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Gannett Co Inc ɡ ə ˈ n ɛ t is an American mass media holding company headquartered in New York City It is the largest U

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Gannett Co., Inc. (/ɡəˈnɛt/) is an American mass media holding company headquartered in New York City. It is the largest U.S. newspaper publisher as measured by total daily circulation.

Gannett Co., Inc.
image
Company typePublic
Traded as
  • NYSE: GCI
  • Russell 2000 component
ISINUS36472T1097
IndustryMedia
GenrePublishing
FoundedOctober 6, 1906; 118 years ago (1906-10-06) in Rochester, New York
June 29, 2015; 9 years ago (2015-06-29) (current Gannett Company)
FounderFrank Gannett
SuccessorTegna Inc. (Broadcasting)
HeadquartersNew York City, New York, U.S.
Key people
  • Mike Reed
  • (chairman and CEO)
ServicesPublishing/Digital Marketing Solutions
Revenueimage US$2.9 billion (2022)
Operating income
image US$–146 million (2019)
Net income
image US$–119 million (2019)
Total assetsimage US$4.02 billion (2019)
Total equityimage US$981 million (2019)
OwnerFortress Investment Group
Number of employees
11,200 (2022)
ParentNew Media Investment Group
SubsidiariesNewsquest
Websitegannett.com

It owns the national newspaper USA Today, as well as several local newspapers, including the Austin American-Statesman; Detroit Free Press; The Indianapolis Star; The Cincinnati Enquirer; The Columbus Dispatch; The Florida Times-Union in Jacksonville, Florida; The Tallahassee Democrat in Tallahassee, Florida; The Tennessean in Nashville, Tennessee; The Daily News Journal, in Murfreesboro, Tennessee; The Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky; the Democrat and Chronicle in Rochester, New York; The Des Moines Register; the El Paso Times; The Arizona Republic in Phoenix, Arizona; The News-Press in Fort Myers, Florida; the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; the Argus Leader; the Pueblo Chieftain; and the Great Falls Tribune.

In 2015, Gannett split into two publicly traded companies, one focusing on newspapers and publishing and the other on broadcasting. The broadcasting company took the name Tegna, and owns about 68 TV stations. The newspaper company inherited the Gannett name. The split was structured so that Tegna is the legal successor of the old Gannett, while the new Gannett is a spin-off.

In November 2019, New Media Investment Group acquired and merged its GateHouse Media subsidiary into Gannett, creating the largest newspaper publisher in the United States, which adopted the Gannett name. Mike Reed was named CEO.

Gannett along with 91 additional Fortune 500 companies had "paid an effective federal tax rate of 0% or less" in 2018 as a result of Donald Trump´s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.

History

1906–1983

Gannett Company, Inc. was formed in 1923 by Frank Gannett in Rochester, New York, as an outgrowth of the Elmira Gazette, a newspaper business he had begun in Elmira, New York, in 1906. Gannett, who was known as a conservative, gained fame and fortune by purchasing small independent newspapers and developing them into a large chain, a 20th-century trend that helped the newspaper industry remain financially viable.

In April 1957, Paul Miller succeeded Frank Gannett as president and CEO when the group held 19 newspapers over four states; Florida not among them. Miller became frustrated after repeated unsuccessful attempts to acquire a foothold in Florida, then targeted Brevard County. He spoke to Marie Holderman, the owner and publisher of the Cocoa Tribune, and shared his plan for a morning daily paper in Brevard County. Holderman was not interested. Over the next few years, several Gannett representatives attempted to negotiate a purchase, without success.

In the late 1950s, Al Neuharth was assistant managing editor at the Miami Herald and became acquainted with Marie Holderman. In 1963, he was hired by Miller to manage the Democrat and Chronicle in Rochester, New York. Two years later, he asked Miller for an opportunity to persuade Holderman. In their meeting, Neuharth complimented the Tribune, but told Holderman that she lacked the resources to win a competition. Holderman was invited to Rochester for a meeting to talk with Gannett executives. The Gannett corporate airplane flew four people from Florida to New York.

John Pound, managing editor joined Holderman and her two granddaughters on the trip in May 1965. Convinced of Gannett's determination and at age 81, Holderman decided to sell, and Pound told the executives they wanted $1.9 million in compensation. Neuharth's response: "We told them that was a fair price and we certainly paid her more than she expected to get." In 1966, Neuharth took charge of Gannett Florida. After a few months, the Hudson family in Titusville decided to sell the Star Advocate to Gannett for $1 million.

