of women in the newsroom is at a much lower percentage than has shown up in the bylines on top stories on Stltoday.com, which during the first quarter showed a 50-50 ratio of men to women in the articles we checked. Of those articles from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in the first quarter, six were by a woman and six by a man or two.

The gender breakdown in the Post-Dispatch newsroom appears to fall mostly along traditional lines. Women made up the majority only of the arts and entertainment (six to two) as well as the lifestyle (five to one) and health (three to one) staffs. On the other hand, the biggest differences for men were in sports (20 to one) and business (seven to two) staffs. If those under news staffs are tallied up (general assignment, city beats, city hall, main news, metro and national/international), men outnumber women at a ratio of more than three to one.

Of those listed as specifically online news staff, three were female and five were male. The deputy managing editor/online is male — Bob Rose.

St. Louis Beacon

As is typical, the St. Louis Beacon, the online-only news outlet we monitor in this region, has a much smaller staff than the newspaper-based St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Women actually make up the majority of the 15-person editorial and reporting staff (accessed June 22) — nine are female, or 60 percent.

However, even though the St. Louis Beacon has a much greater percentage of female news staff than its newspaper competitor, that has not yet been the case in its byline record through our Gender Checks. During the first quarter, four articles were by women while eight were by men. It’s still early to determine whether this is an ongoing trend.

Unlike with the Seattle P-I, where an apparent emphasis on crime reporting displayed on the top of the website brought out more male bylines, there does not necessarily appear to be a trend at this point here. Three of the eight male bylines belong to one reporter whose topics were of state and city government issues but the rest are spread out between two other reporters and a “special to” the Beacon contributor. All four articles with female bylines counted in our Gender Checks as of the first quarter were of different authorship.

Also noteworthy is the fact that the editor of the Beacon is a woman, Margaret Wolf Freivogel, who is also one of the site’s founders. According to her on-site bio, she has received recognition for her coverage of women in politics and served as president of the Journalism and Women’s Symposium.

Note: For the purposes of our study, most of our data for the breakdowns of the individual newsrooms we feature have and will come from what is readily available online through the news sites’ own contact and staff listing pages. From what we know from our own experience in the industry, we’re aware these aren’t always quite up to date, but they should give us a general idea of what the newsrooms look like. We’ve stuck to newsroom staff for our purposes. This may vary by news site, as some, particularly newspapers, include different staff positions on their lists.

Read the first post in this series, which looked at the staff breakdowns at the Seattle Times and Seattle P-I, here. Watch for the next installment coming soon. Two more posts remain in this series — the Northeast and the South.

Supreme Court decision in Wal-Mart case brings out discussions about sex discrimination, re-emergence of ERA

In a 5-4 vote that fell along ideological lines, the U.S. Supreme Court decided this week that 1.5 million women who are current and former employees of Wal-Mart could not join together in a class-action lawsuit (one of the largest ever) against the company because of a lack of “sufficient proof” of commonality and evidence of discrimination among all of the plaintiffs. The case, Dukes v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., has been ongoing since 2001 and the women charge that they’ve been subjected to unequal pay and promotion based on company practices and culture. The highest court’s decision overturned the lower courts’ rulings.

The case and the Supreme Court’s decision have received much attention and debate this week including about whether it demonstrates a “pro-business” leaning of the court, whether it’s a sign that some corporations are “too big to be held accountable,” whether it is just a check on class action lawsuits. Most interesting for our purposes is the coverage of what this decision means for women.

The question came down to just how much in common the 1.5 million women needed to have to sue as a class.

Plaintiffs pointed to statistics, such as the fact that women were 70 percent of employees but only one-third of managers, and anecdotal examples of discrimination as a result of local managers’ control over individual salaries and promotions. Meanwhile, Wal-Mart pointed to its written equal opportunity policy.

Writing for the majority, Justice Antonin Scalia sided with Wal-Mart that there was not evidence that the company operated under a “general policy of discrimination” that affected all of those more than one million plaintiffs. He said it was in fact that substantial control allotted to individual stores and managers that made it not plausible for all the women of Wal-Mart — in various positions, pay levels, store locations, states, etc. — to have been subject to the same discriminatory policy employment practices.

In her dissent, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg noted that giving managers discretion in personnel decisions without formalized standards can result in bias: “The risk of discrimination is heightened when those managers are predominately of one sex, and are steeped in a corporate culture that perpetuates gender stereotypes.”

Some commentators pointed out that “contemporary sexism” is no longer out in the open, but more subtle and cultural. As, Courtney E. Martin pointed out in an opinion piece for the Christian Science Monitor, “It’s not company rules that most brave working women have to challenge these days; it’s informal and widespread exclusion.”

Others, like Nelson Lichtenstein in an op-ed for the New York Times, argued that Wal-Mart’s patriarchal beginnings have put on a new face of a “systematically authoritarian structure” that hurts both women and men. Since women make up roughly 70 percent of the hourly workers, it has a tendency to hurt them more, he noted, particularly with regard to promotions into management that require relocation and long hours. He argues that this case demonstrates the need for a union.

Some of those who applauded the Supreme Court’s decision, including Ann Rittgers in this opinion piece, pointed out that in protecting due process rights by not allowing the class-action rules to be “loosened,” the decision in turn protected everyone, including women.

The decision does not necessarily mean the women won’t be able to continue to pursue action against Wal-Mart; they’ll just have to do it in more specific cases and in smaller numbers and through complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, as the plaintiffs have already said they plan to do. Such cases have been successful in the past. One woman managed to win $2 million from Wal-Mart in a lawsuit after she claimed was fired for asking to be paid the same as her male colleagues.

