Local News Downsizing Fuels Infrastructure Decay

UCLA
Oroville dam spillway 2017

William Croyle/California Department of Water Resources/Wikimedia Commons

Heavy rainfall damaged the main and overflow spillway of Oroville Dam, east of Oroville, Calif., in 2017, prompting the evacuation of more than 180,000 people and the relocation of a fish hatchery.

Key takeaways

  • A new study from UCLA and Duke University shows local journalism that produces detailed coverage about aging infrastructure increases voter support for additional infrastructure investment.
  • Basic, undetailed reporting, like that from severely understaffed newsrooms or AI-generated stories, resulted in lower support for infrastructure spending.
  • Voters demonstrated a willingness to hold local politicians accountable when provided with context in local reporting.

Reading strong local journalism is tied to greater support for funding dams, sewers and other basic infrastructure vital to climate resilience, according to new research from UCLA and Duke University.

The study, published this month in the journal Political Behavior, found that reading fictionalized samples of news coverage with specific local details about infrastructure maintenance requirements led to as much as 10% more electoral support for infrastructure spending compared to reading bare-bones reporting. Just a few extra paragraphs of context in the mock news stories not only increased support for spending, but also increased voters' willingness to hold politicians accountable for infrastructure neglect by voting them out of office.

"Local news reporting builds public support for infrastructure investments," said UCLA political scientist Megan Mullin, a co-author of the study whose research focuses on environmental politics.

"Heat, floods, drought and fire are putting new stress on aging and deteriorating infrastructure, which must be maintained to protect communities against these growing climate risks," said Mullin, a UCLA public policy professor and faculty director of the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation. "Our study shows that investing in facilities that improve our resilience to climate hazards requires investing in the health of local news."

Private ownership has cut or eliminated local news staff nationwide, reducing original reporting and local political stories while focusing on national news that can be centrally produced and shared in many newspapers within the same ownership structure, the study's authors noted. They cited research that found 300 to 500 fewer political stories after average staffing cuts, and a Pew Research Center found that 56% of newspaper employment disappeared from 2008-2022. With fewer reporters staffing newsrooms, the depth of reporting on infrastructure declines.

"Local newsroom capacity is critical to democracy," said co-author Andrew Trexler, a Duke University doctoral candidate studying political communication. "Our study shows that when newsrooms can commit resources to report more information about infrastructure conditions and failure risks, readers notice and are more willing to hold officials accountable for inaction, and more willing to support higher spending."

The study surveyed more than 3,300 adults. Each read a news-style story about an upcoming election with an incumbent mayor, a mayoral challenger and a property tax increase averaging $40 annually to fund aging infrastructure. The sample stories, viewable on page 15 of the study's appendix, described either a local dam or a sewer system.

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