New report shows Bexar County's local news gap
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Bexar County has fewer than four local reporters for every 100,000 people —less than half the national average.
Why it matters: Many American neighborhoods lack adequate news coverage for everything from school board meetings and elections to local sports and cultural events.
Driving the news: The U.S. now has 8.2 "local journalist equivalents" (LJEs) for every 100,000 people, down 75% from 2002 on average.
- That's according to the Local Journalist Index 2025 from Muck Rack and Rebuild Local News, a local journalism nonprofit.
- Two-thirds of U.S. counties fall below the national average, underscoring what researchers call "the stunning collapse in local reporting."
How it works: The findings are based on Muck Rack's data about journalists and media outlets nationwide as of Q1 2025.
- Among other steps, the authors adjusted the number of overall journalists in each county to account for part-timers, plus those who work for big-city outlets but sometimes cover suburban affairs.
- The result is the "local journalist equivalent" — a metric similar to "full-time equivalent," which accounts for part-time employees when measuring the size of a workforce.
State of play: Efforts are underway to bolster the local media landscape.
- The University of Texas at San Antonio announced a new journalism degree program last week.
- Press Forward San Antonio — the state's only chapter of a national $500 million initiative — launched in 2024 and is prioritizing rural newsroom grants, according to Poynter.
What they're saying: "If there's no news and information source in your community, then there's no access to the resources that people need to survive and make better decisions," Jesus Garcia-Gonzalez, senior program officer for Press Forward San Antonio, told Poynter.
What's next: Looming cuts to federal public broadcasting funds could deepen the crisis — forcing more local stations to shrink or shut down.

