Boston Herald copy editor

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German Ethel Merman

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Joined
Jan 22, 2007
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The Boston Herald, a newspaper providing the best pro, collegiate and high school sports coverage to New England readers, is seeking a sports copy editor. Candidates will work editing a mix of staff-written and wire stories, writing headlines and also assisting on the compilation and editing of materials for our agate pages. Qualified candidates should have five-plus years of experience on a daily copy desk, including pagination, and should be proficient in Quark Express. Photoshop knowledge a plus. Please send resume and page design samples to Mark Murphy, Deputy Sports Editor, Boston Herald, 1 Herald Square, Boston, MA 02118 or email same to [email protected]
 
Pluses: You will work with a bevy of dedicated, talented, nice people.
Minus: Rent, not buy-up to and including underwear
 
One more thing. Like I said, a fine place to work with a questionable long-term future. Long or short term, it's the most expensive place to live in the country. Everything is more expensive here-housing leads the way, but even ice cream costs more.
 
Guild scale says 2006 reporter starting salaries was $887.59. Five-year minimum was $1,088.38. Don't know how that'd relate here.

Mr. Gee forgot one thing: If you're gonna work there, make sure your spouse has a nice health insurance plan. Herald employees pay up the wazoo for coverage (last time I checked, it was 75 percent of the costs), and the paper had cut back on traditionally generous (as far as this industry goes) OT shifts that were designed to offset the health insurance costs.

Mr. Gee, feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
 
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Weekly salary for a copy editor at the Herald is around $1,100. And the health insurance concerns are indeed valid, to the point at which one's wazoo would ache significantly.
 
Past union contracts only had covered 1 or 2 percent of health care. That standard dated back to when Rupert "saved" the old Herald-American in the early '80s. In the last one, signed a few years back when Pat Purcell still had some cash, they boosted the employer contribution.
 
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