Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Postmedia To Cut Salary Expenses By 20 Per Cent Through Buyouts

The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2016 01:08 PM
  • Postmedia To Cut Salary Expenses By 20 Per Cent Through Buyouts
TORONTO — Postmedia says it plans to reduce its salary expenses by 20 per cent through voluntary staff buyouts, adding that layoffs are possible if its target isn't met.
 
The company says staff have until Nov. 8 to apply for the buyouts.
 
In January, Postmedia cut 90 jobs and merged newsrooms in four cities, but maintained separate papers in each location.
 
A LOOK AT SOME OF THIS YEAR'S BLOWS TO CANADA'S PRINT MEDIA INDUSTRY
 
Canada's print media landscape has suffered more than its fair share of casualties this year, with buyouts and layoffs a common recurrence in the industry. On Thursday, Postmedia announced it plans to reduce its salary expenses by 20 per cent through voluntary staff buyouts, though it acknowledged layoffs are possible if its target isn't met.
 
 
Here's a look at some of the other blows sustained by the print media sector in 2016:
 
Jan. 19: Postmedia announces it will cut approximately 90 jobs and merge newsrooms in four cities to slash costs amid mounting revenue losses. The company owns two newspapers each in Ottawa, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver.
 
Aug. 9: Torstar, the company that owns the Toronto Star, says it's laying off more than 50 people, mostly from its newsroom and tablet edition, citing continuing declines in print advertising revenue. Twenty-two employees, including 19 full-time workers in the Toronto Star newsroom, are among those to be let go.
 
Sept. 8: The Globe and Mail offers voluntary buyouts to 40 of its approximately 650 staff. Publisher and CEO Phillip Crawley says the buyouts will be done by the end of November.
 
 
Sept. 30: Rogers Media triggers a sweeping overhaul of its magazines — with Flare, Sportsnet, MoneySense and Canadian Business becoming online-only publications in January — in response to declines in subscribers and print advertising revenue. 
 
Other changes to take effect next year will see Maclean's, Chatelaine and Today's Parent cut the number of print editions that they publish. Rogers says it is also looking to sell all of its business-to-business magazines as well as its French publications. The media giant says some jobs will be lost, though it couldn't say how many.

MORE National ARTICLES

Crude Oil Prices, Toronto Stock Market Reach Highest Levels Since Summer 2015

Crude Oil Prices, Toronto Stock Market Reach Highest Levels Since Summer 2015
The price of oil and Toronto's main stock index both settled Wednesday at highs not seen in more than 15 months, buoyed by signs that Saudi Arabia foresees an end to the downturn in crude prices.

Crude Oil Prices, Toronto Stock Market Reach Highest Levels Since Summer 2015

New Date Set For Case Of Surrey Mountie Charged With Child Luring

New Date Set For Case Of Surrey Mountie Charged With Child Luring
The case of an RCMP officer charged with child luring has been put over to Nov. 2 in B.C. provincial court.

New Date Set For Case Of Surrey Mountie Charged With Child Luring

Girl's Leg Broken During Cheese-Rolling Festival In Whistler, B.C.: Lawsuit

Girl's Leg Broken During Cheese-Rolling Festival In Whistler, B.C.: Lawsuit
VANCOUVER — A lawsuit alleges that an annual cheese-rolling competition in Whistler, B.C., went from fun to frightening when a runaway wheel of cheddar crashed into a three-year-old girl.

Girl's Leg Broken During Cheese-Rolling Festival In Whistler, B.C.: Lawsuit

Rare Comic Book That Could Be Worth Thousands Stolen In Vancouver

Rare Comic Book That Could Be Worth Thousands Stolen In Vancouver
  The Vancouver Police Department says a 45-kilogram safe was stolen from a home, with the stack of valuable comics inside.

Rare Comic Book That Could Be Worth Thousands Stolen In Vancouver

Immigration Spike On The Table, But 450,000 Newcomers 'Huge Figure': John McCallum

Immigration Spike On The Table, But 450,000 Newcomers 'Huge Figure': John McCallum
McCallum suggests the recommendation — a 50 per cent increase in targets to 450,000 people a year, targeting skilled, entrepreneurial newcomers — might be too ambitious.

Immigration Spike On The Table, But 450,000 Newcomers 'Huge Figure': John McCallum

Canadian Humanitarian Missing After Small Plane Crash In The Dominican Republic

Canadian Humanitarian Missing After Small Plane Crash In The Dominican Republic
A Canadian humanitarian worker is among three people missing after a small plane crashed off the north coast of the Dominican Republic.

Canadian Humanitarian Missing After Small Plane Crash In The Dominican Republic