Neuharth started Today in Cocoa, which eventually became Florida Today. By June 1966, paid subscriptions were 33,000, far exceeding their goal of 20,000 by the end of the year. The paper became profitable in 1968 after just 33 months.

Miller was succeeded by Al Neuharth in 1973.

In 1978, Gannett acquired Combined Communications Corp., operator of 2 major daily newspapers, the Oakland Tribune and The Cincinnati Enquirer, seven television stations, 13 radio stations, as well as an outdoor advertising division, for $370 million. The outdoor advertising became known as Gannett Outdoor, before being acquired by Outdoor Systems (previously a division of 3M), before the company was sold to Infinity Broadcasting, which later became part of Viacom, and was part of CBS Corporation, until 2014 when CBS Outdoor went independent and became Outfront Media.

The News Journal in Wilmington, Delaware was purchased from DuPont and The Tennessean in Nashville in 1979, when the chain had grown to 79 newspapers. In 1982, the broadcasting unit partnered with Telepictures Corporation to start out its Newscope program.

Gannett's oldest newspaper is the Berrow's Worcester Journal based in Worcester, England and founded in 1690. In the United States, the oldest newspapers still in circulation are the Poughkeepsie Journal, founded in Poughkeepsie, New York in 1785, and The Leaf-Chronicle founded in Clarksville, Tennessee in 1808.

1984–2013

In 1984, John Curley was appointed president and COO. In 1985, Curley became CEO and continued as president.

The company was headquartered in Rochester until 1986, when it moved to Arlington County, Virginia. Its former headquarters building, the Gannett Building, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.

Douglas H. McCorkindale succeeded Curley as CEO in 2000 and chairman in 2001. That year, the company moved to its headquarters in Tysons Corner, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, D.C.

Beginning in 2005 at the Fort Myers News-Press, Gannett pioneered the mojo concept of mobile multimedia journalists, reporters who were initially untethered from conventional newsrooms and drove around their communities filing hyperlocal news in various formats including text for print publication, still photos for print and online publication, and audio and video for the News-Press website. The practice has spread throughout the chain.

In 2010, Gannett increased executive salaries and bonuses; for example, Bob Dickey, Gannett's U.S. newspapers division president, was paid $3.4 million in 2010, up from $1.9 million the previous year. The next year, the company laid off 700 U.S. employees to cut costs. In the memo announcing the layoffs, Dickey wrote, "While we have sought many ways to reduce costs, I regret to tell you that we will not be able to avoid layoffs."

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Logo used until March 6, 2011

On March 7, 2011, Gannett replaced the stylized "G" logo in use since the 1970s (notably used on its TV stations as a corporate/local ID with different animations), and adopted a new company tagline: "It's all within reach."

In February 2012, Gannett announced that it would implement a paywall system across all of its daily newspaper websites, with non-subscriber access limited to between five and fifteen articles per month, varying by newspaper. The USA Today website became the only one to allow unrestricted access.

On March 24, 2012, the company announced that it would discipline 25 employees in Wisconsin who had signed the petition to recall Governor Scott Walker, stating that this open public participation in a political process was a violation of the company's code of journalistic ethics and that their primary responsibility as journalists was to maintain credibility and public trust in themselves and the organization.

On August 21, 2012, Gannett acquired Blinq Media.

Around the first week of October 2012, Gannett entered a dispute against Dish Network regarding compensation fees and Dish's AutoHop commercial-skip feature on its Hopper digital video recorders. Gannett ordered that Dish discontinue AutoHop on the account that it is affecting advertising revenues for Gannett's television stations. Gannett threatened to pull all of its stations should the skirmish continue beyond October 7, and Dish and Gannett fail to reach an agreement. The two parties eventually reached an agreement after extending the deadline for a few hours.

