Facebook says it will spend $100 million to help local news outlets survive the economic impact of coronavirus

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Facebook says it will spend $100 million to help local news outlets survive the economic impact of coronavirus
Mark Zuckerberg

Ben Margot/AP Photo

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  • Facebook is committing $100 million to support local news outlets amid the coronavirus outbreak, the company announced Monday.
  • Local newspapers have already lost money from the coronavirus economic downturn - advertising revenue is down for local papers as much as 30 to 50 percent for the month of April.
  • Facebook will provide $25 million in emergency grants to local news and $75 million in a marketing drive aimed at newspapers.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Facebook will give local news outlets $25 million in emergency funding grants and will spend $75 million on a marketing drive to "move money over to news organizations," the company announced Monday.

The company said the $100 million investment was an attempt to help local news outlets survive the coronavirus outbreak, which has put a strain on newsrooms' reporting capacity while undermining ad revenue.

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The ad business has already started to contract amid coronavirus, and local newspapers are feeling the effects. While interest in coronavirus has driven a surge in traffic and subscriptions for local news outlets, daily publishers will lose between 30 and 50 percent of ad revenue for the month of April, according to Harvard's Nieman Lab.

"If people needed more proof that local journalism is a vital public service, they're getting it now. And while almost all businesses are facing adverse financial effects from this crisis, we recognize we're in a more privileged position than most, and we want to help," Facebook vice president for global news partnerships Campbell Brown wrote in a post announcing the investment.

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Emergency grants from Facebook have already enabled The Post and Courier in Charleston, South Carolina, to take down its paywall for coronavirus stories and cover travel costs for reporters to cover rural areas of the state, according to Brown.

Facebook had previously pledged to invest more than $300 million in news companies across the US by 2021, funding reporting fellowships and grants for local papers.

There has long been tension between publishers and Facebook - along with Google, the platform is responsible for the vast majority of online traffic to news sites. Facebook faced criticisms from publishers for some features, like instant articles, that nominally increased traffic but hurt outlets' ad revenue. Facebook also spent months encouraging brands and publishers to create more video content, promising that video would bring more ad revenue and engagement, before it was revealed that the metrics associated with videos on Facebook were inflated and largely inaccurate.

In October, Facebook announced that it would pay some publishers directly in order to syndicate their stories in Facebook News, a new section of its app.

Do you have a personal experience with the coronavirus you'd like to share? Or a tip on how your town or community is handling the pandemic? Please email covidtips@businessinsider.com and tell us your story.

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