Baltimore Sun

Sun editor Alatzas adds duties of publisher

Promotion comes as Tribune Publishing Co. revamps structure

- By Natalie Sherman

Tribune Publishing Co. named Trif Alatzas publisher and editor-in-chief of The Baltimore Sun on Wednesday as part of a broader corporate reorganiza­tion designed to better capitalize on its journalism. The move to create editor/publisher roles, combining oversight of editorial and business operations at its newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times and Chicago Tribune, comes as Tribune Publishing’s newest investor seeks to turn around the company.

Michael Ferro, a Chicago venture capitalist and technology entreprene­ur, invested $44.4 million to become the largest shareholde­r in Tribune last month, and appointed a new CEO last week.

“By giving our newsroom leaders dual responsibi­lities, we are ensuring our local brands remain vital to the communitie­s they serve with our journalist­s and creators producing premium, compelling content across all mediums,” Justin Dearborn, Tribune Publishing’s new CEO, said in a

statement.

Alatzas, 49, is a Baltimore native who joined The Sun in 2002.

The flattening of the corporate structure is part of what Dearborn, a longtime Ferro business partner, dubbed the company’s “content-first” strategy. In addition, he said print subscriber­s will automatica­lly receive unlimited access to their publicatio­n’s website, starting this spring. The firm also seeks to harness and monetize the data provided by digital readers.

“We are a big company, and we need to start acting like it and get our swagger back,” he said on a company-wide call for employees on Wednesday.

While combining the publisher and editor roles is not unknown, particular­ly at smaller news organizati­ons, the practice remains far from the industry norm, which has traditiona­lly viewed a separation between business and news operations as critical. Alatzas said he would work to ensure editorial independen­ce.

“Commerce is part of this, but the editorial integrity just is not for sale,” Alatzas said.

A Bel Air resident, Alatzas grew up in Baltimore County in a family of “news junkies,” he said. He was known to many in The Sun’s newsroom because he worked at his family’s former restaurant, located close to the newspaper’s Calvert Street offices. He later interned at the now defunct Evening Sun.

“Not a lot of people end up working at their hometown newspaper, and certainly not a lot of them become the editor or the publisher, so I’m very honored. This place means a lot to me,” he said. “I want The Sun to continue to be the best, and I’m really committed to doing everything I can.”

He worked for newspapers in Rochester, N.Y., and Wilmington, Del., before returning to Baltimore, where he led the sports and business department­s before becoming head of digital media. In 2013, he became the top editor of the 179-year-old news organizati­on.

During Alatzas’ tenure as top editor, The Sun expanded investigat­ive reporting and has won more than 20 national journalism awards for breaking news coverage of the Columbia Mall shooting and investigat­ions of police brutality, the public health impact of violence on city residents and compensati­on claims by school workers hurt by students.

The Sun’s coverage of the aftermath of Freddie Gray’s death was recognized with two awards from the Online News Associatio­n in 2015 for breaking news and explanator­y reporting. The Sun was also a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize in 2014.

Tim Ryan, former publisher of The Sun and Allentown Morning Call, said Alatzas showed a “natural business sense.” Ryan left Baltimore in September to become publisher of the Los Angeles Times and The San Diego Union-Tribune.

“I’m very excited to see him apply the leadership skills that he’s utilized in the newsroom to the rest of the organizati­on,” said Ryan, who was named president of publishing on Wednesday and will oversee Alatzas and the other publishers.

Richard J. “Rick” Daniels, who was The Sun’s publisher until Monday, lost his job as part of the shake-up.

“It’s a new management system, and there will probably be a few kinks that can

Triffon G. ‘Trif’ Alatzas

Family:

Job:

Previous position: Residence: Education: be worked out, but if anybody can make it work, it will be Trif,” said Daniels, a former executive at The Boston Globe and The Hartford Courant who replaced Ryan.

Bill Marimow, a former top editor at The Sun who hired Alatzas in 2002, said he is confident that Alatzas will preserve the paper’s editorial integrity but that taking on what has been two, full-time jobs will be difficult.

“It’s a very challengin­g task,” said Marimow, now editor at the Philadelph­ia Inquirer.

In his new role, Alatzas oversees a staff of about 720 people at the Baltimore Sun Media Group, which includes The Capital in Annapolis, The Carroll County Times, City Paper, Towson Times and other community newspapers and their websites.

The Baltimore Sun had average daily print circulatio­n of 121,000 and Sunday circulatio­n of 259,000, according to an investor presentati­on last summer. While print circulatio­n has declined, The Sun’s digital audience has grown. After implementi­ng a digital subscripti­on model five years ago, The Sun posted record increases in online readership last year.

Scott Dance, a reporter who is the local leader of the Washington-Baltimore Newspaper Guild, which represents about 135 reporters, advertisin­g staff and others at The Sun, said it is “concerning” that The Sun has had three publishers in six months.

But, he said, “We are glad someone we know and trust is in charge.”

In the past five years, Tribune Co. has emerged from bankruptcy and spun off its newspapers into a separate public company, which has seen several top executive changes while facing persistent declines in advertisin­g revenue.

On Wednesday, the Chicago-based company reported a loss of $2.8 million on $1.65 billion in revenue for 2015 and said it expected pressure on revenue to continue this year, offset by “strategic cost management.”

The company did not say how much would be saved by combining the publisher and editor roles.

Wall Street rewarded the changes, lifting shares of Tribune Publishing more than 8 percent Wednesday to close at $9.19.

Rick Edmonds, a business media analyst at the Poynter Institute, said reorganizi­ng the executive team and adding leaders with technology experience may be a good move. He noted that business and news operations are becoming more integrated across the industry.

“There’s reason to think we’re going to see some new things,” he said. “Some of them might work very well. I don’t think that’s proven yet.”

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Trif Alatzas

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