Los Angeles Times

The inevitable end of print

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Re “A new threat to newspapers,” editorial, Sept. 5

I’m an avid newspaper reader. I trace my obsession to eagerly awakening as a 5-year-old and being the first to the Sunday morning comics section. That was in 1955.

I also can remember, although they were already being phased out, elevator operators and gas station attendants.

Until two years ago I had the feel of newsprint in my hands, but the paper was getting smaller and the price was getting higher. I called to cancel my subscripti­on and was gratefully talked into trying the electronic version. I now receive my paper as early as 3:30 a.m. and have more hours to peruse it and no longer miss the feel of holding it in my hands.

Whether or not Assembly Bill 5 is enacted and newspapers are forced to give costly employee protection­s and benefits to the contractor­s who deliver their products, it’s only a matter of time until print goes the way of other anachronis­ms.

The Times is still the finest newspaper in the land and should concentrat­e on its electronic version.

Ron Garber Duarte

Please, state lawmakers, do not enact any legislatio­n that will curtail newspaper deliveries.

One of the best parts of my day is reading the L.A. Times at breakfast. I read all sections (except Sports) every day and have done so for many years. I don’t want to read my paper online; I want the actual newspaper with pages to turn and stories to read and reread.

I also remember my brother delivering the newspaper from his bike when we were children. I sometimes rode my bike along with him.

I do not want to hurt the delivery people or the newspaper business. I simply want my daily paper along with my daily coffee.

Marlene Bronson Los Angeles

The Times’ Business columnists have criticized large companies that employ independen­t contractor­s versus regular employees to avoid paying benefits and livable wages. It’s now hypocritic­al for The Times’ Editorial Board to want to avoid paying the delivery people as employees and to compare them with paperboys on bicycles.

I realize that newspapers are dealing with financial difficulti­es, as many of us are. But you can’t have it both ways, criticizin­g businesses that hire independen­t contractor­s while also relying on those contractor­s.

Alan Yamashiro San Juan Capistrano

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