If nothing else, the high-profile case has brought attention to the issue, and, by some accounts, positive changes within Wal-Mart, including increases in the percentages of women in management, even according to some of the named plaintiffs in the case.

Wal-Mart is not necessarily alone either in claims of unequal treatment, as CNN Money points out, since similar suits of “unconscious discrimination” have been brought against other big corporations. The facts across the board regarding women’s status in the workforce show disparities, as the Christian Science Monitor highlighted, including the pay gap of 81 cents to a man’s dollar. (See our past week in review posts on the subject: “Pay disparity by gender highlighted, disputed” and “White House study shows persisting gap in wages, despite education advancement.”)

The re-emergence of the Equal Rights Amendment

The Supreme Court’s decision has inspired lawmakers to reintroduce the Equal Rights Amendment, an amendment that was first introduced in the 1920s. The amendment, which has stated “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex,” came the closest to ratification in the 1970s when it was passed by Congress but fell three states short of the 38 needed to approve it.

Rep. Carolyn Maloney and Sen. Robert Menendez, both Democrats, announced the effort Wednesday, with the House bill co-sponsored by nearly 160 members, and Maloney specifically referenced the Wal-Mart case:

“The Equal Rights Amendment is still needed because the only way for women to achieve permanent equality in the U.S. is to write it into the constitution. While it’s been thrilling to see how far women have come in my lifetime, laws can change, government regulations can be weakened, and judicial opinions can shift…

“The Wal-Mart case decided by the Supreme Court this week is a classic example of how far attitudes must still come. The facts of the case support the view that over a million women were systematically denied equal pay by the world’s largest employer.”

Round-up of coverage

For more on the news and opinions surrounding the Wal-Mart decision, check out some of the links below:

This is the Gender Report’s Week in Review, a weekly post that highlights some of the major stories related to gender issues this week. Some of these stories may have already appeared in our News Feed or in the week’s Gender Checks. We’ll at times include a longer analysis of stories as well as bring attention to stories that may have slipped through the cracks of the week’s news cycle.

Gender check: 6/23/11 – Midwest

*Gender Checks are quick examinations of gender representation in individual news articles for the purpose of discovering trends over time. Click here to read more.

Website: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (stltoday.com)

On Stltoday.com, one of the lead articles featured on the home page as of 12:30 p.m. (PST) Thursday, June 23, was titled “St. Louis woman charged; police say she lied about carjacking.” Its subject was a woman charged with making a false report after lying about a carjacking.

Here is its gender breakdown:

Author: Female

Human sources  (listed in order mentioned):

1. Female, accused (via court documents)


Website: St. Louis Beacon

On the St. Louis Beacon, one of the lead articles featured on the home page as of 12:30 p.m. (PST) Thursday, June 23, was titled “Analysis: Obama’s troop withdrawals from Afghanistan reflect domestic pressures.” Its subject was a look at the decision to draw down troops and focus attentions “at home.”

Here is its gender breakdown:

Author:  Male

Human sources  (listed in order mentioned):

1. Male, U.S. senator (Democrat)

2. Male, U.S. senator (Democrat)

3. Male, U.S. senator (Republican) (via op-ed)

4. Male, then-U.S. senator

5. Unknown, “senior administration official” (Unnamed)

6. Male, “senior administration official” (Unnamed)

Notes/analysis: The article also refers to statements from the U.S. Conference of Mayors, as well as other offices and statistics.

Gender check: 6/21/11 – West

*Gender Checks are quick examinations of gender representation in individual news articles for the purpose of discovering trends over time. Click here to read more.

Website: Seattle Times

On the Seattle Times, one of the lead articles featured on the home page as of 12:15 p.m. (PST) Tuesday, June 21, was titled “Seattle asks court to allow release of names of disciplined cops.” Its subject was a petition by the Seattle City Attorney’s Office.

Here is its gender breakdown:

Author: Male

Human sources  (listed in order mentioned):

1. Male, attorney

Notes/analysis: The story mostly references documents or refers to “the department.”


Website: Seattle P-I

On the Seattle P-I, one of the lead articles featured on the home page as of 12:15 p.m. (PST) Tuesday, June 21, was titled “Charge: Lakewood man sold incarcerated sex predators child porn.” Its subject was a man charged with smuggling child pornography into a state facility for sex offenders.

Here is its gender breakdown:

Author: Male

Human sources  (listed in order mentioned):

1. Unknown, inspector (Unnamed)

2. Male, assistant U.S. attorney

Gender check: 6/16/11 – Midwest

*Gender Checks are quick examinations of gender representation in individual news articles for the purpose of discovering trends over time. Click here to read more.

Website: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (stltoday.com)

On Stltoday.com, one of the lead articles featured on the home page as of 11:25 a.m. (PST) Thursday, June 16, was titled “Missouri River to be high but manageable all summer, barring torrents of rain.” Its subject was a discussion on the flood potential of the Missouri River.

Here is its gender breakdown:

Author: Male

Human sources  (listed in order mentioned):

1. Male, chief of Weather Service office

2. Male, commander of Army Corps of Engineers district

Notes/analysis: The photo accompanying the story features two males. It was taken by a male photographer.


Website: St. Louis Beacon

On the St. Louis Beacon, one of the lead articles featured on the home page as of 11:25 a.m. (PST) Thursday, June 16, was titled “Blunt visits Guantanamo, calls for two more terror suspects to be tried there.” Its subject was a U.S. senator speaks about his tour of Guantanamo.

Here is its gender breakdown:

Author: Male

Human sources  (listed in order mentioned):

1. Male, U.S. senator

2. Male, a spokesman (unnamed)

3. Unknown, attorney

Notes/analysis: The story was based mainly on a call with reporters with the U.S. senator sharing his thoughts after a tour of the facility, making him the main and dominate source.