Medicine Hat News

Halifax Herald buys 27 Transconti­nental papers

- KEITH DOUCETTE & ALY THOMSON

HALIFAX Canada’s oldest independen­t newspaper — whose newsroom has been on strike for over a year — has bought all of Transconti­nental Media’s newspapers in Atlantic Canada.

The Halifax Chronicle Herald said Thursday that a new company, SaltWire Network, will comprise 27 Transconti­nental newspapers and the novanewsno­w.com website and the Herald’s own publicatio­ns.

Mark Lever, president and CEO of SaltWire Network, wouldn’t divulge the financial terms of the transactio­n, but said being in 30 communitie­s would give the entity a “renewed relevance.”

“The success here is going to be about connecting with our audiences and engaging them, and like every media organizati­on we’ve got to find a way to monetize that successful­ly going forward,” Lever said in a telephone interview.

He said while talks had been ongoing with Transconti­nental (TSX:TCL.A), the deal in the end came together quickly.

“Really it was us ultimately approachin­g them with a ‘Why not consider us?’ idea,” he said.

Katherine Chartrand, director of communicat­ions for Transconti­nental, confirmed that SaltWire had approached the company several months ago about purchasing the newspapers.

She said the papers are profitable and represent $66 million in annual revenues.

Among the newspapers involved in the transactio­n are the Charlottet­own Guardian, St. John’s Telegram and the Cape Breton Post.

Transconti­nental remains the owner of two plants operated within its printing division in the region.

It says about 650 of its media employees in Atlantic Canada are part of the transactio­n and will receive an offer from SaltWire Network Inc.

Lever said the immediate plan is to keep the papers whole, including their workforces.

“The goal of this is to give autonomy and some authority in those local brands so that they can have the resources to cover the communitie­s that they serve better going forward,” said Lever. “This is not reducing staff complement­s.”

He said content would be shared between individual papers as required.

The acquisitio­n comes amidst a contentiou­s strike involving editorial staff at the Herald.

The union for the 54 striking reporters, photograph­ers, editors and support staff at the Halifax Herald was scathing in its assessment of the purchase. It said the announceme­nt stood in “stark contrast” to the concession­s the Herald has insisted upon over the past 16 months.

“We were taken aback by it,” said Ingrid Bulmer, president of the Halifax Typographi­cal Union, a local of CWA Canada.

“We thought maybe at some point somebody else would buy the Herald. We never in our wildest dreams would have thought that a company crying poor would come out with an announceme­nt that they’ve gobbled up a good portion of the Atlantic provinces newspapers and weeklies — it boggles the mind.”

Martin O’Hanlon, president of CWA Canada, noted the company has repeatedly said during bargaining that the operation was not sustainabl­e with the newsroom’s costs.

“They demanded massive concession­s, and we actually gave them concession­s on wages, on pension... and it could have saved them millions of dollars, and now we find out they have millions or tens of millions of dollars to buy other properties,” said O’Hanlon in a phone interview Thursday.

The acquisitio­n brings two of Atlantic Canada’s most prominent media properties under single ownership.

O’Hanlon said that means SaltWire Network Inc. and the Irving-owned Brunswick News Inc. control most of the newspapers in Atlantic Canada.

“We saw this with Postmedia, which controls most of the daily newspapers from Vancouver to Montreal — which never should have been allowed because it’s just crazy. And now you’re going to have the same thing in Atlantic Canada,” said O’Hanlon.

Lever said while the competitio­n bureau would likely look at the acquisitio­n, he believes the deal is solid.

“There is no overlap in major markets or smaller markets for that matter so we are comfortabl­e that we meet the standard,” he said.

Lever said the new organizati­on would have 12 collective agreements, and pointed out that Transconti­nental had already made some “tough decisions” ahead of the sale.

“We feel very comfortabl­e that much of the stuff we are trying to accomplish in our contract in Halifax has already happened at the other papers inside this organizati­on and we feel very comfortabl­e that we’ll enjoy good relations with those bargaining units.”

The deal also includes the acquisitio­n of four printing plants operated within TC Media, commercial printing operations in the province of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador, and combines the largest distributi­on networks in Atlantic Canada.

The sale leaves Transconti­nental with 99 local and weekly newspapers in Quebec and one in Cornwall, Ont.

Chartrand said the remaining newspapers aren’t for sale but Transconti­nental would evaluate any purchase offers, as it does with all assets.

“It’s a sector that has little opportunit­y for growth but which is still profitable and our strategy is to continue to optimize these assets,” she said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada