Saltwire sale: Newfoundland residents worry for culture loss as newspaper scales back


The ultimate version of The Telegram newspaper’s each day print hit the stands in St. John’s, N.L., on Saturday, marking the tip of a 145-year run and a transfer to weekly print model with each day tales on-line.


The Individuals’s Paper, as it’s also recognized, was a part of SaltWire Community, which was bought to Postmedia for $1-million in an settlement authorised earlier this month. The sale didn’t embrace The Telegram’s printing press — the final of its sort within the province — which has left a number of different papers scrambling to discover a new plan.


On Friday evening, the plant fired up for what might be the final time to print the final each day Telegram. The constructing is in the marketplace for $5.9 million, and if no person comes ahead to purchase it, it will likely be misplaced for good.


Nicole Penney, with Memorial College’s Folklore and Language Archive, mentioned individuals have lengthy turned to print newspapers to assist them catalogue native life and household tales. The rigorously curated folders of paperwork individuals deliver to the archive are all the time filled with Telegram clippings.


These folders, and people tales inside, assist map out the province’s social historical past, she mentioned.


“When somebody will get a newspaper, they discover a cool story, they clip it out, it has one thing to do with household, pals, no matter, and so they deliver it into us. And if it has to do with Newfoundland and Labrador tradition, we take it, that is our mandate,” Penney mentioned in an interview.


“The choice now can be to print the story from on-line and convey it in. And, like, how many individuals have a printer at dwelling lately?”


As in the remainder of the nation, many native and regional newspapers folded throughout Newfoundland and Labrador previously decade. When SaltWire bought The Telegram in 2017 from Transcontinental Inc., it acquired a couple of dozen different papers working in communities from Glad Valley-Goose Bay, in Labrador, to Port-aux-Basques, a small former fishing city on Newfoundland’s southwest tip.


Solely The Telegram and two free weekly papers — the Newfoundland Wire and the Central Wire — have been nonetheless publishing as of earlier this week, in accordance with SaltWire’s web site, although the latest version on the location was from December 2023.


With The Telegram transferring to a weekly print version, St. John’s joins Fredericton as the one provincial capitals with out an English-language newspaper publishing in print at the very least 5 days per week.


In the meantime, Postmedia’s takeover of SaltWire Community has rocked a number of unbiased publications in Newfoundland and Labrador, together with The Shoreline newspaper. The paper serves a lot of southeastern Newfoundland, together with many rural communities alongside the island’s jap coasts, and it used The Telegram’s printing plant in St. John’s, which Toronto-based Postmedia did not purchase.


The Shoreline will now should be printed elsewhere in Atlantic Canada, in accordance with a be aware on the paper’s entrance web page Friday from writer Craig Westcott.


“We hope the change is short-term,” Westcott wrote. “We’re working onerous to re-establish newspaper printing operations on this province, each to print our personal newspapers and to serve different small publishers all through Newfoundland and Labrador.”


Joan Sullivan can also be racing to discover a new printer for the Newfoundland Quarterly, a 123-year-old arts and tradition journal which she edits and runs. She mentioned she worries concerning the appreciable freight prices any writer should bear to have their papers flown or shipped in by sea.


“These papers began for a motive … individuals need these newspapers,” Sullivan mentioned in an interview. “Print stays put. Individuals reserve it, individuals cherish it, and other people re-read it.”


Sullivan, too, is worried concerning the cultural influence of dropping a significant each day newspaper in print, but in addition of all of the ephemera produced by the plant in St. John’s, she mentioned. These fliers, booklets, signal boards and ads all develop into historic markers and reflections of the values and types of time they have been printed, she added.


On Friday evening, some Telegram reporters shared pictures on social media of the press in motion for what was doubtless a ultimate run. Some pictures confirmed the pages of the ultimate each day Telegram print version rolling by way of the machines. Others confirmed plant staff rigorously inspecting the print.


The subsequent morning, a number of individuals at a St. John’s Sobeys grocery retailer had the paper of their cart. Copies have been promoting shortly, a cashier confirmed.


The daring headline above the fold was readable from throughout the shop: “This is not the tip for us.”


The Telegram’s first weekly print version is anticipated Friday. Each day information continues on-line.


This report by The Canadian Press was first printed Aug. 24, 2024.

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