Journalists sign first union contract at nonprofit news outlet Wisconsin Watch

Jack Kelly of Wisconsin Watch waits with reporters outside the state Capitol for a press conference to begin in September 2023. (Wisconsin Examiner photo)
Journalists at Wisconsin Watch β a nonprofit news organization that includes the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service β have ratified their first union contract.
The agreement, signed on Friday, March 28, includes minimum salary guarantees and annual cost-of-living increases along with layoff restrictions, severance pay and benefits as well as βjust causeβ protections against arbitrary terminations, according to the Wisconsin Watch Union. The contract also includes provisions for medical, parental, caregiver and bereavement leave.
The union is a subunit of Milwaukee NewsGuild Local 34051, which also represents newsroom employees at the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
βIβm really proud of the outcome,β said Jack Kelly, a Wisconsin Watch reporter and union bargaining team member. Staffers represented by the union were active in advocating for their priorities during contract negotiations, giving personal testimony about issues important to them, he said.
βThey put some faces and names to the numbers we were asking for,β Kelly said in an interview Monday.Β βI think the contract is going to make Wisconsin Watch and Neighborhood News Service better places to work.β
Kelly also commended Wisconsin Watch managementβs handling of the bargaining process.
βWe certainly had meetings that were long and stressful, but I think in general we were able to engage a collegial approach to bargaining,β Kelly said.
βWeβll continue to do great journalism knowing our workplace is more structured, secure and protected,β said Phoebe Petrovic, a Wisconsin Watch investigative reporter who was among those who initiated the union organizing effort, in a statement released by the union.
Wisconsin Watch journalists announced their union organizing campaign in October 2023, and the organizationβs board subsequently agreed to voluntarily recognize the union. Protection against arbitrary firings was among the goals employees cited.
Wisconsin Watch was founded in 2009 as the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, still its legal name. The Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service became part of Wisconsin Watch in July 2024 and its employees became part of the bargaining unit.
Devin Blake, a Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service reporter who joined the bargaining team, said that in addition to tangible gains the union brought him closer to coworkers. βI have such a clearer sense of what matters to their lives and work,β Blake said in the unionβs statement.
Digital news outlets and nonprofit news organizations have seen growing union representation in the last several years, with outlets including ProPublica and The Marshall Project joining the ranks of unionized newsrooms.Β
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