More than 40 newspaper workers will be unemployed when the Brandon Sun newspaper press shuts down and the paper is printed in Winnipeg, starting Friday.

FP Newspapers owns the Brandon Sun and Winnipeg Free Press and the Brandon paper will be printed on its sister newspapers' presses in Winnipeg, effective Oct. 1.

"The move by FP newspapers, controlled by Vancouver-based majority owner Ron Stern and his Winnipeg-based minority partner Bob Silver, ends more than 100 years of printing since the first Sun rolled off the presses on January 19, 1882," said the union, the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union of Canada.

"It also puts 45 employees on the unemployment line," the union said in a release Wednesday, noting that 20 full-time press operators and 25 mailroom workers will be out of work.

After printing, the Brandon Sun will be trucked from Winnipeg the 200 kilometres to Brandon to be distributed to homes and businesses. Editorial, advertising and circulation offices will stay in Brandon.

The Brandon Sun also printed the prairie edition of The Globe and Mail for almost 30 years. The FP Newspapers recently lost that contract to Estevan, Sask.-based Glacier Media.