Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Paper cries foul over city’s legal notices move

Officials had accused it of obstructin­g business

- By John Hanna

TOPEKA, Kan. — A growing community near Kansas City has decided to stop publishing its legal notices in its hometown newspaper, describing the move as cost-cutting but doing it after several officials criticized the coverage the city was receiving.

The City Council in Gardner, Kansas, changed its newspaper of record following a staff report that the city would likely lower its costs 75 percent by going with another weekly publicatio­n. The Gardner News, which was the paper of record for at least three decades, stands to lose thousands of dollars a year.

The dispute comes as local newspapers are facing financial pressure as they struggle to deal with the online shift of both readers and advertiser­s. The industry has largely held on to the business of printing legal notices, even though state lawmakers, including in Kansas, face proposals to allow local government­s to save money by publishing them only online.

Some see something more troubling in the Gardner City Council’s move, made just weeks after the mayor and a council member accused The Gardner News of publishing inaccurate material, tying up city’s staff to answer it and obstructin­g city business. They also note that the print circulatio­n for the new paper of record, The Legal News, is in nearby communitie­s, not Gardner, where it is circulated only online.

“They want to put me out of business,” longtime Gardner News Publisher Rhonda Humble said. “They want to shut me up.”

The mayor and council members who supported the change — the council split 3-2 on Monday over the decision — said they could not ignore the potential cost savings: at least $48,000 over the next five years.

“The decision was based on a cost differenti­al and nothing more,” Mayor Steve Shute said in an email, adding that it was trying to publish legal notices “in the most fiscally responsibl­e manner.”

The dispute might end up being settled in court; Humble said she’s “exploring litigation.”

Even The Legal News’ publisher, John Lewis, has misgivings about picking up Gardner’s business.

“We continue to believe that the city should publish in the in-town newspaper,” Lewis said in an email. “This is a dispute between the city of Gardner and The Gardner News. I do wish they would learn to get along.”

Richard Karpel, executive director of the Public Notice Resource Center, said he hears of a dispute over local public notices somewhere in the U.S. about once every six months. Karpel’s group, based in Carson City, advocates keeping public notices printed in newspapers.

“Usually, they get upset at the coverage, the newspaper coverage, and move it, or try to move it, to another paper,” he said. “In some cases, they’re challenged in court, and generally, you can’t make those kinds of decisions based on content.”

Gardner’s city attorney told council members that they had to base their decision on cost. Shute said in an email before the decision that “we value the role of the local paper” and encourage it to continue covering the community.

But the relationsh­ip has been contentiou­s for months. Last month, Humble filed a formal protest with the city over an annexation decision, arguing that the summary legal notice it filed was not the complete publicatio­n required by state law.

The paper followed up with a survey to council members, asking them how they would preserve transparen­cy.

City officials have said they complied with state law. Council Member Rich Melton, another supporter of the switch, said during a November meeting that criticism of the city’s staff was “below the belt.” Shute said that when a news organizati­on makes “false claims and allegation­s” that obstruct city business, “it needs to be addressed in some way.”

For some residents, such comments were an obvious red flag. One of them, Heath Freeman, called the move “vindictive.”

 ?? Charlie Riedel The Associated Press ?? The Gardner News in Gardner, Kan., published a front-page story on its loss of status as the paper of record. The City Council voted to move legal ads to another publicatio­n weeks after two officials said the paper published inaccurate material.
Charlie Riedel The Associated Press The Gardner News in Gardner, Kan., published a front-page story on its loss of status as the paper of record. The City Council voted to move legal ads to another publicatio­n weeks after two officials said the paper published inaccurate material.

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