After 23 years, N.W.T.'s Deh Cho Drum newspaper suspends publication - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:45 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

After 23 years, N.W.T.'s Deh Cho Drum newspaper suspends publication

The Deh Cho Drum, a weekly newspaper that covers communities in N.W.T.'s Dehcho region, announced it's running its final issue Thursday.

'End of an era!' says publisher in Facebook post unveiling final issue

The weekly Deh Cho Drum has been covering communities in N.W.T.'s Dehcho region since 1994. (Sara Minogue/CBC)

The Deh Cho Drum, a weekly newspaper thatcovers communities in N.W.T.'s Dehchoregion, will run its final issue this week.

The paper's publisher announced thatThursday's issue will be its last, and that publication is being "suspended" in a Facebookpost on Wednesday afternoon.

"End of an era!" the post read, with a picture of a retrospectivefront page.

Both Michael Scott, general manager at Northern News Services, and Mike Bryant, senioreditor, declined an interview ahead of the announcement.

In an editorial published in Thursday's paper Scott notes that, "declining advertising revenue and shipping costs in a small market have made the publication of the Deh Cho Drum untenable. As a private business, we survive by selling newspapers and advertising."

"It's a real loss," said Bob Norwegian, a local historian.

"Prettywell everybody, that's their only communication with each other [between communities], something to discuss over at the coffee shops."

Binding communities together

Staffed byone reporter/editor based inFort Simpson, the paper also covered Jean Marie River, Nahanni Butte, Fort Liard, Fort Providence,Kakisa, Wrigley, and Sambaa K'e.

"The paper kind of bound all the Dehcho communities together," said former Fort Simpson mayor Sean Whelly.

Whelly said that as a political figure he had his disagreements with the paper on occasion, but that there was always mutual respect with the reporters at the Drum.

"You would get stories that you wishcould have been presented slightly differently, but I always foundthe reporters to be even-handed," he said.

The paper has been covering the Dehcho region since 1994. Its predecessor, the Mackenzie Times, covered the region prior to that.

The exact cause for the closure is not yet publicly known, but the shuttering of community papers has become commonplace across Canada in recent years. Declining ad revenue is often to blame.

Loss for the region

Meagan Wohlberg has seen the effects of a newspaper's closure up close. She's the former editor of the Northern Journal, which ceased publicationlast year in Fort Smith, N.W.T.She says she'sapproached at least once a weekby someone lamenting the paper's loss.

"I think in a lot of cases these things are missed once they're gone more than taken advantage of sometimes while they exist, but the absence of newspapers really does create a hole in communities," she says.

She adds that the loss isn't just a lack of news.

"Reporters who work for community newspapers are part of the community. We are residents, and neighbours, and volunteersthey become part of the fabric of the community just as much as anyone else. So when an organization like the Northern Journal or the Deh Cho Drum closes, those are real people whose real lives are being impacted."

The loss of a newspaper is especially marked in small communities.KakisaChief Lloyd Chicot echoed the sentiment of many people contacted about the loss of the paper: that it provides an essential service, connecting communities and keeping readers abreast of the goings-on in oneanother's backyards.

"I know the downturn has been coming," says Chicot,"Butwe never thought they would [close it]."

'It will be missed,'says MLA

Even MLA Michael Nadli said the paper helps him keep informed of what is happening in his riding, a large geographical area made up of many small communities.

"In that sense it's really disappointing," he says.

Social media, Nadli added, is heavily used in the region, and Chicot pointed out that the First Nations all have their own websites, but both admitted that those mediums lack the ability of a dedicated newspaper to explain, filter and contextualize the news.

"It will be missed," says Nadli.

The expected announcementin Thursday's issue will provide the first official word on the closure.

As former mayor Sean Whelly put it, referring to just about everything that happened in the region, "It didn't really happen until you put it in the paper."