The Oregonian to cut print days to 4 a week
Published 4:08 pm Tuesday, August 1, 2023
- The Oregonian in Portland, once Oregon's largest daily newspaper, will only print newspapers four days a week beginning in January.
The Oregonian will discontinue printing a newspaper on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, bringing an end to 142 years of daily print publication early next year.
The change takes effect Jan. 1. It is not expected to affect news staffing or news gathering operations.
The newsroom will continue to publish digital editions of the newspaper, and stories on OregonLive, seven days a week.
The company moved to four-day-a-week home delivery a decade ago.
It continued to print a small run of papers on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, primarily for newsstand sales, but some avid readers made arrangements with their newspaper carrier to deliver all seven days.
At the time, newsstand sales were at about 15,000 a day. Today, that number of so-called “single-copy” sales has dwindled to about 3,600.
“The demand for single copies has continued to wane,” said John Maher, president of the Oregonian Media Group and publisher of The Oregonian/OregonLive. “When we look at the trend, it makes sense to make this change.”
It’s been a painful time for newspapers, in Oregon and elsewhere.
The Medford Mail Tribune shut down in January and was replaced by the EO Media’s Rogue Vally Times. The Eugene Register-Guard and Salem Statesman Journal — the second and third-largest papers in the state, both owned by Gannett Co. — have effectively combined operations.
Nationally, about 360 other papers have failed since 2019, according to a 2022 study prepared in collaboration with the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.
Oregonian Media Group has managed to stabilize itself and today is profitable, Maher said. OregonLive and related sites attract about 7 million unique readers a month.
Sunday print circulation was 44,294 as of March 31, according to the Alliance for Audited Media.
Average daily circulation was 29,325.
Those numbers represent a 70% decline since 2017.
The news organization also produces a digital replica version of the newspaper each day for readers who prefer the traditional format of a newspaper rather than a website.
Maher thanked the seven-day-a-week customers. “They are among the most passionate readers of our paper and I’m really thankful for their support,” he said.