Acquisition of Belo Corporation, 2013

On June 13, 2013, Gannett announced plans to buy Dallas-based Belo Corporation for $1.5 billion and the assumption of debt. The purchase would add 20 additional stations to Gannett's portfolio and make the company the fourth largest television broadcaster in the U.S. with 43 stations. Because of ownership conflicts that exist in markets where both Belo and Gannett own television stations and newspapers, the use of a third-party company (Sander Media, LLC, owned by former Belo executive Jack Sander) as a licensee to buy stations to be operated by the owner of a same-market competitor and concerns about any possible future consolidation of operations of Gannett- and Belo-owned properties in markets where both own television stations or collusion involving the Gannett and Sander stations in retransmission consent negotiations, anti-media-consolidation groups (such as Free Press) and pay television providers (such as Time Warner Cable and DirecTV) have called for the FCC to block the acquisition.

On December 16, 2013, the United States Department of Justice announced that Gannett, Belo, and Sander would need to divest Belo's station in St. Louis, KMOV, to a government-approved third-party that would be barred from entering into any agreements with Gannett, in order to fully preserve competition in advertising sales with Gannett-owned KSDK. The deal was approved by the FCC on December 20, and it was completed on December 23. On February 28, 2014, Meredith Corporation officially took over full control of KMOV.

Acquisition of London Broadcasting Company stations, 2014

On May 14, 2014, Gannett announced the acquisition of six stations from the Texas-based London Broadcasting Company in a $215 million deal, including KCEN-TV (NBC) in Waco-Temple-Bryan, KYTX (CBS) in Tyler-Longview, KIII (ABC) in Corpus Christi, KBMT (ABC/NBC) in Beaumont-Port Arthur, KXVA (FOX) in Abilene-Sweetwater and KIDY (FOX) in San Angelo. The company's COO Phil Hurley will also join Gannett to continue his leadership role at the six stations. The acquisition was completed on July 8, 2014; in total, Gannett stations now serve 83% of households in the state. Post acquisition, Gannett now outright owns and operates their first Fox affiliates, KIDY & KXVA.

Split and further deals, 2014-2018

On August 5, 2014, Gannett announced that it plans to split into two independent publicly traded companies–one focused on newspapers and publishing, the other on broadcasting. Robert Dickey, head of old Gannett's newspaper division, became CEO of the newspaper company, leaving Gannett's remaining broadcasting and digital operations under the leadership of Martore. In a statement, she explained that the split plans were "significant next steps in our ongoing initiatives to increase shareholder value by building scale, increasing cash flow, sharpening management focus, and strengthening all of our businesses to compete effectively in today's increasingly digital landscape." Additionally, the company announced that it would buy out the remainder of Classified Ventures—a joint venture between Gannett and several other media companies, for $1.8 billion, giving it full ownership of properties such as Cars.com. On April 21, 2015, Gannett announced that the publishing arm would continue to use the Gannett name, while the broadcasting and digital company would be named Tegna—an anagram of Gannett. The split was completed on June 29, 2015. The split was structured so that the old Gannett changed its name to Tegna, and then spun off its publishing interests as a "new" Gannett Company. Tegna retained "old" Gannett's stock price history under a new ticker symbol, TGNA, while "new" Gannett inherited "old" Gannett's ticker symbol, GCI.

The two companies shared a headquarters complex in Tysons Corner for a time, though Tegna has since moved to a new 440,000-square-foot office tower nearby, occupying roughly 60,000 square feet.

On October 7, 2015, Gannett struck a deal to buy the Journal Media Group for $280 million, giving it control of publications in over 100 markets in the Midwestern and Southern U.S. Similar to what Gannett had earlier done with its broadcasting assets, the Milwaukee-based Journal had separated its publishing and broadcasting arms in April 2015, with the E. W. Scripps Company acquiring the television and radio properties owned by the former's technical predecessor Journal Communications and spinning out their respective publishing operations into Journal Media Group. In December 2015, Gannett announced that its local newspapers would be branded as the "USA Today Network", signifying a closer association with the national USA Today paper.

In April 2016, Gannett made an unsolicited bid to acquire the Tribune Publishing Company for $12.25 per-share, or around $400 million. This deal was rejected by Tribune's shareholders in May 2016; in turn, Gannett increased its offer to around $15 per-share (around $800 million). Although the two companies held talks during the summer and into the fall of 2016, disappointing earning reports for Gannett for the second and third quarters of 2016 caused Gannett to pull out of talks on November 1.

Gannett announced it would not be delaying print deadlines for the 2018 midterm elections in the United States, meaning that next-day newspapers would no longer contain the election's results, instead directing readers to the Internet.

