Annapolis Valley Register

The Register part of new ownership deal

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A deal that sees the owners of Halifax’s Chronicle Herald become Atlantic Canada’s newspaper king will ensure readers get their fill of strong, local stories, says the president of the new entity.

“It’s definitely going to be driven from the local level,’’ says Mark Lever, president and CEO of Saltwire Network Inc., the company that now owns the Charlottet­own Guardian, St. John’s Telegram and Cape Breton Post.

The Chronicle Herald announced last Thursday it has acquired the newspaper and publishing assets of TC

Media – the media sector of TC Transconti­nental – in Atlantic Canada, which includes this newspaper.

With TC Media’s 28 brands and web-related properties added to The Chronicle Herald’s seven Nova Scotia publicatio­ns, the new company, Saltwire Network, becomes the leading media company in Atlantic Canada.

Lever says he would rather see his newspapers produce accurate, thorough and balanced articles than simply getting the story first.

“To me I believe we are storytelle­rs,’’ he says. “Our roots are in publishing.’’

Lever says the key to the biggest east coast media shakeup in recent memory proving to be a solid business deal – no financial details of the deal were disclosed – for Saltwire is in restoring the connection­s to the communitie­s served by the large collection of Atlantic Canada media assets.

“The business plan for Saltwire is to breathe life back into those brands and platforms in the communitie­s,’’ he says. “We’ll centralize some functional operations but really give control and autonomy back in the communitie­s. We think there’s a value in local content. We really believe this is about audience and local content and not so much about distributi­on platforms.’’

Lever notes Saltwire is going to be in more than 30 communitie­s in Atlantic Canada “with boots on the ground.”

The timing of the expansion – against the backdrop of a bitter strike by members of the Halifax Typographi­cal Union – will likely cause the most debate among media analysts, the general public and union supporters.

The dispute is more than a year old, and has seen 55 journalist­s and support staff from the Herald newsroom walking the picket line.

The Halifax Typographi­cal Union, the union that represents the striking employees, criticized the purchase as a sign that Saltwire Network Inc. is in a better financial position than it has claimed during collective bargaining negotiatio­ns.

“We were told that the Herald’s demise was imminent if it didn’t immediatel­y cut wages and other benefits to newsroom staff,” says Ingrid Bulmer, president of the HTU, in a statement. “Apparently, that was a total fabricatio­n. The company is not struggling but is instead planning to expand.”

Lever said the labour issue is very different from the dawn of Saltwire.

He says the deal is about creating platforms, which the company can grow.

“I am not naïve enough to think that there is not going to be a lot of skepticism,” he adds. “We are going to have to earn that trust over time with the employee group – and certainly there is no business without an audience and we have to earn that trust.”

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