TORONTO – One of the country’s oldest dailies, the Guelph Mercury, will cease publishing its print editions this week, the latest casualty of the deep malaise in Canada’s newspaper industry, its publisher announced Monday.
The closure will throw 23 full-time and three part-time employees out of work, including eight in the newsroom. The southwestern Ontario newspaper, which dates to 1867, will print its last edition on Friday.
Publisher Donna Luelo expressed regret at the decision, but said shuttering the print edition was the only viable option. A regional digital team would continue to put out a web version.
“The steep decline in classified and national advertising revenues has made it difficult for the printed copy of the daily newspaper to remain profitable,” Luelo said in a statement.
“There is nothing the talented team at the Guelph Mercury could have done differently to affect the outcome.”
Across Canada and North America, newspapers have struggled to stay, or become, profitable as free websites have eaten into traditional classified and advertising revenues, while readers have moved to online news sites.
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The Mercury’s circulation in the city of about 115,000 people had fallen to below 9,000 home-delivery subscribers, Leulo said.
In an email, Luelo said the decision would have no impact on the nearby Waterloo Region Record daily, where she’s also publisher.
MORE: Rogers Media to cut 200 jobs, or 4% of workforce
Print cuts
Montreal’s La Presse, also one of the country’s oldest and largest newspapers, announced the end of its print product last fall in favour of a tablet edition launched in 2013 at a cost of $40 million.
Just last week, money-losing Postmedia announced it was cutting 90 jobs as it merged newsrooms in Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton and Ottawa. Also, the 141-year-old Nanaimo Daily News on Vancouver Island announced it would stop publishing.
Black Press, which had bought the paper from Glacier Media in December 2014, said it was it had been unable to develop a sustainable business model for the daily.
The Mercury, owned by Torstar Corporation’s Metroland Media Group, was owned by Thomson Newspaper Corp. from 1947 until 1995, when Hollinger Inc. took over. Ownership moved in 1998 to Sun Media before Torstar Corporation took over that same year.
“This is a sad day for Guelph, not just the wonderful people who work here,” Mercury sports reporter Tony Saxon said in a tweet.
The Mercury said its real estate publication, called Guelph and District Homes, and its lifestyle magazine Guelph Life would continue as a printed product.
Metroland’s president could not be reached for comment.
However, the company said it would deliver news and “unique local content” through its twice-weekly Guelph Tribune.
In a related development Monday, Rogers said it would be cutting 200 jobs in TV, radio, publishing and administration — about four per cent of its workforce.
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