Calgary Herald

Ottawa considerin­g future without newspaper giants

- SEAN CRAIG

As the print media industry copes with mounting revenue declines, layoffs and quarterly losses, the Trudeau government is considerin­g what the landscape would look like without the country’s two largest newspaper companies.

Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly’s office confirmed to the Financial Post that the Department of Canadian Heritage “regularly does industry-specific environmen­tal scanning” that includes the hypothetic­al scenarios that Torontobas­ed Postmedia Network Canada Corp. and Torstar Corp. will cease operations.

“The way Canadians access content is changing with new platforms and technologi­es,” said a spokespers­on for Joly. “The shifts that are happening as a result are significan­t. One of the objectives of our Canadian content consultati­ons is to assess how to best support the production of news informatio­n as well as local content that is credible and reliable.”

Spokespeop­le for both Postmedia and Torstar declined to comment for this story.

The government is holding cross-country consultati­ons with industry groups as part of a sweeping review of Canada’s $48-billion broadcasti­ng, media and cultural industries, the results of which could have tremendous impacts on the struggling bottom lines of Postmedia and Torstar.

Emails and documents obtained under the Access to Informatio­n Act show that bureaucrat­s at the Department of Heritage have been preparing assessment­s of markets that would lose significan­t media coverage if either company were to cease publishing.

Postmedia publishes the National Post, and is the only publisher of daily broadsheet­s in many of Canada’s largest cities, including Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Ottawa. It also publishes the only Englishlan­guage daily broadsheet in Montreal, in addition to dozens of community newspapers and tabloids.

Faced with a 13.7 per cent decline in revenue, and a 21.3 per cent decline in print advertisin­g revenue, Postmedia reported a $99.4-million loss in the three months ending Aug. 31, significan­tly more than the $54.1 million in the same period the previous year. Last month the company announced it intends to cut hundreds of positions by reducing its salary costs by 20 per cent.

Torstar publishes Canada’s largest daily circulatio­n newspaper, the Toronto Star, alongside other broadsheet­s the Hamilton Spectator and the Waterloo Region Record, and more than 100 community papers.

This month Torstar reported an adjusted third-quarter loss that exceeded analyst expectatio­ns, as its operating revenue fell 12.6 per cent to $162.1 million and its print advertisin­g revenues fell 16.1 per cent. The company has laid off more than 350 editorial and production staff in 2016.

Postmedia CEO Paul Godfrey has urged the government to ramp up federal spending on advertisin­g in newspapers, and to provide tax incentives for companies that do the same.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES ?? Ottawa is taking a look at Canada’s two biggest newspaper chains, Postmedia and The Toronto Star, which continue to lose advertisin­g revenue and are laying off employees,
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS/FILES Ottawa is taking a look at Canada’s two biggest newspaper chains, Postmedia and The Toronto Star, which continue to lose advertisin­g revenue and are laying off employees,

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