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Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Business
Alexa D'Angelo

HuffPost lays off 39 reporters and editors after Yahoo-Verizon deal closes

Thirty-nine journalists at HuffPost were laid off Wednesday as part of Verizon Communications Inc.'s acquisition of Yahoo Inc., according to the union representing the website's editorial staffers.

The cuts are part of what's expected to be a 15 percent staff reduction across Yahoo and the Verizon-owned AOL, which merged Tuesday upon the completion of the $4.48 billion sale. In total, about 2,000 Yahoo and AOL workers are expected to lose their jobs as Verizon trims expenses and eliminates overlapping positions.

Verizon is counting on the combination of Yahoo and AOL, operating as a single business unit called Oath, to build a strong third alternative in a rapidly growing digital advertising market that is currently dominated by Google and Facebook.

Oath properties include HuffPost, Yahoo Sports, AOL.com, Makers, Tumblr, Build Studios, Yahoo Finance and Yahoo Mail.

An Oath spokesman could not break down job cuts by unit.

Co-founded by Arianna Huffington in 2005 as the Huffington Post, the news site now called HuffPost rose to prominence with its mix of liberal politics, web-savvy journalism and blog posts from outside contributors. AOL purchased the site for $315 million in 2011; Verizon acquired AOL for $4.4 billion in 2015. Huffington herself left the company last year.

The union members who were laid off from HuffPost "will receive a collectively-bargained severance package that includes two months' salary plus a week of pay for each year of service and continued health benefits for that entire period," Writer's Guild of America East said in a statement.

Included in the layoffs was former senior military correspondent David Wood, who won HuffPost's only Pulitzer Prize, in 2012, for a multimedia series on military veterans.

HuffPost editorial staffers ratified their first union contract with the Writer's Guild of America East in January. The union said at the time that the collective bargaining agreement included gains in pay and protections of journalistic integrity.

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