by holdthefrontpage staff
An emergency debate over the future of the media in Birmingham and the Midlands is being hosted later this month.
The Birmingham Press Club has called the 11th-hour meeting in response to news this week that Trinity Mirror is planning to close nine weekly newspapers and merge two more – placing 17 journalists' jobs, and 94 in total, under threat.
Further rumours persist about the future of the Birmingham Post and Mail, also owned by Trinity Mirror.
The National Union of Journalists is balloting members over possible strike action amid claims the daily Post could reduce in frequency while the Mail could switch to overnight printing.
Press Club chairman John Lamb said these cuts, combined with similar measures hitting the region's TV and radio news output, were a serious matter on a number of levels.
He said: "We have to ask ourselves 'What is happening to the media in Birmingham?' Is part of the city's heritage being dismantled?'.
"If the answer to that is 'yes', then we need to highlight the danger before it is too late and it is right that the Press Club should promote a forum to bring these issues to the fore.
"The newspaper (Post) has been in daily print since 1857 and is an indispensable part of Birmingham's heritage and in particular its business life."
The debate will be chaired by former Midlands TV presenter Llewela Bailey and the panel will include former Post editor Nigel Hastilow, NUJ northern organiser and former Mail journalist Chris Morley and Chris Bullivant, founder of the Observer group of newspapers in the Midlands.
Admission to the debate is free. It starts at 6pm on 13 July at Austin Court, 80 Cambridge Street, Birmingham. Refreshments will be provided.