When Nobody Is Watching

Cedar Valley News — March 9, 2026
From the Editor’s Desk: When Nobody Is Watching
By: Teresa Nikas, Editor
From the fictional town of Cedar Valley, where characters from Quiet Echo continue to respond to real-world events.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette published its first edition in 1786. George Washington was still alive. The Constitution had not been written. For nearly 240 years, somebody in Pittsburgh picked up a newspaper and read what was happening in their city — who was running for office, how the money was being spent, which building inspector looked the other way.

In January, the Post-Gazette‘s owner announced the paper would publish its final edition May 3. Pittsburgh’s last remaining print daily — gone. The owner cited more than $350 million in losses over twenty years. The union said management chose to punish journalists rather than follow the law. A city of 300,000 people will lose the newsroom best positioned to watch its government.

This is not new. Two newspapers close every week in the United States. Since 2005, the country has lost a third of its newspapers. More than 200 counties have no local news outlet. Northwestern University calls these information deserts. The word is accurate. Nothing grows in a desert.

I am an editor of a small paper. I understand what a newsroom does because I run one. And what a newsroom does — what it has always done — is put a reporter in the room where public decisions are made, and tell the community what happened. Not what officials said happened afterward. What actually happened. The city council vote at 10 PM when half the audience has gone home. The contract awarded to the commissioner’s brother-in-law. The school budget line item buried on page forty-seven.

When the reporter is present, people behave differently. Not because journalists are powerful. Because being watched changes behavior. Every parent knows this. Every public official who has ever looked up from a podium and seen a reporter in the second row with a notebook open knows it. Accountability is not a principle. It is a presence. Remove the presence, the accountability goes with it.

When local newspapers close, government borrowing costs rise. County wages increase as a share of all wages. Voter turnout drops. Polarization increases. The problems do not arrive with fanfare. They arrive the way water damage arrives — invisible until the wall is soft.

People say the internet replaced the newspaper. It replaced the classifieds, the weather page, the box scores. It did not replace the reporter who sits through a four-hour planning commission meeting on a Tuesday night, so you do not have to. The internet gave us more information and less journalism, and most people did not notice the difference until the local paper was gone.

To be sure, newspapers are not blameless in their own decline. Some failed to adapt. Some were gutted by corporate owners who stripped the newsroom to service debt. The Post-Gazette‘s labor dispute is complicated, and I will not pretend one side holds all the fault.

But fault and consequence are different conversations. Whatever caused the Post-Gazette to close, the consequence is the same. A city loses its witness. And a city without a witness is a city where the powerful do what they want because nobody with a notebook is in the second row.

I worry about Cedar Valley. Not today. Today we are here. But the economics pressing against every small paper in America press against us too. The day this paper closes — if it closes — nobody will hold a funeral. The presses will just stop, the way they stopped in Pittsburgh and in more than two thousand communities before it. And the first thing people will lose is the knowledge of what their own government did last Tuesday night.

If your town still has a newspaper, read it. Subscribe to it. Disagree with it loudly — disagreement is a sign of life, not a threat. But do not let it disappear while you are looking at your phone. Because the moment the last reporter leaves the room, the meeting does not stop. It just stops being recorded.

And what is not recorded is, sooner or later, not remembered.

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town are fictional, the national events they reflect on are real.

Want to know the full story behind Cedar Valley? Teresa, Caleb, Dan, and the community you’ve come to know in these editorials first came together in Quiet Echo. Discover how a small town found its way from fear to fellowship — one quiet act of courage at a time. Available on Amazon: https://bit.ly/3ME4nSs

Why do words matter? Because they change lives — when someone reads them. Discover why purpose is the foundation of every sentence worth writing in The Power of Authors by Evan and Lois Swensen. Available on Amazon.

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