Sale to GateHouse Media and relationship with Softbank, 2019

In January 2019, Digital First Media (DFM) made an unsolicited bid to acquire Gannett for $1.36 billion, but it was rejected for being undervalued. In an attempt to pursue a hostile takeover, DFM built up a 7.5% stake of Gannett's public shares. Gannett subsequently accused the company of engaging in a proxy fight. After a failed attempt to place three DFM nominees on Gannett's board of directors through a proxy vote on May 16, 2019, DFM sold shares lowering their ownership to 4.2%.

On August 5, 2019, New Media Investment Group, parent of GateHouse Media, announced that it would acquire Gannett. New Media Investment Group was managed by a private equity firm, Fortress Investment Group. Fortress was owned until May 2024, by the Japanese conglomerate Softbank. Apollo Global Management funded the acquisition with a $1.792 billion loan. Although GateHouse was the nominal survivor, the combined company took the better-known Gannett name. Michael E. Reed, the CEO of GateHouse's parent company, was named CEO. The new management team immediately announced it would target "inefficiencies", which could lead to cutbacks at newspapers and reduction in newspaper staff.

In December 2019, CNBC listed Gannett along with 91 additional Fortune 500 companies that "paid an effective federal tax rate of 0% or less" in 2028 as a result of Donald Trump´s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.

As of 2022, Gannett's board of directors, which does not include anyone with journalism background, paid CEO Mike Reed a salary $900,000 and long term stock incentives adding to a total of $7.7 million in 2021, the first full year after the merger. The total compensation was estimated with Gannett stock valued at the then current price. During Reed's tenure, Gannett stock has fallen 70%, reducing the value of future equity incentive plan awards.

Sued for enabling sexual abuse of paperboys in 1970s New York and Arizona, 2019

In 2019, Gannett was sued under the New York State Child Victim's Act by a former paperboy who accused the company of enabling a former district manager to sexually abuse him in the 1980s. In late 2018 as Gannett was seeking partners for a merger, fending off a hostile takeover and its stock fell, this former paperboy emailed investigative reporters and Gannett management asking them to investigate his claims. In response, Karen Magnuson, then Executive Editor for Gannett's Democrat and Chronicle, told reporters to put their investigative reporting of abuse claims on "pause", and brought the email to the attention of Gannett's management to conduct their own investigation.

Gannett chief operating officer Michael G. Kane sent the original claimant a letter indicating no evidence had been found and they were "closing out" the matter. A few months later New York passed its Child Victim Act lifting statute of limitations on child sex abuse claims. Four more lawsuits were filed in February 2020 Additionally, three more men filed suit against Gannett for child sex abuse in September 2020 and April 2021;

In December 2020, Gannett and its Arizona Republic newspaper were sued by two former paperboys in the Phoenix, Arizona community for enabling its employees to sexually abuse them in the late 1970s. As the New York state window to file under its Childs Victim Act closed in August 2021, another man sued Gannett in Rochester, New York, alleging child sex abuse by the same former district manager of paperboys. This latest case brings the total to eleven men who are suing Gannett for enabling sexual abuse of former paperboys, some as young as eleven at the time.

Nearly three years after the first lawsuit filing, in July 2022, Gannett defense attorneys notified the court of their intent to file a motion to have the former paperboys' Child Victims Act cases taken "out of the state court system and turn them over to the New York Workers' Compensation Board" stating that the 11–14-year-old paperboys should have applied for workman's compensation at the time of their injuries in the 1980s or upon enactment of the CVA in 2019. In December 2022, presiding Judge, Deborah A. Chimes acquiesced to Gannett's demands that NY Workers Compensation Board – despite the existence of the Child Victims Act as NY State law – determine if Plaintiffs have a valid cause of action for damages or whether they are limited to benefits under the Worker’s Compensation Law. This despite the fact that the Workers Compensation Board has no mechanism to consider this question of justice and legal rights, as the Board is tasked by the state of New York solely to: " administer workers’ compensation, disability benefits and Paid Family Leave." On July 26, 2024, this demand of Gannett, received and accepted fully by Judge Deborah Chimes, was reversed, by the Fourth Judicial Department of the Appellate Division of the New York State Supreme Court. The nine plaintiff cases remain pending action by Judge Chimes and her court.

