In just a year, media has changed another word usage that has lasted for hundreds of years. Hardly a single local or national news, sports, weather, financial report, or what have you, can pass without some reporter saying the grammatically nonsensical “It is concerning.” Much of the time, they mean that something is disconcerting to them, but that might require a bit more education or a dictionary. “It is concerning” has become THE expression for announcers to express CONCERN or anxiousness over something–falling stock prices, lack of housing for the homeless, the possibility of slippery roads, listeria in our packaged salad mixes, and anything else that comes to mind.
Until recently, if someone said or wrote “It is concerning,” we would have to ask what is “it” and what is “it” concerned about?
For clarity and preciseness, the verb concern has always been a verb (what is called a transitive verb) followed by words that tell us who or what concerns us. Example: “I am concerned about losing my job” makes perfect sense. In that sentence, the “I” indicates that he or she is anxious about something. “Losing my job” answers the question about what causes the anxiety. Clear.
But to say, “I may lose my job. It is concerning,” makes no sense. If “it” refers to “losing my job,” then what “it is concerning” means is “Losing my job is concerning.” Concerning what? I didn’t know that “losing my job” could be concerned about anything. A person certainly could; however, that’s not what the sentence says.
Suddenly, everything is concerning. While we do live in a fearful, anxious world for many people, “It is concerning” has become a voguish tagline to either summarize an idea or to introduce one at the expense of language variety, power, and precision. This clichéd tag is said so often that it already has lost much of its force of language, if it ever had any.
Actually, “It is concerning” very much abstracts our language rather than giving it punch. In the end it abstracts us and our concerns or emotions. The phrase gives us a way to say that we are concerned or anxious about something while being ambivalent or removed from direct, living interaction with that concern.
The phrase becomes a tagline much as does “and stuff.” What did you do today? Oh, I went shopping and stuff.” The listener is supposed to either just pass off the “stuff” as irrelevant or intuit what the speaker means as “stuff.” Stuff could be anything from reading magazines to going to the doctor to robbing banks. The speaker is saying, “Well, you get what I mean. It’s no big deal.” The same could be said of “It is concerning.” But at a cost.
Consider the difference between “I may lose my job. It is concerning,” and these statements:
My greatest concern is that I lose my job. (one sentence, w/o the abstract “it”)
I’m terrified I might lose my job.
I might lose my job!
Or consider this weather forecast: “We have some weather issues to report with some winter storm warnings and advisories for some areas. The cold front is expected to bring rain first, followed by a few inches of snow. Since the ground is already frozen, the rain will freeze as soon as it hits the ground, making driving hazardous and very concerning.”
It sounds as if “driving” is not only hazardous but is concerned about something. “Drivers” could and should be concerned about this slippery mess, but not “driving.” The report was meant to warn drivers, so perhaps what should have been said more forcibly and clearly might be: “The Weather Service has issued winter storm warnings and advisories for freezing rain turning to snow, making driving hazardous. Drivers should stay off the road except in emergencies. (or) Drivers should proceed with extreme caution. (or) Travel is not advised.”
Forget concerning. We need to say what needs saying rather than bleeding words of their power and concreteness. We can be concerned, but we can’t be concerning. Saying that becomes very disconcerting.
When concerning is used as a preposition meaning “in reference to,” then it works fine, such as in “Concerning your report of 5 April, we want to congratulate you on a job well done.”
When concern is used as a noun meaning something that is important to us or something that we are anxious about, it works fine too, such as in “My main concern is to find the lost dog before the coyotes get her.”
In contrast, think of this funny screenplay interchange:
“You slept with Rhona, cleaned out our bank account, and sold my mother’s jewels. It is concerning.”
“Did Josephine tell you this? She has a big mouth. It is concerning.”
“I want a divorce.”
“That is concerning.”

