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St. Cloud Times

St. Cloud Times is an American, English language daily newspaper headquartered in St. Cloud, Minnesota.[2][3] The Times is owned by mass media holding company Gannett and is part of the USA Today network of newspapers.[4] The print version of the paper is printed by ECM Publishers in Princeton, Minnesota.[5]

St. Cloud Times
TypeDaily newspaper
Owner(s)Gannett
Founded1861 (1861)
LanguageAmerican English
Headquarters24 Eighth Ave. S, St. Cloud 56301
CitySt. Cloud
CountryUnited States
Circulation7,092 (as of 2024)[1]
ReadershipCentral Minnesota
ISSN0899-5028
OCLC number18126925
Websitesctimes.com

History edit

The St. Cloud Times and Journal Press was created in 1929 through the merger of several local newspapers, including the St. Cloud Union, The Visitor, St. Cloud Democrat, St. Cloud Journal-Press, and German Language Der Nordstern.[4] The paper was renamed to the St. Cloud Daily Times in 1941, becoming a six-day a week afternoon paper owned by Fred Schilplin.[4] The newspaper was purchased by Speidel Newspapers in 1975, which in turn was purchased by Gannett, the largest newspaper holding company in the United States, in 1977.[4] The Times added a Sunday edition in 1988.[4]

The St. Cloud Journal-Press had previously been known as the "St. Cloud Journal"[6]

St. Cloud was also home to the Minnesota Union newspaper,[7] founded by Sylvanus Lowry, a slave owner from Kentucky, Democratic political boss, and the city's first council president (the office of mayor did not exist) to compete with Radical Republican Jane Swisshelm's Saint Cloud Visiter and to provide a pro-slavery viewpoint.[7][8] Lowry lived in St. Cloud in 1854 until his death in 1865. Swisshelm left St. Cloud when the Civil War broke out in 1861.

In a May 2010 report by Minnesota Public Radio, St. Cloud State University professor Christopher Lehman claimed that "Lowry founded a pro-slavery newspaper, The Union, which later became the St. Cloud Times."[9] The Minnesota State Historical Society does not reference any holdings for the Lowry paper.[10] The St. Cloud Times history of multiple changes of ownership does not include the Lowry "The Union" paper among the five local publications that merged over time.[4] "With a population of just over two thousand in 1870, St. Cloud, Minnesota, was a bustling thoroughfare, but not large enough to support the multiple newspapers published in the city."[11]

Legacy of national and state awards edit

"In its prime, the paper had 40 to 50 people in its newsroom covering three counties and beyond, regularly winning state and even national journalism awards."[12]

In the 32 years between 1985-2017, the St. Cloud Times was named the Minnesota Newspaper Association's daily newspaper of the year 25 times.[13] That honor - the Vance Trophy - is determined by news professionals from outside Minnesota, with new judges each year. The Vance Trophy was won in succession under top editors Don Casey, Susan Ihne, John Bodette and Lisa Schwarz.

In 2017, the Times won the national Sigma Delta Chi/Society of Professional Journalists award for Breaking News for its coverage of the confession of the murderer of Jacob Wetterling, a 12-year-old St. Joseph, Minn., boy who was abducted at gunpoint in 1989. Team: Kirsti Marohn, David Unze, Stephanie Dickrell, Jenny Berg, David Schwarz and Jason Wachter (photographers). Led by editor Lisa Schwarz.

In 2012, the Times won the Society of American Business Editors and Writers (SABEW) Best in Business - Innovation Award for a multimedia reporting project about the impact of the Bakken oil boom on Central Minnesota, almost two states away. Judges comments on "Chasing Futures in the Oil Patch" were: "The paper was able to show readers a direct relationship from the boom in North Dakota to St. Cloud’s economy. The package showed an extraordinary investment of time, thought and space by the paper to the story, although St. Cloud has limited resources." The project also won first place for in-depth reporting from the Minnesota Society of Professional Journalists.[14] Team: Kevin Allenspach, Kimm Anderson (photographer), Lisa Sabyan (graphic artist). Led by editor Lisa Schwarz.

