Great West Newspapers Explained

Great West Media L.P.
Type:Private
Foundation:1995
Location:340 Carleton Drive
St. Albert, Alberta
T8N 7L3
Key People:Duff Jamison, President and CEO
Brian Bachynski, Executive VP
Area Served:Alberta
Industry:Mass media
Products:20 weekly newspapers and websites
Parent:Glacier Media, 50%
Jamison Newspapers, 50%
Subsid:Mountain View Publishing
Homepage:www.greatwest.ca
Footnotes:[1]

Great West Media Limited Partnership is a Canadian publisher of weekly newspapers in the province of Alberta. It is headquartered in St. Albert, Alberta.

The company is jointly owned by Glacier Media, a Vancouver-based publisher, and the local family business Jamison Newspapers, which operates Great West's properties.

History

Great West was founded in 1995 as a partnership between Southam Inc. and the Jamison family, which had owned the St. Albert Gazette since 1966 (the newspaper itself had been founded in 1961). The Jamisons had run the paper as a family business but prided themselves on professional journalism; the Gazette staff produced a daily newspaper for the 1978 Commonwealth Games in Edmonton.[2]

The Gazette had first partnered with Southam in 1988, when the Jamisons began printing suburban editions of Neighbours, a publication of the Southam-owned Edmonton Journal, as well as some colour comics and television inserts for the Journal and Calgary Herald.[3]

Over the next 15 years, Great West grew its holdings to 20 weekly newspapers across the province. In 1997, Southam was purchased by Hollinger Inc. In 2005, Jamison Newspapers bought out its partner but sold a 50% stake in Great West to Glacier Media. The company built a $25 million office and printing plant in Campbell Business Park. In August, 2012, the company announced that it struck a deal with Postmedia to print the Edmonton Journal. The Journal will begin printing at Great West's facility in the late spring of 2013.[3]

Great West swapped newspapers with Black Press in 2010, gaining the Rocky Mountain Outlook in Canmore, Alberta, and unloading the Red Deer Express, a weekly that competed with Black's daily Red Deer Advocate. The swap was part of a larger deal that saw Glacier sell many of its British Columbia newspapers to Black.[4]

Glacier continued to operate a competing award-winning weekly in St. Albert, the Saint City News, until 2010, when the paper was sold to Great West. Great West closed the Saint City News in 2011, citing a decline in advertising revenue.[5]

Properties

Great West newspapers, all of which are weeklies based in Alberta, are:[6]

Great West Media also owns 51 Degrees North magazine, a digital and print publication focused on the people of the Bow Valley.

The company also owns several regional publications and an interest in Glacier Media's agricultural publications.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About: Great West. GreatWest.ca. June 20, 2024.
  2. News: The Family That Works Together Produces a Newspaper. 4B . October 12, 2011. March 28, 2012. St. Albert Gazette.
  3. News: The Gazette Through the Ages. 14B. October 12, 2011. March 28, 2012. St. Albert Gazette.
  4. News: Black Press Buys Red Deer Express Newspaper. https://archive.today/20130201013411/http://www.reddeeradvocate.com/business/provincial_biz/Black_Press_purchases_Red_Deer_Express_newspaper_97526709.html?mobile=true. dead. February 1, 2013. June 30, 2010. Red Deer Advocate. Red Deer, Alta.. March 28, 2012.
  5. News: Saint City News Shuts Down. July 2, 2011. March 28, 2012. Cory. Hare. St. Albert Gazette.
  6. Web site: Local News Publications . 2023-11-08 . Great West Media . en-US.