Vancouver Sun

Ex-employees aim to breathe new life into local papers as publishers

- JULIEN ARSENAULT

As Transconti­nental sells off its weekly newspaper portfolio, many of its former employees are jumping at the chance to get into the publishing business by snapping up the publicatio­ns.

And they are hoping to succeed where the media and publishing firm had encountere­d difficulti­es in recent years: by re-establishi­ng its place within local communitie­s.

“The decline (of income) we experience­d was because we forgot that the news had to be local,” said Dave Beaunoyer, a former regional executive with Transconti­nental who heads a group that took over French newsmagazi­ne L’Express in August.

Transconti­nental put its 93 newspapers in Quebec and Ontario up for sale in April.

Of the eight transactio­ns the company has concluded since then, three were with former employees who’ve decided to give the newspaper business a shot.

Transconti­nental had centralize­d many aspects of the operation related to production, sales, marketing and editorial — a move that eroded the flexibilit­y of the weekly newspapers, say the former employees-turned publishers.

“Transconti­nental was filled with good intentions,” Beaunoyer said. “But, for example, spring doesn’t arrive everywhere in Quebec at the same time so when we produced a section on gardening for the entire chain, the results weren’t always successful.”

It’s a similar refrain from the president of Gravite Media, Julie Voyer, who spent 11 years with the company, most notably as general manager for the region south of Montreal. Voyer got a hold of six newspapers serving those suburbs last month and took it as an opportunit­y to re-establish links with local advertiser­s who’d drifted away and opted for online advertisin­g.

“If I am an advertiser and I am called by an office in Montreal telling me my payment is late, even if I almost always respect the deadlines, it is not pleasant feeling,” Voyer said. “The customer wasn’t treated as well as before.”

Transconti­nental spokeswoma­n Katherine Chartrand says the company was pleased to see employees take an interest in the publicatio­ns for sale. Twenty have been sold already, but she wouldn’t say whether other sales were in the work.

She noted that the company’s decision to consolidat­e activities stemmed from a time when it operated newspapers in Saskatchew­an, Ontario and the Maritimes.

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