In 2010, the Times won the national Sigma Delta Chi/Society of Professional Journalists award for Investigative Reporting for an 18-month project exploring the public, economic and personal costs of dozens of failed housing developments in the Great Recession. Team: Kirsti Marohn, Britt Johnson, Lisa Sabyan (graphic artist). Led by editor Lisa Schwarz.

In 2007, the Times won the national Knight-Batten Award for Innovations in Journalism: Multimedia for Downtown After Dark, a mulitmedia reporting project that showed a college community what its bar district looked like after everyone but the students, hospitality workers and law enforcement was in bed. Team: Kari Petrie, Dave Schwarz (photographer). Led by editor Lisa Schwarz.

In 2004, the Times embedded reporter Michelle Tan and photographer Dave Schwarz with the 367th Infantry assigned to Bagram, Afghanistan for three weeks. In addition to daily reports, the Times produced a book from their reporting. Led by editor Rene Kaluza.

Decline and Downsizing edit

The Times had daily circulation of more than 30,000, nearing 40,000 on Sundays, as recently as the mid-2000s and employed more than 40 people in the newsroom and more than 250 on site in its printing, advertising and business operations.

The presses were retired in 2009 due to proximity of a larger company-owned printing operation in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro area.

In 2018, the building at 3000 7th Ave. North was sold, along with other Gannett real estate nationwide, to Twenty Lake Holding, a subsidiary of Alden Global Capital.[15] The Times relocated its then-35 total employees to a custom-remodeled, leased property at 24 Eighth Avenue South in downtown St. Cloud on April 1, 2019.[16]

Following its 2018 purchase by Gatehouse Media, parent company Gannett eliminated more than half (12,000+) of its newsroom jobs nationwide between 2019 and 2022, cuts substantially deeper than the rate of newspaper revenue decline. The downsizing is blamed in part on millions of dollars in debt payments related to the Gatehouse/Gannett deal.[17]

The Times' editor resigned in July 2022, leaving a news staff of nine behind.[18] After layoffs in August 2022, voluntary buyouts in December 2022 and resignations, a single reporter remained by December 2022 to cover Minnesota's fifth largest metropolitan area, with a population of 200,000. Industry observers referred to the shell publication as a 'ghost paper'.[19]

Axios (website) asked Gannett in December 2022 how the bare-bones St. Cloud staff could keep producing a daily paper. The email response: "While incredibly difficult, implementing these efficiencies and responding decisively to the ongoing macroeconomic volatility will continue to propel Gannett's future."[20]

The last remaining news reporter at the paper resigned in January 2023 to join St. Cloud Live, a new, free online publication produced by The Forum Communications Company, headquartered in Fargo North Dakota, 155 miles northwest of St. Cloud by Interstate 94. (A sports reporter was hired later in 2023 as the Times' next sole news staffer.)

Forum Chief Content Office Mary Jo Hotzler said: "St. Cloud, from a geographical standpoint, makes sense. But more than that, we are deeply committed to local journalism and see a need in St. Cloud."[21][22][23]

In 2022, Gannett ended newspaper delivery of the Times, distributing the paper through the U.S. Mail instead, eliminating a separate Saturday edition and delivering the Sunday paper on Saturday instead.

Online Digital edit

The newspaper's website, sctimes.com, was established in 1998.,[4] and refers to the publication as the "SC Times". The publication offers readers a 'digital only' option.

