Mary Cavallaro, Chief Broadcast Officer for SAG-AFTRA, joined the America's Work Force Union Podcast to deliver an unflinching assessment of what is happening to broadcast journalism, an industry reshaped by the Telecommunications Act of 1996, accelerated by decades of consolidation, and now, a new wave of disruption from artificial intelligence.
Cavallaro discussed the recent Nexstar layoffs in Los Angeles, Chicago and New York, the stunning closure of CBS News Radio and the union's intensifying focus on protecting severance packages, health benefits and just cause protections for members caught in the crossfire. She also delivered a message to non-union broadcast workers: SAG-AFTRA is ready to help, whether you have a union contract or not.
Mary Cavallaro has been working with broadcast journalists and disc jockeys since 1995. She came to SAG-AFTRA as a lawyer, starting as a business representative in Philadelphia. Her introduction to union bargaining arrived almost immediately in the form of the CBS takeover of Westinghouse stations — a transaction that reshuffled affiliates, blurred the lines between radio and television staffing and set in motion a consolidation wave that has never really stopped.
Nearly three decades later, she oversees SAG-AFTRA's national jurisdiction for news and broadcast as the union's chief broadcast officer, and the industry she has spent her career navigating is under more pressure than ever. Layoffs are accelerating. Legendary institutions are closing. Artificial intelligence has arrived. And the workers caught in the middle are looking to their union for protection, guidance and, when things go wrong, the best possible outcome from a bad situation.
To understand the current state of broadcast journalism, Cavallaro said, you have to go back to 1996. The Telecommunications Act of that year accelerated the consolidation of radio and television ownership in ways that fundamentally altered the economics of the industry and, by extension, the employment landscape for the journalists, disc jockeys and on-air talent SAG-AFTRA represents. Ownership caps were loosened, and large media companies absorbed smaller ones. Local stations became properties in national portfolios managed from corporate headquarters far removed from the communities they served.
Cavallaro was in the middle of it from the start. The CBS-Westinghouse transaction she witnessed in Philadelphia offered a preview of how consolidation would reshape work. The changes included radio talent being deployed across television platforms, staff being asked to do more across more formats with the same or less compensation and the union fighting at the bargaining table to protect jobs, define workloads and establish fair pay for expanded duties. That dynamic, labor trying to keep pace with management's drive to extract more from fewer people, has defined her career ever since.
The most recent flashpoint is Nexstar. The media company announced layoffs affecting well-known, longtime journalists in Los Angeles, Chicago and New York, ahead of pending FCC approval of a transaction. Cavallaro described the announcements as a gut punch for workers who had built careers in those markets, people whose names and faces were known to their communities, for whom walking out the door and finding a comparable position is far beyond updating a resume.
In moments like these, Cavallaro said, the union's focus shifts to the protections it has built into its contracts over decades. This includes severance packages, termination pay, notice requirements, payout of accrued time off and the continuation of health benefits. The gap between what a SAG-AFTRA contract provides and what a standard corporate severance policy offers can be substantial, she said.
Under the union's standard, the target is a minimum of two weeks of severance per year of service, uncapped. Corporate policies vary widely. Some offer one week per year, many impose caps on total severance weeks and some handle terminations on an ad hoc basis with no consistent policy. In an industry where workers build decades-long careers and then find themselves out of work in a single day, that difference can be between having time to land on your feet and being in an immediate financial crisis.
An often-overlooked dimension of the union benefit package, Cavallaro added, is health coverage continuation. Under SAG-AFTRA's benefit plans, members who are terminated or laid off can, in some cases, remain on the union's health plan for up to a year without entering COBRA, a protection that carries enormous practical value for workers and their families navigating an unexpected job loss.
The announcement that CBS News Radio would be shuttered stunned Cavallaro. CBS News Radio is more than a radio network, she said. It is a foundational institution in American broadcast journalism, with a history stretching back roughly a century, including a roster of journalists she described as among the best she has known in her career.
The closure came alongside significant layoffs of CBS television correspondents, all connected to the leadership changes accompanying the Skydance transaction at Paramount. Cavallaro said she is not inside the decision-making at CBS News, but the pattern is familiar. The new ownership arrives with its own vision for how journalism should be produced, makes sweeping changes and leaves the people who built the institution to absorb the consequences, she said. Some of those affected had recently been re-signed. Others had received positive performance feedback from their supervisors. The suddenness of it, she said, made it particularly hard.
One important nuance she raised was that not all SAG-AFTRA broadcast contracts include traditional just cause protections. Many members in this sector hold personal service contracts alongside their union agreements, meaning they can be let go or not renewed even when their performance is not the issue. In layoff situations, the union's work shifts to ensuring those members receive everything their contracts entitle them to and helping them navigate what comes next. It is, Cavallaro acknowledged, making the best of a bad situation — but that is a meaningful part of the job.
Beyond consolidation and layoffs, Cavallaro identified artificial intelligence as the accelerating threat that has her attention right now. AI's ability to clone voices, generate scripts and produce content that mimics the work of real journalists and on-air talent creates a category of risk that is unlike anything the industry has faced before. Whether it is a disc jockey's voice, a correspondent's delivery, or a reporter's on-camera presence, these are the identities that broadcast workers have built over the course of their careers. AI threatens to replicate them without permission, without compensation and without limits.
SAG-AFTRA is working to address those threats through contract negotiations, building language that governs how AI can and cannot be used in relation to member voice, likeness and work product. It is a fast-moving target that the union takes with the utmost seriousness, Cavallaro said.
Cavallaro closed with a message directed at broadcast workers who are not currently at union stations. If you are facing a layoff, trying to understand a personal service contract or simply worried about what is coming next in an industry that seems to deliver bad news every week, call SAG-AFTRA. The union's expertise in broadcast contracts, severance negotiations and member support does not stop at the boundary of a union shop. Rising tide lifts all boats, Cavallaro said. Reach out. They will talk to you.
More information is available at sagaftra.org.
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