“I mean, that’s the truth. Tractor sales although bucked the trend on the back of hopes of a normal monsoon, a robust sowing season and government expenditure in rural areas. The nearby interstate is an easy supply line for opioids and meth, police say. Mayor Hardman said it was inadvertent and quickly corrected.The paper lasted five issues. Because being the editor of the Daily Guide was all I wanted for a really long time.”The death of the Daily Guide raises questions not easily answered, the same ones asked at newspapers big and small across the country.Did GateHouse stop investing because people were less interested in reading the paper? It would have been better than dealing with whispers and Twitter.Without a newspaper’s reporting, Police Chief Dan Cordova said many in the community are unaware of the extent of the problem. It’s meat-and-potatoes local news.When he’s not at meetings, he works from a windowless office in the basement of his home. These are external links and will open in a new windowNewspapers will no longer have their sales figures automatically published, the industry's auditor has said.The Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC), which records and audits sales, usually publishes figures every month.But ABC said publishers were growing concerned about a "negative narrative of decline" in newspaper sales.Three major titles were absent from Thursday's figures, which showed a significant drop in sales in April amid the coronavirus pandemic.The Telegraph, The Sun and The Times declined to publish, but other national titles revealed their figures as normal, including The Daily Express, The Daily Mirror, The Guardian, The Daily Star and The i Paper.The Daily Mail had the highest sales of the papers which published, with a circulation of 945,000 - down from 1.13 million in March.No national newspaper sold more than 1 million copies per day in the UK, as readers shopped less frequently under lockdown.Newspapers were already suffering falling print sales prior to coronavirus, and stories about the gradual decline of newspapers have been common in recent years.After the announcement that some papers would not publish their figures, "Entirely coincidentally, pre-Covid this was due to be the month the Sun lost its title as UK's biggest selling newspaper after 40+ years to Daily Mail.
In June, the last newsroom staffer, editor Natalie Sanders, quit — she was burned out, she said. “I felt like I was doing something for the community. “The decline in state sales tax collections was driven principally by steep drops in remittances from oil- and gas-related sectors,” Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar said in a news release. Mayor Hardman said it was inadvertent and quickly corrected.The paper lasted five issues. According to Michael Barthel’s “Newspaper: Fact Sheet” in his research on newspaper sales at the Pew Research Center, weekday and Sunday newspaper circulation fell approximately 7% and 4% respectively in 2015, the biggest decline since 11% and 8% in 2010. (AP Photo/Orlin Wagner)Connect with the definitive source for global and local news Newspapers were already suffering falling print sales prior to coronavirus, and stories about the gradual decline of newspapers have been common in recent years. The availability of multimedia news platforms has accelerated this decline in the 21st century, and by the close of 2014, no UK daily or Sunday newspaper had a circulation exceeding two million.
Aug 01, 2016. Sanders, the former editor, and Joel Goodridge, another former publisher, blame both GateHouse and the community for not supporting the paper.Goodridge said some businesses found they could advertise much more cheaply in free circulars dumped at local stores.
He said he angrily stopped buying the paper when it wrote about a drag show at a local community center.Beyond the emotions are practical concerns about the loss of an information source. GateHouse rejects the notion that their motivations are strictly financial, pointing to measures taken in Waynesville and elsewhere to keep news flowing, said Bernie Szachara, the company’s president of U.S. newspaper operations.All newspaper owners face a brutal reality that calls into question whether it’s an economically sustainable model anymore unless, like the Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post, the boss is the world’s richest man.“They’re getting eaten away at every level,” said Ken Doctor, a news industry analyst at Harvard’s Nieman Lab.Newspaper circulation in the U.S. has declined every year for three decades, while advertising revenue has nosedived since 2006, according to the Pew Research Center. The paper supplemented its income through outside printing jobs, but those dried up, too, said Szachara, the GateHouse newspaper operations president.Given an unforgiving marketplace, there’s no guarantee additional investment in the paper would have paid off, he said. “He tries to be fair, and to be honest about it, he does a good job, but he’s just one person and he’s limited by social media.”Maurina declines to share many details about the finances for his online site.