References edit

  1. ^ "Minnesota Newspaper Directory 2024" (PDF). Minnesota Newspaper Association. (PDF) from the original on March 15, 2024. Retrieved March 28, 2024.
  2. ^ "About St. Cloud times. (St. Cloud, Minn.) 1988-current". Chronicling America. Library of Congress. Retrieved January 24, 2020.
  3. ^ "The St. Cloud daily times". Library of Congress. Library of Congress. Retrieved July 29, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "Our History". St. Cloud Times. Retrieved July 29, 2021.
  5. ^ "ECM to print St. Cloud Times". HometownSource.com. July 6, 2015. Retrieved July 28, 2021.
  6. ^ "St. Cloud Journal", Minnesota Historical Society, Minnesota Digital Newspaper Hub.
  7. ^ a b Lehman, Christopher P. (2019). Slavery's reach : Southern slaveholders in the North Star State. Saint Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press. pp. 179–181. ISBN 9781681341354.
  8. ^ Espinoza, Ambar (May 7, 2010). "St. Cloud professor unearths history of slavery in Minnesota". MPR News. Retrieved July 28, 2021.
  9. ^ Ambar Espinoza, St. Cloud professor unearths history of slavery in Minnesota, MPRnews, St. Paul, May 7, 2010.
  10. ^ Digital Newspapers at MNHS
  11. ^ The St. Cloud Journal (St. Cloud, Minn.) 1866-1876, Minnesota Historical Society, Digital Newspapers At MNHS.
  12. ^ John Reinan "Deep staff cuts leave St. Cloud Times a 'ghost paper', Minneapolis Star Tribune, December 9, 2022
  13. ^ MNA, MNA (June 12, 2023). "The Vance Trophy". Minnesota Newspaper Association. Retrieved June 12, 2023.
  14. ^ chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/http://www.mnspj.org/wp-content/uploads/2013-Program.pdf
  15. ^ O'Connell, Jonathan (February 11, 2019). "A hedge fund's 'mercenary' strategy: Buy newspapers, slash jobs, sell the buildings". [The Washington Post]. Retrieved June 21, 2023.
  16. ^ Haecherl, Anna (March 29, 2019). "SC Times moves into its new downtown office Monday".
  17. ^ Joshua Benton, "The scale of local news destruction in Gannett’s markets is astonishing", NiemanLab, March 9, 2023.
  18. ^ Times staff report (July 29, 2022). ""Lisa Schwarz to leave St. Cloud Times, join state newspaper association"". St. Cloud Times. p. 1. Retrieved June 12, 2023.
  19. ^ John Reinan, "Deep staff cuts leave St. Cloud Times a 'ghost paper'. Serving a region of 200,000 residents, the paper now has a news staff of two.", Minneapolis Star Tribune, December 9, 2022
  20. ^ Nick Halter and Torey Van Oot , "The St. Cloud Times' newsroom decimated by staff cuts", Axios Twin Cities, December 8, 2022
  21. ^ Adam Uren, "Last remaining St. Cloud Times reporter leaving for new Forum Communications rival. The St. Cloud Times has been decimated by reporter departures and cuts by parent company Gannett." Jan 24, 2023
  22. ^ Audrey Kennedy, St. Cloud Times' newsroom loses lone reporter, Axios Twin Cities, January 24th, 2023.
  23. ^ Jennifer Hoff, "Last St. Cloud Times reporter leaves newspaper", KARE 11 News, January 27, 2023

External links edit

  • Official website

45°33′34″N 94°09′39″W / 45.559411°N 94.160761°W / 45.559411; -94.160761 (D: St. Cloud Times)

