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Illinois rolls out $4 million in tax credits to fuel local news, but 78 percent of new reporter credits go unclaimed

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* John Volk for the Medill Local News Initiative

Forty Illinois local news entities operating 120 outlets are receiving $4 million in state tax credits under a new law designed to encourage the retention and hiring of journalists, according to documents released this week. […]

They span major legacy organizations, small community newspapers, digital start-ups and public broadcasters. Most of the funding went to organizations outside the Chicago metro area. Nonprofit outlets received 30% of the money. The vast majority of news organizations in Illinois are for-profit. […]

So far in Illinois, 61 entities have applied for funding with 49 of those approved. Five applicants had their applications denied and seven more applications remain under review. The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity did not immediately provide a response to written questions about who was denied and why.

* Gannett, which runs 11 daily papers in western and central Illinois, and Alden Global Capital, owner of the Chicago Tribune, didn’t make the list



* Back to LNI

The legislation attempted to cap the amount of funding to organizations backed by private funds like Gannett and Alden. One such company, Lee Enterprises, still managed to be the largest recipient of Illinois’ tax credits at $375,000 across applications it submitted for four newspapers in the state.

Earlier this summer, Illinois became the first state in the nation to distribute money directly to local news organizations for employing journalists. The Illinois law is the latest step in the growing movement of state and local governments using legislation to intervene in the local news crisis, even as the federal government clawed back $1.1 billion in funding for public broadcasting last month. Twenty-two states and municipalities have passed or are considering bills to support local news, according to Rebuild Local News. […]

Illinois’ legislation, passed in May 2024, makes available $25 million over five years for local news organizations that hire and retain journalists in the form of refundable tax credits. In its first year, $5 million is available in tax credits broken into two buckets, with $4 million earmarked for retaining journalists and the remaining $1 million for newsrooms that add new journalists. A little over $1 million remains available in 2025, with 78% of the credits for expanding newsrooms unclaimed.

The credits are distributed on a first-come, first-serve basis. To receive funding, outlets must apply and demonstrate eligibility based on certain criteria, including consistent publication of original local content and employment of journalists.

* Despite $1 million available to support hiring new reporters, most grant recipients focused on subsidizing their newsrooms rather than adding staff.…

* Related…

posted by Isabel Miller
Friday, Aug 8, 25 @ 12:35 pm

Comments

  1. Sad to see more newspapers closing down. These seem to be in pretty small towns, which likely depend on them more.

    Comment by Friendly Bob Adams Friday, Aug 8, 25 @ 1:09 pm

  2. Under the Trump FCC, look for more sales like Byron Allen’s. The environment is ripe for a handful of companies (Gray, Sinclair, Nexstar) to buy up most of the local stations in the country and create duopolies or even triopolies.

    Comment by Drifter182 Friday, Aug 8, 25 @ 2:13 pm

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