New York Times to reduce page size and close a plant in 2008
The New York Times is planning to reduce the size of the newspaper, making it narrower by one and a half inches, and to close its printing operation in Edison, N.J., company officials said yesterday.
The changes, to go into effect in April 2008, will be accompanied by a phased-in redesign of the paper and will mean the loss of 250 production-related jobs.
Several other American broadsheets reduced their size a few years ago, and many are planning further shrinkage to cut costs as the price of newsprint climbs and newspapers lose readers and advertisers to the Internet.
The Times, which made the announcement last night on the eve of its quarterly earnings report, said it would sublet its plant in Edison and consolidate its regional printing facilities at its newer plant in College Point, in Queens.
That consolidation will mean the loss of about a third of the total production work force of 800.
Source: Katharine Q. Seelye, The New York Times
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Quite inevitable. This has already happened to many newspapers around the world. The Times of London went totally tabloid (though they prefer to call it compact). It’s an evolutionary change in journalism, from which, I guess, no paper is exempt.
Comment by Pradeep Nair — September 17, 2006 @ 8:44 pm