COVID-19, 2020

In March 2020, Gannett announced that due to COVID-19, it will be forced to make a series of cuts and furloughs. Executives would also take a 25% reduction in salary.

Reduction of editorial content, 2022- 2024

In April 2022, a committee of Gannett editors made the formal recommendation that newspapers in the chain should significantly pare back the opinion material that newspapers traditionally publish on their editorial pages, including editorials, op-ed columns, syndicated columns and editorial cartoons. According to the company-wide memo, "Readers don't want us to tell them what to think. They don't believe we have the expertise to tell anyone what to think on most issues. They perceive us as having a biased agenda." The memo additionally claimed that editorial content is the least-read content in the papers while being the most likely reason someone gives for cancelling a subscription.

In March 2024, the company announced that effective March 25, it would end its legacy Associated Press premium subscription, meaning it would no longer pay to publish AP dispatches, photos and video from the wire service in Gannett-owned publications. According to a statement from the company, this decision, regarded by observers as a cost-cutting move, "will give us the opportunity to redeploy more dollars toward our teams and build capacity where we might have gaps."

In that same memo, Gannett said it signed an agreement with Reuters to publish the newswire's global content. Gannett will continue to pay AP for its election-related polling and vote-counting, and pay to access the AP Stylebook. Gannet's contract with AP was set to expire at the end of 2024. It is unclear why the company ended the agreement early or how much it was paying AP.

Financial conditions and layoffs 2022

In the second quarter of 2022, Gannett's revenue was $749 million, sustaining a loss of $54 million. In reaction to the news, the company announced, "In the coming days, we will be making necessary but painful reductions to staffing, eliminating some open positions and roles that will impact valued colleagues." At the end of August, the company announced that it was laying off 3% of its United States workforce, which was about 400 employees. At this announcement, Gannett also said they would not be filling 400 open positions.

At the time of the announcement, Gannett stock, which was already down about 45% on the year, fell an additional 28.5%.

In October, the company announced the second round of financial austerity steps. These included the requirement that all employees take a week of unpaid leave in December, and a suspension of matching contributions to employee 401(k) accounts. Gannett also instituted a hiring freeze and is seeking volunteers for buyouts.

Gannett announced around 200 more layoffs, or 6% of the news division, in November 2022.

As part of the cuts, Gannett stopped printing six community papers, collectively known as the Observer and Eccentric chain, in southeast Michigan, including the print editions of the Livonia Observer and papers covering Westland, Farmington, Plymouth, Canton, and Birmingham. Gannett indicated that the publications would provide online content.

