They are already here and coming through in droves, armed with an iPhone they meet the needs of the next generation photos requirements through blogs, news and social media. Everyone has a phone, everyone is everywhere and can capture the news as it happens. The world is changing and so is photojournalism.
...and there in lies the problem, Everyone thinks that press work is easy.
Except that it isn't.
About 5% of news is live action and incident, and for those shots nothing will ever beat being in the right place at the right time. Up until the near recent past on the spot photographs by passers by were hoovered up as
'collects' by staff and agency photographers. In the days of Instagram, FB and Twitter that side of the business is largely dead.
However 95% of a staff photographers work is far less to do with photography but far more about in depth legal knowledge and access.
The average bloke on the street will never understand the legal implications of a whole raft of situations that are shot, far less those that fall under the restrictions of the editors code.
It's not the fault of those giving their images away that news photography is collapsing, it's the short sightedness of the management teams who are trying to save money.
Without proper journalism and decent images, local newspapers are dead in the water. National press will follow to some extent in that they will be restricted to purely national/political news
and celeb mush. There won't be any local reporters left to dig out the really interesting stuff any more. Papers will be filled with reader generated images that are largely well below standard
and that very readership will disappear.
Btw Lindsay is spot on. There's no merit with getting a photograph published in a newspaper when it's given away for gratis. Most editors will publish any old snapshot now that the picture desks have gone.