Orlando Sentinel

Newspapers dying? Not here

Activist and ex-presidenti­al hopeful Nader invests in new Conn. hometown publicatio­n

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK — At age 88, Ralph Nader believes his neighbors in northwest Connecticu­t are tired of electronic­s and miss the feel of holding a newspaper to read about their town.

So at a time that local newspapers are dying at an alarming rate, the longtime activist is helping give birth to one.

Copies of the first edition of the Winsted Citizen are circulatin­g around this old mill town, with stories about a newly-opened food co-op, a Methodist church closing after attendance lagged at services and the repair of a century-old bridge.

“If it works, it will be a good model for the rest of the country,” said Nader, who as a youngster delivered a long-gone Winsted daily paper in his hometown. He splits time now between Winsted and Washington, D.C.

The last locally-based weekly paper, the Winsted Journal, began in 1996 before being shut down in 2017, unable to make enough money to support itself.

A town of about 8,000, Winsted has seen better days. Locals still talk about the 1955 hurricane that wiped out much of Main Street and killed a big employer, the Gilbert Clock Co. Winsted is surrounded by several better-off smaller communitie­s, with Litchfield County a popular second-home destinatio­n for city dwellers, and the Winsted Citizen will cover those, too.

Since the Journal shut down, people are losing touch with what’s going on in local government and the news that knits a community — who’s getting engaged, who’s given birth — Nader said.

“After awhile it all congeals and you start losing history,” he said. “Every year you don’t have a newspaper, you lose that connection.”

Nader invested $15,000 and hired a veteran Connecticu­t journalist, Andy Thibault, to get the Citizen started. The masthead lists 17 reporters. They get paid, Thibault said, “when they write a story.”

The motto: “It’s your paper. We work for you.”

The Citizen plans to publish monthly until next January, when it will become a weekly, Thibault said. He plans to sustain the newspaper through advertisin­g, donations and subscripti­ons — $25 for the rest of 2023, and $95 a year after that.

Nader is full of suggestion­s but not intrusive, Thibault said. The consumer activist and four-time presidenti­al candidate doesn’t dictate a political stance, he said.

Thibault has used his connection­s to build a solid bench of contributo­rs, including longtime Hartford Courant editorial cartoonist Bob Englehart. The first issue includes a lengthy profile of a successful local basketball coach and a story about a project to paint a five-story mural in two abandoned mill buildings.

An estimated 2,500 newspapers have closed in the United States since 2005, with all but about 100 non-dailies, according to a report issued last year by the Northweste­rn/Medill Local News Initiative.

So Nader is clearly bucking a trend and is to be commended, said Penelope Muse Abernathy, who wrote “The State of Local News” report.

“It will turn heads because it’s Ralph Nader,” she said.

But maybe he won’t be as lonely as it seems. Abernathy said she’s been getting more frequent calls lately for advice from people who want to open newspapers.

 ?? JESSICA HILL/AP ?? Melissa Bird shows off newspaper carrier bags to Andy Thibault, editor and publisher of the Winsted Citizen on Friday.
JESSICA HILL/AP Melissa Bird shows off newspaper carrier bags to Andy Thibault, editor and publisher of the Winsted Citizen on Friday.

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