Chicago Sun-Times

Unrest at Tribune after Michael Ferro’s exit

- BY DAVID ROEDER, BUSINESS & LABOR REPORTER droeder@suntimes.com | @RoederDavi­d

The company that owns the Chicago Tribune said Tuesday that former chairman Michael Ferro Jr. has sold his shares to Alden Global Capital, known for slashing payrolls at other newspapers it controls.

Tribune Publishing Co. said Alden purchased 9.07 million shares from Ferro and his company, Merrick Ventures, for $13 per share. The nearly $118 million purchase represents a 25.2% stake in the company and will make Alden the largest shareholde­r of Tribune Publishing.

Alden will name two members of the Tribune Publishing board, which will expand from six to eight people, the company said.

Alden is a New York-based hedge fund that owns a large chain of print publicatio­ns — including the Denver Post, The Mercury News of San Jose and the St. Paul Pioneer Press — called Media News Group. It is known for its steep cost cutting that has reduced local news coverage. Media News owns about 100 publicatio­ns in all, including dailies and weeklies.

Ferro stepped down from his chairmansh­ip of Tribune Publishing, which was then called Tronc, in 2018 just as Fortune magazine was publishing a story quoting two women accusing him of sexual harassment. However, Ferro remained Tribune Publishing’s largest shareholde­r.

He formerly led the Sun-Times as chairman of Wrapports. In 2017, Wrapports sold the Sun-Times and other assets to a group of unions assembled by the Chicago Federation of Labor, as well as private investors.

Ferro’s sale appears to mark a quiet exit from the media business for a man who once aspired to dominate it, especially in Chicago. Ferro, who took over the Sun-Times in 2011, handed his stake in the paper to a charitable trust in 2016 and, with funds from a cohort of business titans, took the reins of the Tribune’s corporate parent.

The next year, when his former allies at Wrapports put the Sun-Times up for sale, Ferro tried to buy it. Concerns from federal anti-trust lawyers raised a roadblock that helped the unionbacke­d partnershi­p acquire the Sun-Times.

Alden, meanwhile, has come under criticism from journalist­s’ groups, the NewsGuild labor union and even Congress for the cuts it has enforced at its publicatio­ns. At the Denver Post, for example, journalist­s have said Alden slashed the newsroom headcount from 180 to 60 over six years.

The hedge fund also came under federal investigat­ion for transferri­ng $250 million in employee pension savings to company accounts, although it later moved the money back, according to the Washington Post.

“Alden could be a problem for Tribune. They will hold the company’s feet to the fire on profits,” said Bernie Lunzer, president of the NewsGuild. He said Alden’s typical tactic is to strip media companies of any assets it can sell, such as real estate, and use the proceeds on other ventures while starving news budgets.

Newsroom employees at the Chicago Tribune, now unionized under the NewsGuild’s

Chicago local, took to Twitter and other social media outlets to express outrage at the sale to Alden. Tribune writer Steve Johnson called it “a final bird flip to Chicago journalism from Michael Ferro, citizen of self interest.”

Alden, controlled by Heath Freeman, could not be reached Tuesday night.

The stock sale was reported on the same day that two other newspaper chains joined forces, promising cost cuts. GateHouse completed its $1.1 billion takeover of Gannett, with the surviving company taking the Gannett name. The newly formed company now owns 260 daily newspapers and hundreds of weeklies.

 ?? COLIN BOYLE/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Michael Ferro Jr. arrives Sept. 22 at Theater on the Lake for the wedding of Patrick Daley, son of former Mayor Richard M. Daley.
COLIN BOYLE/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Michael Ferro Jr. arrives Sept. 22 at Theater on the Lake for the wedding of Patrick Daley, son of former Mayor Richard M. Daley.

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