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Archive for May, 2012

Northern Reporter makes time to talk time

May 31, 2012 Comments off

I thought it appropriate to begin my life under the B.C. Reporter Reporter umbrella by talking about time, or, more specifically, the lack of it.

For instance, when Reporter Reporter announced the merger of our blogs, I had meant to write something to get the ball rolling.

That didn’t work out so well.

As time went on, time slipped by. How very cruel.

The more I thought about the lack of time on my side — I effectively have no personal time at the moment — the more I thought about how that affects the work I do. I’m just going to assume I’ve mentioned in the past the fact that I have, in my career, worked in a single person newsroom.

Even in the non-single person offices, the news beats for all the reporters basically comes down to who’s in the office when something happens (Well, somewhat.).

Resources can be scarce, is what I’m getting at.

To go back a little farther, I recall a fact I did reveal in one of my early entries is that I’m not a journalism school graduate. I’ve worked with such people, and they’re great, and being around them makes me feel at a disadvantage. They’ve worked under professors, done their research, did the scholastic training. Most, if not all, of what I know I’ve learned is through trial and error. (Hence the reason I exist as a blog.)

So, time is lacking, and I personally lack the formal training many colleagues have. That’s the basis for the trouble I sometimes feel I get into. I don’t have enough time or training to follow up on news tips for larger stories.

For instance, I was asked to follow up on a story about a company that’s working in the area which, in contrast to earlier, stated objectives, might not be hiring all the local people they can hire, preferring outside workers. That’s entirely speculation, of course. But I don’t actually have the training to form a strategy for approaching such a story, or even the time to do such.

I can just ask the company, but I’m sure I’ll get the usual statement as any company would give. Then what? Do I track down all the eligible local companies I can which could be doing work? How ‘local’ do I define ‘local’? And I suppose I would have to know what qualifications are being sought to really understand who’s being left out, if anyone. That’s a lot of work in a week for a single story.

And when there’s all the rest of the stories in the week that need written, and only so many people available to write them, how can it be justified to shift resources into a single, albeit potentially important, story?

I wish I had an answer to all this, but it’ll have to wait. I’ve run out of time for now.

Categories: Uncategorized

A boring post (unless you need a new gig)

May 23, 2012 Comments off

Here’s a project: compare the number of posts on this blog to B.C.’s weather patterns. I’d bet you’d find a correlation between participation and blog activity. That’s my way of blaming the weather for the lack of posts in recent weeks. And also my way of saying that postings may be relatively scarce in weeks and months to come. I’ll still blog, but I’ve got other things happening. I’ve also been assured Northern Reporter’s got something in the pipeline to prove that I haven’t pulled a Sarah Phillips on him.

In the meantime, apply for a job: the Prince George Citizen needs a reporter, as does the Alberni Valley Times, Burnaby Now, Fernie Free Press, and North Shore Outlook.

Categories: Housekeeping Tags:

Vancouver Courier sportswriter wins spot on Lingerie Football League team

May 9, 2012 Comments off

So, this happened:

Vancouver Courier sports reporter Megan Stewart won a spot on the Lingerie Football League’s B.C. entry, the B.C. Angels, after taking part in a tryout last month.

See the column (w/ not-so-revealing photo) here.

Megan explains that while she’s won a spot (trying out in a hoodie and tight-fitting pants), she was still not 100 per cent sure that she’d suit up in the team’s Aug. 25 opener in Abbotsford.

I don’t know if I’ll stay and play; the lacy uniforms include a garter belt.

Playing tackle football-a pursuit that isn’t widely available to girls or women-is exhilarating. I’m learning just how complex, fast and incredibly fun a game it is. And I’m already loyal to my Angel teammates and their ambitions to play pro-am sports.

But she seems to be coming around to the idea. On Wednesday she tweeted: “Great first session this morning with my rad personal trainer @fit_for_sport. I will be ready to wear a garter belt on the gridiron. #LFL

We’ll be watching (not like that, you pervs!) to see how this thing develops. As Megan notes, a Toronto team folded last year citing mismanagement and safety concerns.

What the hell is Bob Doull up to?

May 3, 2012 4 comments

Unless you work for him, or have worked for him in the distant past, you may not know the name Bob Doull. But quite slowly over recent years, Robert W. Doull has been amassing a strange collection of community papers around British Columbia. And yet, it’s hard to get a sense of his real objective.

So, with that said, I’m going to put out what information I’ve collected and see if anyone can make sense of it all. (I would love it if Bob emailed me to explain his grand designs to this blog’s readers).

Here we go:

The former cartoonist of the Banff Crag and Canyon has the most info about Doull’s backgroud here.

Among the highlights, according to that writer: Doull started as a writer at the (left-wing) Georgia Straight. He later became general manager of (the right-wing) Alberta Report before he started buying papers in 1987. First under the name Black Tusk Holdings, and later as WestMount Press, Doull built a chain of 21 papers, mostly in the Rocky Mountain area of B.C. and Alberta.

The cartoonist praises Doull for “believing in quality newspapers” and turning both the Crag and the Canmore Leader into award-winning publications.

Doull is quoted in an American Journalism Review article in 1996 as saying:

“We take the long view . . . If we lose credibility with readers, it will do us more harm than good in the long run.” And: “During the recession, we didn’t cut any positions. We had a higher level of benefits than provided by union shops… We have to keep people we value.”

In 1998, Doull sold his chain to a subsidiary of Sun Media, according to the cartoonist. He then disappeared for a bit.

In 2005, he was involved in something called the Christian History Project. According to Kaye Corbett of the Vernon Daily Courier, when the project ran into trouble, Doull blamed a “moslem” for destroying records and setting the company back $700,000.

