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Thursday, December 29, 2022

'22 Ending With News Desert Expanding


The year 2022 is ending on a depressing note for numerous people in the publishing business, reports Mediapost.

Case in point: the Barberton Herald, a weekly publication that has been serving the Akron, Ohio area for 100 years, is closing this month. 

A front-page editorial explains that local businesses were “hit hard by the pandemic, forcing them to close or cut back on employees and expenses. The Herald lost many advertisers during that period. As revenues went down, costs soared. The rising cost of postage and printing are far too great to overcome. The Herald would have to double the subscription rates and advertising prices to make ends meet.”

Then there is the Commercial-News, a newspaper that has served the Three Rivers area in Michigan for 127 years: It announced earlier this month that it is ceasing publication.



Like the Bremerton Herald, the Commercial News faced decreased revenues and lack of support. 

“The reality became that we could not generate enough revenue to remain viable,” said Dirk Milliman, editor and publisher. “We do not have enough regular advertisers who use our products to promote their businesses,” according to the Commercial News. 

Milliman added, “The prominence of social media has changed the whole dynamic of information sharing, of news and news reporting. And like many small businesses, we never really recovered from the pandemic. Unfortunately, it is just our time.”

Happily, the paper has been acquired by Mike Wilcox, owner of a Southwest Michigan group, and it is publishing news online. But, in general, the climate for local newspapers is “shifting from print to online and print subscriptions and readership dwindling, Clark Burns, publisher of the West Side Leader and South Side Leader, told the Akron Beacon Journal. Those papers plan to increase their coverage of the Bremerton area to fill in for the loss of the Herald. 

Meanwhile, in New Hampshire, Debra and Chris Paul are closing two weekly newspapers: The Nutfield News and the Tri-Town Times. But they will still publish the Londonderry Times. 

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