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Detroit News to operate independently at year's end
Detroit News to operate independently at year's end

Miami Herald

time16-06-2025

  • Business
  • Miami Herald

Detroit News to operate independently at year's end

The Detroit News will begin operating independently at year's end following the conclusion of its 36-year partnership with the Detroit Free Press, The News announced Monday. The move will allow The News to operate more closely with its sister papers in Detroit's suburbs, including The Oakland Press, the (Royal Oak) Daily Tribune, the Macomb Daily, the (Southgate) News-Herald and others, which share the same ownership as The News. "Together, we're uniquely positioned to provide coverage of Metro Detroit like no single news organization can," said Gary Miles, editor and publisher of The News. "That's good for readers and advertisers, as well." Continuously published since August 1873, The News has been a partner in a joint operating agreement (JOA) with the Free Press that has been run by the Detroit Media Partnership since 1989, through which both Detroit-based newspapers have maintained separate and competitive newsrooms. Their business operations, including production, distribution and advertising, have been jointly run by the partnership. That partnership, most recently renewed in 2005 with a 20-year term, is set to expire following publication of the Dec. 28 print edition. "The partnership did what it was intended to do – it preserved two great and distinct media voices during a time of great upheaval in our industry," Miles said. "We're excited to return to a landscape in which we operate completely independently for readers and our many partners, producing more of the outstanding journalism they need and expect." For three consecutive years, The News has been named the state's top newspaper by the Michigan Press Association, as judged by journalists in other states. Founded in 1873 as a smaller, low-cost and independent paper in a time of highly partisan outlets, The Evening News proceeded to mark several firsts in the media industry. It was a pioneer in aerial photography, launched the nation's first commercial radio station (now WWJ-AM, in 1920), the state's first television station (now WDIV-TV, Channel 4) and won the nation's first Pulitzer Prize in photography in 1942. It was the first of its three Pulitzers, considered the top prize in journalism. The Scripps family sold the Evening News Association to the Gannett Co. in 1986. The owners of The News and Free Press almost immediately filed for federal approval of the JOA, declaring the Free Press a failing newspaper under the Newspaper Preservation Act. The partnership was approved in 1989. In 2005, Gannett sold The News to MediaNews Group and purchased the Free Press, giving the JOA a 20-year term, which expires on the last Sunday of December. MediaNews Group acquired The Oakland Press, Macomb Daily, Daily Tribune, News-Herald and Dearborn Press & Guide and Voice newspapers eight years later, but collaboration with The News was limited due to its partnership in the JOA. MediaNews Group owns more than 70 other daily newspapers and more than 100 weekly newspapers across the country. The Free Press is owned by Gannett Co. Inc., which has managed the Detroit Media Partnership as general partner since 2005. Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Detroit News, Free Press to end joint operating agreement, will run independently
Detroit News, Free Press to end joint operating agreement, will run independently

CBS News

time16-06-2025

  • Business
  • CBS News

Detroit News, Free Press to end joint operating agreement, will run independently

The Detroit News and Detroit Free Press, competitors in content who shared business operations for decades, are ending their joint operating agreement and will run independently of each other. Both newspapers issued announcements on their websites Monday morning about the decision. The joint operating agreement will expire Dec. 31. Gannett did not give a public reason in the reports for ending the business deal. Such partnerships sprang up across the country after Congress first approved the Newspaper Preservation Act in 1970. At one time, there were 28 joint operating agreements supporting certain metro areas that had multiple newspapers. The last one remaining after this one wraps will be in Las Vegas. Detroit's joint operating agreement was last renewed in 2005 with a 20-year term. History of Detroit newspapers The Detroit Free Press was founded in 1831. The Detroit News' history dates back to 1873. The Detroit Media Partnership began in 1989 under conditions allowed for under the Newspaper Preservation Act, with the argument in court that the Free Press, then owned by Knight-Ridder, was at risk of shutting down. Under the plan, production, distribution and advertising have been jointly run by the partnership. The newspapers continued to have separate and competitive newsrooms. The Sterling Heights production facility, where both newspapers have been printed, was part of that business cooperation. Layoffs will begin in July for a total of 109 Gannett Publishing Services employees at that facility, which has been sold, and the lease is ending. Newspaper production will be moved to other sites. Newspaper industry changes Over the years, there have been ownership changes to the two newspapers along with changes and business consolidations in the U.S. newspaper industry. Locally, The Detroit News was a Gannett newspaper at the time the joint operating agreement began. Then in 2005, Gannett sold The Detroit News to MediaNews Group and purchased the Detroit Free Press. The Knight-Ridder company no longer exists. In the meantime, Gannett's footprint in Michigan expanded to include several smaller newspapers such as The Monroe News and the Livingston Daily that were once independent or part of the former GateHouse Media company. And MediaNews Group has acquired several other Michigan newspapers, such as The Oakland Press and Macomb Daily. "The tale of the two daily newspapers in Detroit is one of those truly great American stories," said Nicole Avery Nichols, editor and vice president of the Free Press said in her newspaper's article. "It's one that centers on how a tremendous challenge was overcome by an epic battle — in this case, it was a fight to sustain robust local journalism on behalf of metro Detroiters. "The partnership did what it was intended to do – it preserved two great and distinct media voices during a time of great upheaval in our industry," Gary Miles, editor and publisher of The Detroit News, said in his newspaper's article. "We're excited to return to a landscape in which we operate completely independently for readers and our many partners, producing more of the outstanding journalism they need and expect."

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