Maine's largest newspaper chain has finally been sold.
After many false starts, the Seattle Times Company
has sold the Blethen Maine newspapers -- including the
Portland Press Herald -- to an investment group led by
Richard Connor of Pennsylvania. The company purchased the chain in 1998 for
at least $213 million. Today's sale price was not immediately disclosed; conventional wisdom among the chattering classes has been that it would be between $20 and $30 million.
Connor, whose ownership group is now called Maine Today Media, told the
Press Herald that
another 100 employees may be cut.
If you haven't been following Maine's newspaper crisis, here's
an article I wrote in January.
The Associated Press article quoted a San Francisco based media analyst (guess they needed one on Pacific Time at this hour) who described Portland as "a fairly isolated market where there are limited other sources for local news and limited other vehicles for advertising." (Apparently they don't get the
Forecaster,
The Bollard, the
Portland Daily Sun,
The Phoenix, and the
West End News in San Francisco.) What we're really limited in is not a source of
local news but of statewide and regional (i.e.: southern and
midcoast maine) news; all we've really got is
Maine Public Broadcasting. Perhaps we're on the road to again having a newspaper of record.
No comments:
Post a Comment