The Quebec government is providing $5 million in interim financing to help a struggling French-language newspaper chain with outlets in the National Capital Region.
Pierre Fitzgibbon, minister of the economy and innovation, announced the loan from Investissement Quebec for Le Groupe Capitales Medias (GCM), whose daily newspapers include Le Droit of Gatineau-Ottawa and the Quebec City Le Soleil.
“It is impossible to envisage the closure of these six newspapers,” Fitzgibbon said at a news conference accompanied by Culture and Communications Minister Nathalie Roy. Through this interim loan, Fitzgibbon said he wants to “promote the maintenance of newspapers and regional information and preserve jobs.”
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uOttawa Professor Guy-Vincent Jourdan says he initially never would have guessed a year ago he’d be concocting simulated social media feeds and made-up news broadcasts. But that was before becoming
He cautioned that the government will not become a shareholder and the money will be used to establish a legal process to seek offers for the sale of the company in whole or in part.
Fitzgibbon also announced that former federal cabinet minister Martin Cauchon, who founded the newspaper chain, has resigned as executive chairman. He will remain until the arrival of an acting executive chairman.
The $5 million should allow the six dailies to keep publishing for six months, he said.
“It’s journalism that needs to be protected, not a specific press owner, and that’s what we’re doing today,” added Roy.
The group owning several regional dailies has filed a notice of intent in order to protect itself against bankruptcy.
Capitals Media Group CEO Claude Gagnon wrote on Le Soleil’s website that the chain’s dailies were affected by a drop in advertising revenue resulting from fierce competition from social media giants Facebook and Google.
“This legal process and the funding from the government of Quebec will therefore enable GCM to continue its normal activities and to consider all options to ensure the sustainability of the group’s entities,” he added.
The newspaper chain founded in 2015 has been experiencing liquidity problems for some time.
Relief was expressed from affected communities after the announcement.
“For a big city like Gatineau, it’s essential to have a daily newspaper. There is no true democracy without the media. A fundamental solution is needed for companies that produce essential information are able to survive,” said Mayor Maxime Pedneaud-Jobin.
Premier Francois Legault promised Sunday that his government will “do everything” so that the newspapers survive a reported threat of closure as of Aug. 26. He previously said the government would be open to emergency one-time help until a general media assistance program is put in place.
The company also owns Le Nouvelliste in Trois-Rivieres, La Tribune in Sherbrooke, La Voix de l’Est in Granby and Le Quotidien in Saguenay.
Quebecor Inc., which publishes the Journal de Quebec and Le Journal de Montreal, has expressed interest in the newspapers but the Liberal opposition is worried about media concentration.