Acquisitions

  • 1906 – Elmira Gazette
  • 1912 – The Ithaca Journal
  • 1928 – Democrat and Chronicle
  • 1943 – Binghamton Press
  • 1959 – Courier Post
  • 1965 - Cocoa Tribune
  • 1966 - Titusville Star Advocate
  • 1969 – Pensacola News Journal
  • 1971 – Federated Publications
  • 1971 – Honolulu Star-Bulletin
  • 1972 – Pacific and Southern Company, Inc (Taken over by Combined Communications)
  • 1973 – Oregon Statesman and Capital Journal (These two papers were merged into the Statesman-Journal in 1980)
  • 1976 – Tucson Citizen
  • 1977 – The Poughkeepsie Journal
  • 1977 – Speidel Newspapers, 13 daily and 5 Sunday papers, including Tucson, AZ; Stockton, CA; St. Cloud, MN; and Iowa City, IA. Second largest newspaper acquisition in U.S. history at the time.
  • 1978 – Combined Communications, owner of newspapers, television stations, radio stations and outdoor advertising
  • 1979 – The News Journal Company, from DuPont
  • 1979 – The Tennessean
  • 1982 – Mississippi Publishers, owner of The Clarion-Ledger
  • 1983 – WTCN-TV (now KARE) from Metromedia and WLVI from Field Communications
  • 1985 – Des Moines Register and Tribune Co.
  • 1985 – Family Weekly, from CBS
  • 1986 – Courier-Journal and Louisville Times Company
  • 1986 – Evening News Association and The Detroit News
  • 1986 – Arkansas Gazette
  • 1988 – WFMY-TV and WTLV from Harte-Hanks Communications
  • 1990 – Great Falls Tribune
  • 1991 – New Jersey Publishing
  • 1992 – The Honolulu Advertiser
  • 1995 – Multimedia, broadcaster and publisher
  • 1997 – Army Times Publishing Company
  • 1997 – Asbury Park Press and Home News Tribune
  • 1998 – Daily Record
  • 1999 – Newsquest, newspaper and trade publisher in the United Kingdom. Websites include the Glasgow-based job board s1jobs.com and Exchange and Mart
  • 2000 – News Communications & Media, newspaper publisher in the United Kingdom
  • 2000 – Central Newspapers, six daily newspapers
  • 2001 – 21 newspapers from Thomson Newspapers
  • 2001 – Surrey & Sussex Publishing, Horley Publishing, and Dimbleby Newspaper Group; newspaper publishers in the United Kingdom
  • 2003 – Clipper Magazine
  • 2003 – Three newspapers from Scottish Media Group
  • 2005 – Detroit Free Press and Tallahassee Democrat from Knight Ridder
  • 2005 – HomeTown Communication Network (formerly The Observer & Eccentric Media)
  • 2006 – WATL from Tribune Company & KTVD from Newsweb Corporation.
  • 2011 – Reviewed
  • 2013 – Belo: 20 TV stations in 15 markets, plus 4 regional cable news networks
  • 2014 – 6 TV stations in Texas from London Broadcasting Co.
  • 2015 – Acquired remaining (56.36%) ownership in Texas-New Mexico Newspapers Partnerships, acquiring control of 11 papers in 3 states
  • 2015 – Romanes Media Group, UK regional publisher
  • 2015 – Company renamed to Tegna, spin-off of print assets to new company retaining Gannett name
  • 2016 – Journal Media Group
  • 2016 – ReachLocal
  • 2016 – North Jersey Media Group
  • 2016 – Golfweek
  • 2018 – Wordstream

List of Gannett Co. assets

Gannett's media properties include the following newspapers among the top 100 by circulation in the United States:

USA Today Network

The USA Today Network is the largest local-to-national publishing organization in the country according to Gannett. USA Today, as the national paper, is its flagship brand. The network uses reporting from local publications in the national publication and vice versa.

According to the New York Times in 2021, it included local papers published by Gannett in 46 states. In 2023, the network hired dedicated reporters to cover Taylor Swift and Beyonce.

Gannett acknowledged in 2021 that it provided advertisers with inaccurate information for nine months misrepresenting where billions of ads were placed.

Print media

  • USA Today of New York City
  • Ventura County Star of Camarillo, California
  • The Times Herald of Port Huron, Michigan
  • The Arizona Republic of Phoenix, Arizona
  • Detroit Free Press of Detroit, Michigan
  • El Paso Times of El Paso, Texas
  • The Journal Sentinel of Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • The Indianapolis Star of Indianapolis, Indiana
  • The Record of Bergen County, New Jersey
  • The Cincinnati Enquirer of Cincinnati, Ohio
  • The Columbus Dispatch of Columbus, Ohio
  • The Times-Reporter of New Philadelphia, Ohio
  • The Oklahoman of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  • The Courier-Journal of Louisville, Kentucky
  • The Des Moines Register of Des Moines, Iowa
  • The Florida Times-Union of Jacksonville, Florida
  • The Tennessean of Nashville, Tennessee
  • Democrat and Chronicle of Rochester, New York
  • The Commercial Appeal of Memphis, Tennessee
  • Asbury Park Press of Asbury Park, New Jersey
  • The News Journal of Wilmington, Delaware
  • The News-Sentinel of Knoxville, Tennessee
  • The Journal News of White Plains, New York
  • Reno Gazette-Journal of Reno, Nevada
  • Providence Journal of Providence, Rhode Island
  • The Daily Independent of Ridgecrest, California
  • Observer Dispatch of Utica, New York
  • The Gadsden Times of Gadsden, Alabama
  • Naples Daily News of Naples, Florida
  • The Gaston Gazette of Gastonia, North Carolina
  • The Shelby Star of Shelby, North Carolina
  • The Daytona Beach News-Journal of Daytona Beach, Florida
  • The Columbia Daily Tribune of Columbia, Missouri
  • Argus Leader of Sioux Falls, South Dakota

Significant digital investments

  • Digg — sold to BuySellAds in April 2018

Directors and senior executives

Gannett has an eight-member board of directors and 11 senior executives.

