Labor Board ‘Pierces Corporate Veil’ and Orders McCaw to Pay $3.6M

Nearly two decades after Santa Barbara's most infamous newsroom implosion, the legal reckoning for former Santa Barbara News-Press publisher Wendy McCaw has taken its most personal turn yet. On June 4, 2026, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) "pierced the corporate veil" shielding McCaw from personal liability and ordered her — along with three of her limited liability companies — to pay $3,602,579 to roughly 50 former employees and their union, the Santa Barbara Independent reported. Interest continues to compound daily until the judgment is paid.
For the former reporters, editors, and newsroom staff who have waited nearly 20 years for justice, the ruling is both a milestone and a bitter reminder of time lost.
A Judgment Two Decades in the Making
The roots of this ruling stretch back to the summer of 2006, when the News-Press became ground zero for one of the most explosive journalism ethics fights in California history. On July 6, 2006, five editors resigned, citing McCaw's interference with editorial news judgment. Editor Jerry Roberts, columnist Barney Brantingham, managing editor George Foulsham, deputy managing editor Don Murphy, business editor Michael Todd, and metro editor Jane Hulse walked out of the historic De la Guerra Plaza building. What followed became known locally as the "News-Press Mess." Between July 2006 and February 2007, 60 staff members — out of 200 total employees, including all but two news reporters — resigned or were fired. Readers canceled subscriptions. Advertisers withdrew. Community rallies filled De la Guerra Plaza.
The remaining newsroom employees voted to unionize with the Teamsters, and the resulting labor battle was extraordinary in its hostility. The NLRB panel ultimately wrote 17 separate paragraphs to describe the breadth of management's unlawful conduct, spanning 27 days of violations from 2007 to 2009. Decisions against McCaw for what the board called "flagrant unfair labor practices including bad-faith bargaining" followed in 2012 and 2019.
The original judgment against McCaw's publishing company, Ampersand Publishing, stood at $2.2 million. But McCaw never paid, and interest alone has since grown to $1.4 million, bringing the total now owed to $3.6 million.
'Piercing the Corporate Veil' — What It Means
For years, McCaw insulated herself behind a web of limited liability companies. The NLRB's June 4 ruling dismantled that shield. As the Santa Barbara Independent reported, McCaw was the sole owner of seven LLCs spanning aviation, property, publishing, farming, and a holding company, and she had mixed their funds and transferred money among them. The NLRB concluded that the use of $1.4 million in corporate assets for non-corporate purposes led directly to the insolvency of Ampersand Publishing — the entity that technically owned the News-Press on paper.
Three LLCs are now implicated in the order: Ampersand Publishing, 715 Anacapa LLC, and 725 Kellogg LLC. The last two hold the defunct newspaper's building on De la Guerra Plaza and the printing plant in Goleta. The De la Guerra property alone was assessed at approximately $15.2 million in 2023, according to the Santa Barbara County Assessor's figures reported by the Pacific Coast Business Times.
Perhaps most striking: once notified of the pending default judgment in March 2025, McCaw never answered or appeared before the board. As a result, the board entered a default judgment and deemed all allegations admitted, finding McCaw personally liable and the three LLCs jointly and severally liable as a single employer.
The Human Cost: Lives on Hold
The dollar figures are staggering, but behind them are real people whose financial lives were derailed.
The breakdown of the $3.6 million judgment tells that story plainly. Two employees who were illegally fired are owed $1.2 million in backpay, expenses, interest, and excess tax on a lump-sum payment. About 48 former employees share more than $2 million in merit pay losses or losses from the illegal employment of nonunion workers. The union itself is owed $200,000 in unpaid bills.
Nora Wallace, who edited the News-Press's Valley Living section, put it in the starkest human terms. "I cannot believe it will be the 20th anniversary of the meltdown next month," she told the Independent. When the crisis began, her son couldn't walk or talk yet. She had hoped to use the $64,000 she was originally owed to pay his college tuition. "Now he's in his final year of college, so I guess not."
Wallace's story is hardly unique. The number of full-time news reporters working on the South Coast has dropped by about two-thirds since the mass exodus of 2006, a generational wound to local journalism that the News-Press Mess helped inflict.
From Bankruptcy to This Moment
McCaw's strategy over two decades has followed a consistent pattern: delay, litigate, and evade. In July 2023, having exhausted her appeals of the NLRB order, McCaw declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy and shuttered the paper, ending more than 150 years of continuous publishing history — a lineage that stretched back to the paper's founding as the Santa Barbara Post in 1868, and included a Pulitzer Prize in 1962.
The bankruptcy filing listed assets of less than $50,000 against liabilities of between $1 million and $10 million — a stark contrast to the multi-million-dollar property holdings that McCaw's LLCs controlled. In 2024, a special master of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., recommended that McCaw be found in contempt of court, and questions about whether the De la Guerra Plaza building and the Goleta printing plant could be sold to satisfy creditors have been working through the bankruptcy courts.
With the default judgment now in place, what comes next has a clear legal roadmap. The majority of NLRB cases are settled or paid voluntarily. This one is a rare exception. Following default, the NLRB's litigation branch would next seek enforcement through the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals — and because McCaw never argued the judgment, the order is expected to be summarily enforced. If compliance still does not occur, a contempt petition would follow, according to the NLRB process described by the Independent.
What It Means for Santa Barbara
For a city that watched this saga unfold in real time — from the duct-tape protests in De la Guerra Plaza to the paper's silent final website page in July 2023 — the June 4 ruling carries weight beyond the dollar signs. It is a statement that corporate structures cannot be used indefinitely to dodge accountability to workers, even when litigation stretches across two decades.
The News-Press building still stands at 715 Anacapa Street, a few steps from City Hall, now empty and entangled in legal proceedings. The Goleta printing plant sits dormant. Two properties that once anchored Santa Barbara's civic and information life are frozen in limbo as courts continue to sort out who owns what.
For Nora Wallace and roughly 48 other former employees, the June 4 ruling is likely the closest thing to a finish line they've seen — though it remains to be seen whether McCaw will comply or whether years more of litigation await. After nearly 20 years, the meter is still running.
Reported by 805.life
Researched and written drawing on primary sources. Additional reporting: Santa Barbara Independent.
City
Santa BarbaraAdditional Reporting
Santa Barbara IndependentPublished
June 12, 2026
Reported and written by 805.life
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