Corbett wrote:

Islamic terror has reached Canada, at least on paper, and at least in the mind of newspaper publisher Bob Doull.

As president and CEO of the Christian History Project, Doull has been forced to lay off about 50 people and the planned 12 volumes of the $3-$5-million project, ‘The Christians — Their First Two Thousand Years’ has ceased publication after only six volumes. And he identified a former technician of destroying or retrieving all the records, including the volumes of work from outstanding artists and writers, plus all the customer records from the expensive computer system, based in Edmonton, Alberta.

Doull, who is publisher of a number of community newspapers in British Columbia and Alberta, said that ‘B’, a member of contact center administration for the project, was either a Moslem or connected with Moslems in halting the massive publishing undertaking.

…..

While Doull placed the blame on a “Moslem,” the former executive editor of “The Christians”, Paul Stanway pinpointed that ‘B’ was not a Moslem, but a “beer-swigging Anglican.” When informed of Doull’s assessment of the situation, he said, the project had suffered financial woes with “overspending” before the computer problems. Stanway is the former editor, and now columnist, with the Edmonton Sun.

Doull informed me that ‘B’ had been questioned by Edmonton police, but had been released, and it’s not known where he might be.

In 2006, the project was declared dead. (Kaye posted his columns were posted on the Internet in 2007, hence the date at the top of the post).

In 2006, Doull founded Corvus Publishing and later bought and sold the Abbotsford Post).

In January 2010, Doull (as Corvus) bought the Columbia Valley Pioneer. It was controlled by a company first called Abel Creek Publishing, of which Doull was the president. Now it’s controlled by Misko Publishing Limited Partnership. Doull is the president of that company.

Here’s what the Pioneer wrote about Doull when he bought the paper:

Corvus Publishing was founded in 2006 by Robert W. Doull of Penticton. “I felt that the large chainswere harming papers by attempting to standardize allaspects of their decision-making and stripping jobsout of small communities,” Mr. Doull said.

He explained that the initial concept of Corvuswas based on three principles.

“Firstly, the future of print publishing lies in adedication to quality product with opportunities for the staff to be creatively challenged. Secondly, employees need to be treated respectfully with full responsibility for their own work. Finally, local papers need tobe locally managed,” he said.

Corvus is a full or partial owner of six other news-papers – one on the Sunshine Coast, three in theOkanagan, and two in northern B.C.

Several months later, Doull bought several papers: Kamloops This Week, Prince George Free Press, and the Merritt Herald. The Prince George Citizen reported that the Free Press is now operated by a company listed as Prince George Publications Limited Partnership while KTW and the Free Press are operated by Thompson River Publications Limited Partnership. The Citizen said the companies controlled 10 papers. KTW editor Chris Foulds said not much change had taken place over the first two months under the new bosses:

“Regular readers of Kamloops This Week would never know we had been sold by Black Press to Thompson River had we not announced it in the newspaper and online at kamloopsthisweek.com.

And, that is because, from an editorial point of view, nothing has changed.

Our staffing remains the same (that is to say it remains skeletal, which I am fond of continually reminding my boss!), as does and the pursuit of news and stories.”

Chris also did some speculating:

“Doull also bought Black Press’s Merritt Herald and Prince George Free Press newspapers as part of the deal, which may or may not be connected to a July deal that saw Black Press buy a number of newspapers in the Kootenays from Glacier, which happens to own the Kamloops Daily News.”

Doull is listed here as also controlling the Invermere Valley Sentinel and Oliver Chronicle. No date on that document, but of note, Kamloops This Week is listed as being owned by Black, which obviously dates it to pre-Oct. 2010. It lists the papers as “Independent (or via Black Press).”

In 2011, Doull got back into the alt-weekly game by purchasing both Edmonton weekly publications: Vue Weekly and See. He then merged the two fter declaring that “the market no longer supports two alternative weeklies.” The new, merged Vue is operated by Postvue Publishing Limited Partnership.

An Edmonton Journal article on the sale (in which Doull says the existence of two alt-weeklies was originally premised on a dispute) has some revealing nuggets.

First, and least revealing, the Journal article says Doull owns 13 papers in B.C. Can someone fill in the rest for me?

Doull also said he wanted to keep both paper’s staffs.

Then there’s this, in which Doull speaks, apparently, about chains of alt-weeklies:

“We’ve always agonized about that,” said Doull, who operates 13 community newspapers in B.C. “At what point do you become a chain? I live in Penticton and operate out of my basement. I’m the sole director of the company, so I’m responsible for the decisions. In that sense we’re independent. But you’re never really independent. You always have banks, shareholders.”

So now we know what Doull headquarters looks like.

On April 26, 2012, the Jasper Fitzhugh reported that it had been sold to Bob Doull, president of Aberdeen Publishing.

So what’s the game here? I honestly have no idea.

Doull’s papers in Kamloops and Prince George still use Black Press websites and Black Press regional copy. But in Invermere, his Columbia Valley Pioneer competes against a Black paper. On top of that, there is a rumour floating around that Doull may have some deal with Glacier Media. If such a deal exists, no money has changed hands. None of the Limited Partnerships listed above are mentioned in Glacier’s financial filings. As a public company, Glacier is required by law to declare investments in other companies. (Private companies, like Black Press, are not traded publicly don’t have to list their investments.)

I’ll just note that, from the outside, Doull seems to take hands-off ownership to a strange extreme. That, obviously, isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Whatever his beliefs may be, he’s not writing editorials for his mismash of papers.

Do you know more? Email me at bclocalreporter@gmail.com or leave a comment.

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