cloud, times, also, list, newspapers, minnesota, american, english, language, daily, newspaper, headquartered, cloud, minnesota, times, owned, mass, media, holding, company, gannett, part, today, network, newspapers, print, version, paper, printed, publishers,. See also List of newspapers in Minnesota St Cloud Times is an American English language daily newspaper headquartered in St Cloud Minnesota 2 3 The Times is owned by mass media holding company Gannett and is part of the USA Today network of newspapers 4 The print version of the paper is printed by ECM Publishers in Princeton Minnesota 5 St Cloud TimesTypeDaily newspaperOwner s GannettFounded1861 1861 LanguageAmerican EnglishHeadquarters24 Eighth Ave S St Cloud 56301CitySt CloudCountryUnited StatesCirculation7 092 as of 2024 1 ReadershipCentral MinnesotaISSN0899 5028OCLC number18126925Websitesctimes wbr comMedia of the United StatesList of newspapers Contents 1 History 2 Legacy of national and state awards 3 Decline and Downsizing 4 Online Digital 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe St Cloud Times and Journal Press was created in 1929 through the merger of several local newspapers including the St Cloud Union The Visitor St Cloud Democrat St Cloud Journal Press and German Language Der Nordstern 4 The paper was renamed to the St Cloud Daily Times in 1941 becoming a six day a week afternoon paper owned by Fred Schilplin 4 The newspaper was purchased by Speidel Newspapers in 1975 which in turn was purchased by Gannett the largest newspaper holding company in the United States in 1977 4 The Times added a Sunday edition in 1988 4 The St Cloud Journal Press had previously been known as the St Cloud Journal 6 St Cloud was also home to the Minnesota Union newspaper 7 founded by Sylvanus Lowry a slave owner from Kentucky Democratic political boss and the city s first council president the office of mayor did not exist to compete with Radical Republican Jane Swisshelm s Saint Cloud Visiter and to provide a pro slavery viewpoint 7 8 Lowry lived in St Cloud in 1854 until his death in 1865 Swisshelm left St Cloud when the Civil War broke out in 1861 In a May 2010 report by Minnesota Public Radio St Cloud State University professor Christopher Lehman claimed that Lowry founded a pro slavery newspaper The Union which later became the St Cloud Times 9 The Minnesota State Historical Society does not reference any holdings for the Lowry paper 10 The St Cloud Times history of multiple changes of ownership does not include the Lowry The Union paper among the five local publications that merged over time 4 With a population of just over two thousand in 1870 St Cloud Minnesota was a bustling thoroughfare but not large enough to support the multiple newspapers published in the city 11 Legacy of national and state awards edit In its prime the paper had 40 to 50 people in its newsroom covering three counties and beyond regularly winning state and even national journalism awards 12 In the 32 years between 1985 2017 the St Cloud Times was named the Minnesota Newspaper Association s daily newspaper of the year 25 times 13 That honor the Vance Trophy is determined by news professionals from outside Minnesota with new judges each year The Vance Trophy was won in succession under top editors Don Casey Susan Ihne John Bodette and Lisa Schwarz In 2017 the Times won the national Sigma Delta Chi Society of Professional Journalists award for Breaking News for its coverage of the confession of the murderer of Jacob Wetterling a 12 year old St Joseph Minn boy who was abducted at gunpoint in 1989 Team Kirsti Marohn David Unze Stephanie Dickrell Jenny Berg David Schwarz and Jason Wachter photographers Led by editor Lisa Schwarz In 2012 the Times won the Society of American Business Editors and Writers SABEW Best in Business Innovation Award for a multimedia reporting project about the impact of the Bakken oil boom on Central Minnesota almost two states away Judges comments on Chasing Futures in the Oil Patch were The paper was able to show readers a direct relationship from the boom in North Dakota to St Cloud s economy The package showed an extraordinary investment of time thought and space by the paper to the story although St Cloud has limited resources The project also won first place for in depth reporting from the Minnesota Society of Professional Journalists 14 Team Kevin Allenspach Kimm Anderson photographer Lisa Sabyan graphic artist Led by editor Lisa Schwarz In 2010 the Times won the national Sigma Delta Chi Society of Professional Journalists award for Investigative Reporting for an 18 month project exploring the public economic and personal costs of dozens of failed housing developments in the Great Recession Team Kirsti Marohn Britt Johnson Lisa Sabyan graphic artist Led by editor Lisa Schwarz In 2007 the Times won the national Knight Batten Award for Innovations in Journalism Multimedia for Downtown After Dark a mulitmedia reporting project that showed a college community what its bar district looked like after everyone but the students hospitality workers and law enforcement was in bed Team Kari Petrie Dave Schwarz photographer Led by editor Lisa Schwarz In 2004 the Times embedded reporter Michelle Tan and photographer Dave Schwarz with the 367th Infantry assigned to Bagram Afghanistan for three weeks In addition to daily reports the Times produced a book from their reporting Led by editor Rene Kaluza Decline and Downsizing editThe Times