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Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Philly's Last Newstand Sells No Newspapers

30th Street Newstand Back 'In The Day'

The handwritten sign hung on the door of the newsstand at 30th Street Station. It offered one final headline from a shop that will carry no more, according to The Philly Inquirer.

“No newspapers,” it read, underlined four times for emphasis.

That’s because earlier this month Faber, the New Jersey-based newsstand and bookseller, stopped selling newspapers at its 30th Street location. The store’s shelves remain stocked with magazines, periodicals, books, snacks, greeting cards, and travel trinkets. But the iconic station’s sole newsagent is now a newsstand without newspapers.

The explanation, sadly, is old news. Nearly no one was buying them.

“We weren’t making any money off newspapers,” said Claudia Carr, the store manager. Corporate made the call a couple of weeks ago, she said. But she was relieved to be rid of them. “We were making like pennies off newspapers.”

Slumping sales would hardly come as a surprise. Not in the Age of Smartphones. Not when the pandemic only worsened the newspaper industry’s existential struggle to survive its digital transformation. And not as newsstands themselves, like coin-operated news boxes before them, slowly disappear.


But newspaper sales had grown beyond bleak at 30th Street Station, Carr said. Each year an estimated four million passengers pass through the station’s soaring concourse, making it Amtrak’s third busiest hub. Meanwhile, in recent times, the stand rarely sold more than a dozen daily papers each day, Carr said. Then there’s rising prices, delivery costs, and time and energy spent bundling up returns.

“It just wasn’t profitable for the company,” Carr said.

Back in the day, the shop was owned by Stanley Schiffman, who worked with a dog named Amtrak, a stray he had found in the station. The stacks of newspapers were enough to keep the lights on and a roof over the Schiffman children’s head, his daughter Jill recalled.

But no matter how inevitable, the decision to ditch newspapers at the historic station, which opened in 1933, evokes a certain sense of loss. At Faber, the staff have been griping about customer complaints over the lack of newspapers. Where were these people a month ago?, they wonder.

“Even if you rarely bought a newspaper that way, it was part of the old way of life in the city,” said Rick Edmonds, a media business analyst for the Poynter Institute. “There’s a degree of nostalgia for how it was.”

“It’s an anachronism, I guess,” he said. “But what good is a newsstand without a newspaper?”

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