National Post

La Presse to become non-profit

- Jacob Serebrin

MONTREAL • One of Canada’s largest newspapers will become a non-profit, allowing it to receive donations and, it hopes, support from the federal government.

Under the plan announced Tuesday, La Presse will become a not-for-profit trust. The paper’s current owners, Power Corp., will give it $50 million to help ease the transition and then back away.

“It opens the door to different forms of revenue that we didn’t have before,” said Pierre-Elliott Levasseur, the president of La Presse. “The federal government was very clear with the industry that they understand the problems that written media today faces, the complexity of competing with Google and Facebook.

They understand the important contributi­on that written media plays in a healthy democracy but they’re not willing to help newspapers that are held by rich families or rich companies.”

In February’s budget, Ottawa said it will be looking at new models to enable private giving and philanthro­pic support for non-profit news organizati­ons.

But Levasseur said he hopes it will go further than that.

“If we’re unable to get support from the federal government it’s going to be difficult to maintain and continue to play the role that we’ve historical­ly played in this province,” he said.

Being an independen­t non-profit will also allow the 130-year-old paper to raise money through donations, something that Levasseur said wasn’t really possible when it was owned by

Power Corp., a company controlled by the wealthy Desmarais family.

“We’re opening the door to donations from large companies, from large donors as well as average citizens that understand the role La Press plays in society,” he said.

The paper will also benefit from a Quebec tax credit for news organizati­ons and it will continue to sell advertisin­g, he said.

Edward Greenspon, the president and CEO of the Public Policy Forum, an Ottawa-based think tank said he expects to see more news organizati­ons experiment with non-profit business models and other models that include non-profit elements.

“I think we’re in a period where even exceptiona­lly smart business people, like the Desmarais family, are finding that they can’t figure their way around the obstacles in the face of the industry, at least on a shortterm basis,” he said.

But Greenspon, the former editor-in-chief of The Globe and Mail — which recently launched a foundation to support some aspects of its journalism — said that while non-profit status may buy papers some time, it’s not a solution on it’s own.

“Is it a viable plan for newspapers to become sustainabl­e? Not in and of itself, even a non-profit can’t be a perennial loser,” he said.

There is, however, more interest in supporting journalism from the federal government.

“I think the federal government is willing to go further, but I don’t think they know what further looks like,” Greenspon said, adding that he doesn’t think the federal government will give money to companies that don’t have a plan to move forward into the future.

La Presse, the most-read French-language daily newspaper in Canada, stopped publishing a weekday print edition in 2016, it stopped printing a Saturday print edition at the end of 2017. It has focused on a free tablet applicatio­n, La Presse+, as well as its free-to-read website.

As of the first quarter of 2017, it had the fourthlarg­est digital reach of any newspaper in Canada in either language, according to Vividata.

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