He Was Laid Off at The Washington Post After Working There 60 Years, witnessing the paper's rise and now retrenchment.
He Was Laid Off at The Washington Post After Working There 60 Years
Martin Weil, one of hundreds being let go at The Post, has worked on local news there since 1965, witnessing the papers rise and now retrenchment.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/02/05/business/media/washington-post-martin-weil-metro.html?unlocked_article_code=1.J1A.yDNb.DhVb7ICZSJt9&smid=url-share
Not long into his career at The Washington Post, Martin Weil learned to ignore most of the crackles on the police scanner. One night in June 1972, though, he paused upon hearing this: Doors open at the Watergate.
He decided against chasing down the meaning of those words that night. But the next day, he approached the city desk to ask if anything was afoot. The answer was yes the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee at the Watergate complex had been burglarized.
--------------
And The Post, of course, was pursuing that story and many, many others, until it attained what the newspapers publisher at the time, Katharine Graham, later termed a position of dominance in the Washington region.
On Wednesday, The Post announced plans to move on from that legacy as part of widespread cuts to the newsroom. The layoffs, affecting more than 300 of the roughly 800 journalists at the paper, are landing hard on the local news desk, where Mr. Weil has worked since 1965. He was among those laid off, one of the last ties to the papers Watergate era.
--------------
By the early 2000s, the papers metro department had around 200 journalists, said Jo-Ann Armao, a former top local editor at The Post. When calamity struck, the sections reporters served as the papers foot soldiers, fanning out across the region and often delivering prizewinning work. Examples include the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol, the Virginia Tech shootings, the Beltway sniper attacks and Sept. 11, when The Post published a special late edition that included an article by Mr. Weil on the Pentagon attack.
As of Wednesday, that number had shrunk below 20, according to people with knowledge of the cuts.