QCNA NEWSMATTERS: Community newspapers emerging as last journalistic soldiers standing
Content provided by the Quebec Community Newspapers Association
“Community newspapers aren’t just filling the gap, they’re the whole fabric.”
-Brenda O’Farrell, journalist and president of the Quebec Community Newspapers Association
Last month, Bell Media announced its largest workforce restructuring in 30 years, laying off 4,800 workers.
In December, CBC/Radio-Canada announced plans to cut 800 jobs.
One month earlier, Quebec television network TVA cut 547 jobs.
Earlier in 2023, Postmedia, one of the largest media companies in Canada with a daily newspaper in almost every major city in the country, announced it was cutting 10 per cent of its staff, just the latest in a long string of downsizing moves that has spanned more than a decade. The cuts planned for Quebec went much deeper.
Almost every month, evidence of the continuing shift in the media landscape can be seen. And the result is fewer and fewer journalists reporting the stories that keep Canadians informed.
But in many communities a singular journalistic soldier remains standing: The community newspaper. These small, often privately-owned outlets are the last providers of reliable, professional local news.
“Community newspapers aren’t just filling the gap, they’re the whole fabric,” said veteran journalist and president of the Quebec Community Newspaper Association Brenda O’Farrell.
That is why support for community newspapers is so important, O’Farrell says. As the media landscape continues to shift, the role these news outlets play is not only crucial, but gaining importance.
And they need to be supported by initiatives like the federal government’s Local Journalism Initiative, O’Farrell explains, referring to the funding program that helps qualified outlets hire reporters in communities across the country. But readers in these communities, have to do their part, too, she added, by subscribing to papers that offer that option, especially in Quebec where the minority-language community needs to maintain access to information in English.
Without programs like LJI and reader support, many community papers would struggle to survive.
Since 2012, journalist Marie-Ève Martel has tracked community news outlet closures across Quebec.
“For the moment, I’ve counted more than 80,” she reported late last year, after the abrupt shuttering of the Montreal daily Métro and its offshoots in several Montreal suburbs and Quebec City.
Each closure represents not only jobs lost, but “a hole in our social cement,” as Martel describes it.
Local media “makes us more informed, more aware and more likely to vote,” she said.
“CBC and the Ottawa Citizen aren’t going to cover a byelection in Chelsea,” said Nikki Mantell, the publisher of The Low Down to Hull and Back News, which covers the small towns in the Gatineau hills. “We have boots on the ground, and often our stories get picked up by larger media.”
“Local papers are where you hear about the most important things — health care, schools, get- ting your roads paved, the environ- ment,” said Sharon McCully, publisher of The Record in Sherbrooke and the Brome County News, two papers that cover about 30 municipalities for the English-speaking community in the Eastern Townships. “These are stories that impact people directly.”