had daily circulation of more than 30 000 nearing 40 000 on Sundays as recently as the mid 2000s and employed more than 40 people in the newsroom and more than 250 on site in its printing advertising and business operations The presses were retired in 2009 due to proximity of a larger company owned printing operation in the Minneapolis St Paul metro area In 2018 the building at 3000 7th Ave North was sold along with other Gannett real estate nationwide to Twenty Lake Holding a subsidiary of Alden Global Capital 15 The Times relocated its then 35 total employees to a custom remodeled leased property at 24 Eighth Avenue South in downtown St Cloud on April 1 2019 16 Following its 2018 purchase by Gatehouse Media parent company Gannett eliminated more than half 12 000 of its newsroom jobs nationwide between 2019 and 2022 cuts substantially deeper than the rate of newspaper revenue decline The downsizing is blamed in part on millions of dollars in debt payments related to the Gatehouse Gannett deal 17 The Times editor resigned in July 2022 leaving a news staff of nine behind 18 After layoffs in August 2022 voluntary buyouts in December 2022 and resignations a single reporter remained by December 2022 to cover Minnesota s fifth largest metropolitan area with a population of 200 000 Industry observers referred to the shell publication as a ghost paper 19 Axios website asked Gannett in December 2022 how the bare bones St Cloud staff could keep producing a daily paper The email response While incredibly difficult implementing these efficiencies and responding decisively to the ongoing macroeconomic volatility will continue to propel Gannett s future 20 The last remaining news reporter at the paper resigned in January 2023 to join St Cloud Live a new free online publication produced by The Forum Communications Company headquartered in Fargo North Dakota 155 miles northwest of St Cloud by Interstate 94 A sports reporter was hired later in 2023 as the Times next sole news staffer Forum Chief Content Office Mary Jo Hotzler said St Cloud from a geographical standpoint makes sense But more than that we are deeply committed to local journalism and see a need in St Cloud 21 22 23 In 2022 Gannett ended newspaper delivery of the Times distributing the paper through the U S Mail instead eliminating a separate Saturday edition and delivering the Sunday paper on Saturday instead Online Digital editThe newspaper s website sctimes com was established in 1998 4 and refers to the publication as the SC Times The publication offers readers a digital only option References edit Minnesota Newspaper Directory 2024 PDF Minnesota Newspaper Association Archived PDF from the original on March 15 2024 Retrieved March 28 2024 About St Cloud times St Cloud Minn 1988 current Chronicling America Library of Congress Retrieved January 24 2020 The St Cloud daily times Library of Congress Library of Congress Retrieved July 29 2021 a b c d e f g Our History St Cloud Times Retrieved July 29 2021 ECM to print St Cloud Times HometownSource com July 6 2015 Retrieved July 28 2021 St Cloud Journal Minnesota Historical Society Minnesota Digital Newspaper Hub a b Lehman Christopher P 2019 Slavery s reach Southern slaveholders in the North Star State Saint Paul MN Minnesota Historical Society Press pp 179 181 ISBN 9781681341354 Espinoza Ambar May 7 2010 St Cloud professor unearths history of slavery in Minnesota MPR News Retrieved July 28 2021 Ambar Espinoza St Cloud professor unearths history of slavery in Minnesota MPRnews St Paul May 7 2010 Digital Newspapers at MNHS The St Cloud Journal St Cloud Minn 1866 1876 Minnesota Historical Society Digital Newspapers At MNHS John Reinan Deep staff cuts leave St Cloud Times a ghost paper Minneapolis Star Tribune December 9 2022 MNA MNA June 12 2023 The Vance Trophy Minnesota Newspaper Association Retrieved June 12 2023 chrome extension efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj http www mnspj org wp content uploads 2013 Program pdf O Connell Jonathan February 11 2019 A hedge fund s mercenary strategy Buy newspapers slash jobs sell the buildings The Washington Post Retrieved June 21 2023 Haecherl Anna March 29 2019 SC Times moves into its new downtown office Monday Joshua Benton The scale of local news destruction in Gannett s markets is astonishing NiemanLab March 9 2023 Times staff report July 29 2022 Lisa Schwarz to leave St Cloud Times join state newspaper association St Cloud Times p 1 Retrieved June 12 2023 John Reinan Deep staff cuts leave St Cloud Times a ghost paper Serving a region of 200 000 residents the paper now has a news staff of two Minneapolis Star Tribune December 9 2022 Nick Halter and Torey Van Oot The St Cloud Times newsroom decimated by staff cuts Axios Twin Cities December 8 2022 Adam Uren Last remaining St Cloud Times reporter leaving for new Forum Communications rival The St Cloud Times has been decimated by reporter departures and cuts by parent company Gannett Jan 24 2023 Audrey Kennedy St Cloud Times newsroom loses lone reporter Axios Twin Cities January 24th 2023 Jennifer Hoff Last St Cloud Times reporter leaves newspaper KARE 11 News January 27 2023External links editOfficial website 45 33 34 N 94 09 39 W 45 559411 N 94 160761 W 45 559411 94 160761 D St Cloud Times Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Cloud Times amp oldid 1216091915, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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