UPDATED 4PM: Newhouse Newspapers, which earlier this spring announced
that it would stop printing a daily paper at The New Orleans Times-Picayune and
its Alabama newspapers, said it would end the daily distribution of two more of
its newspapers, The Post-Standard in Syracuse, and The Patriot-News in
Harrisburg, Pa.
The papers will merge their content with local news Web
sites and deliver the printed newspaper only three days a week.
The Syracuse region’s leading website - syracuse.com - and
the largest newspaper brand - The Post-Standard - will be part of a new digital
news and information company, Syracuse Media Group. Stephen A. Rogers, Editor
and Publisher of The Post-Standard, announced today that the planning for the
new company is underway and its debut is scheduled for Jan. 1, 2013. The new
model seeks to adapt the journalistic excellence of The Post-Standard and
syracuse.com to the demands of today’s 24-hour digitally-focused audience.
The new strategy also includes changes to The
Post-Standard’s print schedule. Beginning in January, The Post-Standard will
publish on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays for delivery to homes and
newsstands. A smaller version will be available for single copy sales the other
four days in Onondaga County. The Syracuse Media Group will review the single
copy program carefully and may decide to eliminate it before or by the end of
next year.
Emphasizing that this is an innovative step forward, not a
cost-cutting measure, Harrisburg’s Patriot-News Publisher John Kirkpatrick
spent about 45 minutes with his staff, answering pointed questions about the
future of the news organization as it moves toward changing its model to a
heavy focus online and a print product only three days a week.
The Patriot-News and its website, PennLive.com, will no
longer be two companies. They will merge into PA Media Group, which will also
include the advertising staff.
Inevitably, there will be cuts in staff. But new positions will also open.
Almost as many pages of print — to include comics, the
weekly local, sports and entertainment sections — will still go through the
presses each week and be delivered on newsstands and front porches.
Other than Sunday, the days that the presses will run are
not yet determined.
But the online operation will move to a 24-7 model.
There are still unknowns. The price of the paper is one of
them.
But no paywall at PennLive.com is in the immediate future,
he said.
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