Journalists at the Newsquest-owned Bolton News voted yesterday to strike in protest against an ongoing pay freeze.
Twenty-one NUJ members took part in the ballot, with 16 voting in favour of strike action, the union said in a release.
NUJ deputy general secretary Michelle Stanistreet said: “Newsquest and its American owners have been relentless in their pursuit of higher profits at the expense of journalists.
“The growing anger amongst journalists throughout the group and their determination to bring the company to the negotiating table is clear.”
Newsquest has suffered a series of strikes in recent months as a result of its ongoing pay freeze and relocation of production staff.
The company brought the pay freeze to an end at the end of last year with a 2 per cent pay offer, but only for certain titles. In contrast, staff across titles in Wales, Gloucestershire, and the South Midlands were recently asked to take a week’s unpaid leave in order to help control costs.
Meanwhile, NUJ members working for Johnston Press in Sheffield have called off planned strikes after reaching a deal with management over plans to cut production jobs at a centralised “editorial hub” in the city.
The Sheffield hub produces pages for a range of Johnston Press titles in Sheffield, Doncaster, Chesterfield and North and Mid Derbyshire and South, West and North Yorkshire.