Daily News disappears from Halifax
Parent company is launching free daily paper instead
Last Updated: Monday, February 11, 2008 | 4:39 PM AT
CBC News
Related
Audio
- Stephen Kimber, interim director of the school of journalism at the University of King's College, is now a former columnist for the Halifax Daily News (Runs: 3:58)
- Play: Real Media »
Transcontinental Media is shutting down the Halifax Daily News immediately and laying off more than 90 people.
Employees were given the news Monday morning, when the company announced it is launching a free daily newspaper, Metro, this week..
Monday was the last edition of the Halifax Daily News.
(CBC)
"It was a shock to me," said David Rodenhiser, a longtime columnist.
"I have worked for this paper for 18 years through various owners, and you don't expect when you are coming in on a Monday morning that there will be strange guys you haven't seen before with their hands folded and looking very stern and telling you to go into the executive boardroom. Then you know it's done."
The Daily News was launched in 1974. Transcontinental bought the newspaper in 2002, when it had a circulation of 20,000.
Marc-Noel Ouellette, a senior vice-president with Transcontinental, said closing the paper was a tough decision.
"It's financial," he said. "We bought this paper within a group of papers years ago and it has been losing money ever since."
The company said the 92 employees will be offered severance packages and help finding other work, though a few would be offered positions with other Transcontinental newspapers in the province.
Free paper out Thursday
The first edition of Metro will be out in Halifax on Thursday.
The Daily News website, meanwhile, has already been changed, to Metro Halifax.
It will be smaller and have less emphasis on original, local news, and be targeted at a hip and trendy audience, Ouellette said.
'There's media here up to the wazoo.'—Marc-Noel Ouellette,senior VP with Transcontinental
The disappearance of the Daily News leaves the independently owned Chronicle Herald without a competitor.
However, Ouellette believes Halifax just isn't big enough for two traditional daily papers.
"Halifax is over-mediatized, as far as I'm concerned. There's media here up to the wazoo, so I don't think people are not going to be well informed," he said.
Former Daily News political reporter Brian Flinn disagrees.
"In this town and in this province after today there will be one print source, so that's one set of eyes, that's one point of view that ultimately everything is being generated from. And that's not good for our society and that's not good for our democracy," Flinn said.
Expect ripple effect: Kimber
Stephen Kimber, acting director of the school of journalism at the University of King's College, expects the loss of the Daily News will have an effect on the Herald.
With no competition, the Herald will likely reassess how it chooses what stories to cover, such as investigative pieces or stories that require travel overseas, Kimber said.
"Those were editorial decisions that suddenly become economic decisions. 'Why do we have to put that much money into this? We don't have anybody to compete with anymore,'" he told CBC News.
Sarah Dennis, vice-president of the Chronicle Herald, said she's sad to see a formidable competitor disappear, but it will business as usual at her newspaper.
"We've outlasted Conrad Black and Southam, and now Transcon on the daily newspaper front, so we're just going to continue to do our job as we've been doing," Dennis said.
Transcontinental has about 800 employees in Nova Scotia, at several daily and weekly newspapers, and two printing facilities.
The company is publishing Metro in partnership with Metro International S.A. and the Toronto-based Torstar Corp. Copies are already available in Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver.
Share Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- Police crack down on drag racing near Point Pleasant
- Police in the Halifax region say they're cracking down on the growing problem of drivers who participate in dangerous driving behaviour. more »
- Young woman, 18, dies following Cape Breton crash
- A young woman died after the car she was driving lost control on a dirt road in Reserve Mines, Cape Breton and landed in a brook. more »
- Hockey Canada votes to ban bodychecking in peewee hockey
- Hockey Canada's board of directors voted to eliminate bodychecking from peewee-level hockey on Saturday in Charlottetown. more »
- Mooseheads looking to bring home Memorial Cup
- The Halifax Mooseheads historic season will come to a head Sunday night when the Herd take on the Portland Winterhawks in the Memorial Cup Championship game. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Toronto mayor's brother says he never dealt drugs
- The brother of Toronto Mayor Rob Ford has vehemently denied allegations in Saturday's Globe and Mail that he was involved in the illicit drug trade in the 1980s. more »
- Hockey Canada votes to ban bodychecking in peewee hockey
- Hockey Canada's board of directors voted to eliminate bodychecking from peewee-level hockey on Saturday in Charlottetown. more »
- Neil Macdonald: How serious is Obama about curbing the drone surge?
- In a key speech this week, the U.S. president set out a host of supposed new safeguards for America's controversial practice of remote-controlled rough justice. But as Neil Macdonald writes, the underlying rationale for drone use has not fundamentally changed. more »
- Ontario man lost in Australian mountains has survival skills
- The sister of an Ontario man who disappeared in Australia's Snowy Mountains nearly two weeks ago says she remains hopeful he will be found, partly because of his training as a Canadian Forces reservist. more »
- Man suffers serious injury climbing out of moving car
- Young woman, 18, dies following Cape Breton crash
- Police crack down on drag racing near Point Pleasant
- Big hurricane season expected this year
- Federal ministers swipe at Trudeau during N.S. visit
- Rare albino lobster caught in Cape Breton
- School workers in children's mouth-taping incident off the job
- Family speaks out after mall refuses cart for autistic child
- Chained-teen's mom wants man who pleaded guilty 'to suffer'
Monday was the last edition of the Halifax Daily News.
