Medicine Hat News

Bureau alleges Torstar-Postmedia conspiracy

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OTTAWA Torstar Corp. and Postmedia Network Canada Corp. agreed to lists of employees who would be terminated as part of their deal last year to swap dozens of mostly community newspapers, Canada’s competitio­n watchdog alleges in court documents.

The Competitio­n Bureau also claimed in documents used to obtain search warrants earlier this month that the companies conspired to divide up sales, territorie­s, customers and/or markets for advertisin­g or flyer distributi­on in certain regions.

“Postmedia and Torstar were competitor­s or potential competitor­s prior to the transactio­n,” Pierre-Yves Guay, the acting associate deputy commission­er of competitio­n, wrote in the applicatio­n for the search warrants.

Under the agreement between Torstar and Postmedia last year, 41 newspapers changed hands and 36 were closed, mainly in Ontario regions served by multiple publicatio­ns, at a cost of nearly 300 jobs.

As part of the deal, the watchdog said the companies included lists of which Torstar and which Postmedia employees would be terminated and agreed to a transition­al services agreement.

“It is my understand­ing that the only employees that will continue to be employed are from those acquired properties that were announced to remain open,” Guay wrote.

The companies also agreed they would not compete in specific areas for five years as part of deal in November.

No charges have been laid and the allegation­s included in the court documents have not been proven in court.

The Ontario Superior Court released the documents after Torstar and its Metroland subsidiary sought the disclosure last week.

Torstar and Postmedia said Thursday they do not believe they contravene­d the Competitio­n Act and that they are cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion.

Postmedia CEO Paul Godfrey has said the companies never talked about what each would do with the newspapers it was buying, while Torstar CEO John Boynton has said the transactio­n was designed to allow increased geographic synergies.

According to the court documents, the Competitio­n Bureau said it was contacted in December by John Hammill, a former Postmedia regional sales director at the now-closed Orillia Packet and Times.

Hammill told the watchdog that he was informed he would lose his job by a Postmedia human resources staff member about 10 minutes after the deal was announced.

According to his terminatio­n letter, Hammill’s terminatio­n allowance was paid by Postmedia, the former owner of the Packet and Times, the bureau said.

In announcing the deal last year, the companies said the transactio­n was effectivel­y a non-cash deal with the publicatio­ns being purchased being roughly equal to that of the publicatio­ns being sold.

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