Pittsburgh Post-Gazette sold to nonprofit, no longer planning to shut down
The nonprofit owner of The Baltimore Banner will keep the newsroom in Pittsburgh and print the paper twice a week.
- The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette announced Tuesday it found a buyer in the Venetoulis Institute for Local Journalism, averting the planned May 3 shutdown of the historic publication.
- Block Communications announced in January that the paper would cease publication, facing severe business model strain that has affected local journalism across the country.
- Effective May 4, the Maryland-based Venetoulis Institute will assume control, retaining the newsroom and local leadership in Pittsburgh while integrating technology and business operations with its own teams.
- The Post-Gazette will continue printing on Thursday and Sunday, with a website operating on the other days to maintain reader access across the week.
96 Articles
96 Articles
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette saved from closure
Good morning. The sports media controversy involving The Athletic’s Dianna Russini came to a stunning conclusion on Tuesday. But first, major news involving The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, which was moments away […] The post Pittsburgh Post-Gazette saved from closure appeared first on Poynter.
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette bought by nonprofit
The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette dates to 1786, was the first newspaper to open west of the Allegheny mountains, and was set to close in two weeks, leaving the city as America's largest without a city-based paper. The Venetoulis Institute for Local Journalism, a nonprofit that publishes the digital Baltimore Banner, has agreed to buy it, saving all that would be lost. — Read the rest The post Pittsburgh Post-Gazette bought by nonprofit appeared first…
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Finds Buyer to Stay Open After Supreme Court Loss
The financially struggling Pittsburgh Post-Gazette said on April 14 that it found a new buyer a little more than two weeks before it was expected to shut down. The Pennsylvania newspaper previously said on Jan. 7 that it was closing its doors after the U.S. Supreme Court rejected its request to avoid restoring a workers’ benefits package from a 12-year-old labor agreement. It had been scheduled to cease operations on May 3, after losing more tha…
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