Thanks so much for all your great answers.
I took the plunge, and submitted my piece to the managing editor. I dressed it up as nice as I would any other submission--short cover with a nice hook sentence (I do write the shortest covers on earth), double-spaced mss, word count, and an SASE, even though I live about ten blocks from the paper. My thinking on it was that when he had time, he'd read it, and since it makes a point, I thought I had a chance.
Now, I guess I sit back and wait to see. They've published my letters to the editor, even called me on the phone before, so I'm thinking I might have a little name recognition going, or maybe not. But, the piece is funny, based on a true story, and that's what I think will sell it.
The market isn't too big, but it's ten times the size of the last paper that ran an article of mine.
All he can say is no, right? I just hope he gets a good laugh out of my piece before he does so. I have another idea--this one a column--but I'm going to approach the editor of the little weekly newspaper, three blocks away, on that one first--they're affiliated with the daily newspaper in town so one thing may lead to another. Baby steps they are, but heck, I don't want to work my day job forever. I'm a novelist, first and foremost, but my kid needs that roof over her head. Might as well write for a living until I've got my niche carved.
Again, thanks so much,
Mari