Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tariffs on Canadian newsprint hasten local newspapers’ demise

- CATIE EDMONDSON AND JACLYN PEISER NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

The Trump administra­tion’s decision to impose tariffs on Canadian newsprint is hastening the demise of local newspapers across the country, forcing already struggling publicatio­ns to cut staff, reduce the number of days they print and, in at least one case, shutter entirely.

Surging newsprint costs are beginning to hurt publicatio­ns such as The Gazette in Janesville, Wisconsin, the hometown paper of the House speaker, Paul Ryan, which has long felt a mandate to punch above its weight. The paper, with a newsroom staff of 22, was the first to publish the news in 2016 that Ryan would support the presidenti­al candidacy of Donald Trump. And while its editorial board has endorsed Ryan countless times, the paper made national news when it chided him for refusing to hold town halls with his constituen­ts.

Now, with newsprint tariffs increasing annual printing costs by $740,000, The Gazette has made several cuts to its staff and is using narrower paper, reducing the number of stories published every day.

“We’re all paying a huge price,” Skip Bliss, publisher of The Gazette, said of the tariffs’ effect on the industry. “I fear it’s going to be a very difficult time. I think there’s probably going to be some casualties.”

The newsprint tariffs are just one of several trade measures Trump has rolled out as part of his administra­tion’s effort to protect U.S. manufactur­ers by stopping what he calls unfair trade practices. Tariffs were implemente­d in January, after the Commerce Department sided with North Pacific Paper Co., a paper mill based in Washington state, in a complaint alleging Canadian manufactur­ers were selling newsprint at artificial­ly low prices. Last week, publishers won a small reprieve when the agency said it would cap the anti-dumping tariffs at 16.88 percent, down from 22 percent and apply them to a single manufactur­er, Catalyst Paper Co. But Commerce said it would also impose tariffs of up to 9.81 percent on several Canadian paper companies, including Catalyst, to counter subsidies that those manufactur­ers receive from the government.

Catalyst, which had been exporting more than 425,000 metric tons of newsprint into the United States before the levies went into effect, will face total tariffs of more than 20 percent.

Even if the tariffs seem to align with Trump’s wellknown disdain for the news media, the administra­tion’s ruling in favor of the company that filed the complaint was not unusual as the president carries out his trade fight.

The administra­tion has encouraged companies to bring cases when they have complaints against foreign parties, and the “countervai­ling duty” process under which North Pacific Paper’s case was initiated is set up to defend U.S. companies against foreign competitor­s. As of mid-July, companies had brought 120 new anti-dumping and countervai­ling duty investigat­ions under the Trump administra­tion — about a third more than in a similar time frame at the end of the Obama administra­tion, according to Commerce Department statistics.

As with Trump’s other tariffs on steel, aluminum, solar panels and washing machines, the newsprint duties will help some U.S. manufactur­ers but hurt many other domestic companies.

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