Employees at the Seattle Post-Intelligence learned today that boxes and bins are slated to be delivered to the newsroom later this week - as in to help staffers clean out their desks.
It's just the latest sign that the paper is doomed, following the footsteps of the Rocky Mountain News which shut down on Feb. 27. The PI reportedly will go to an all-online version, keeping just 20 of its 170 employees.
All of this is bringing back some bad memories. I was working for a Palo Alto-based newspaper, the Peninsula Times Tribune, on Nov. 2, 1992, when our owners, the Tribune Co., announced we were up for sale. Like the News and the PI, the owners said if a buyer was not found within a few months, the newspaper would be closed.
As with those papers, no buyer was found. (It's not clear whether TribCo was ever serious about a sale. The prime downtown-Palo Alto real estate was worth more than the newspaper itself.) And as with the News, the PTT suddenly was closed on March 14, 1993, several weeks before the sale deadline.
The signs of a pending closure were everywhere for those of us who were still working there. We had long since been asked to empty our own trash and warned to make copies of our clips. (Nothing was online in those days.) Some of us had gone downstairs (our press was on site) and we could see that we had stopped stocking up on ink and paper rolls. Not good.
The odd thing is the Peninsula Times Tribune (created by the merger of the Palo Alto Times and the Redwood City Tribune) had just celebrated the 100th anniversary of its publication.
The Rocky Mountain News closed just two months shy of its 150th. The PI has been publishing for 146 years. What is it about March and newspapers folding?
I just hope that when the time comes, the PI staff is given a chance to put a decent farewell edition. We never had that chance.
- Paul Gullixson
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