On October 6, 2011, Gannett's chairman, president and chief executive officer Craig A. Dubow resigned, citing health reasons. He was succeeded by Gracia Martore, Gannett's chief operating officer, a 26-year company veteran.

From 2005 until 2008 Sue Clark-Johnson was president of Gannett's Newspaper Division.

In May 2019, Barbara Wall was appointed as interim chief executive officer after Bob Dickey retired.

Mike Reed became Gannett's Chief Executive Officer in June 2020. His immediate predecessor, Paul Bascobert, served in the role for about ten months, starting in August 2019.

Headquarters

In 2001, the company completed construction of its corporate headquarters at the Valo Park business park in Tysons, Virginia. The 1.5 million-square-foot facility sat on a 30-acre site and included a mile-long jogging path, softball fields, tennis courts, a fitness center, athletic facilities and a helipad.

In February 2024, Gannett moved out of its headquarters and planned to relocate to a 24,000-square-foot leased office space in New York City starting March 31.

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Gannett Co Inc ɡ e ˈ n ɛ t is an American mass media holding company headquartered in New York City It is the largest U S newspaper publisher as measured by total daily circulation Gannett Co Inc Company typePublicTraded asNYSE GCIRussell 2000 componentISINUS36472T1097IndustryMediaGenrePublishingFoundedOctober 6 1906 118 years ago 1906 10 06 in Rochester New York June 29 2015 9 years ago 2015 06 29 current Gannett Company FounderFrank GannettSuccessorTegna Inc Broadcasting HeadquartersNew York City New York U S Key peopleMike Reed chairman and CEO ServicesPublishing Digital Marketing SolutionsRevenueUS 2 9 billion 2022 Operating incomeUS 146 million 2019 Net incomeUS 119 million 2019 Total assetsUS 4 02 billion 2019 Total equityUS 981 million 2019 OwnerFortress Investment GroupNumber of employees11 200 2022 ParentNew Media Investment GroupSubsidiariesNewsquestWebsitegannett wbr com It owns the national newspaper USA Today as well as several local newspapers including the Austin American Statesman Detroit Free Press The Indianapolis Star The Cincinnati Enquirer The Columbus Dispatch The Florida Times Union in Jacksonville Florida The Tallahassee Democrat in Tallahassee Florida The Tennessean in Nashville Tennessee The Daily News Journal in Murfreesboro Tennessee The Courier Journal in Louisville Kentucky the Democrat and Chronicle in Rochester New York The Des Moines Register the El Paso Times The Arizona Republic in Phoenix Arizona The News Press in Fort Myers Florida theMilwaukee Journal Sentinel the Argus Leader the Pueblo Chieftain and the Great Falls Tribune In 2015 Gannett split into two publicly traded companies one focusing on newspapers and publishing and the other on broadcasting The broadcasting company took the name Tegna and owns about 68 TV stations The newspaper company inherited the Gannett name The split was structured so that Tegna is the legal successor of the old Gannett while the new Gannett is a spin off In November 2019 New Media Investment Group acquired and merged its GateHouse Media subsidiary into Gannett creating the largest newspaper publisher in the United States which adopted the Gannett name Mike Reed was named CEO Gannett along with 91 additional Fortune 500 companies had paid an effective federal tax rate of 0 or less in 2018 as a result of Donald Trump s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 History1906 1983 Gannett Company Inc was formed in 1923 by Frank Gannett in Rochester New York as an outgrowth of the Elmira Gazette a newspaper business he had begun in Elmira New York in 1906 Gannett who was known as a conservative gained fame and fortune by purchasing small independent newspapers and developing them into a large chain a 20th century trend that helped the newspaper industry remain financially viable In April 1957 Paul Miller succeeded Frank Gannett as president and CEO when the group held 19 newspapers over four states Florida not among them Miller became frustrated after repeated unsuccessful attempts to acquire a foothold in Florida then targeted Brevard County He spoke to Marie Holderman the owner and publisher of the Cocoa Tribune and shared his plan for a morning daily paper in Brevard County Holderman was not interested Over the next few years several Gannett representatives attempted to negotiate a purchase without success In the late 1950s Al Neuharth was assistant managing editor at the Miami Herald and became acquainted with Marie Holderman In 1963 he was hired by Miller to manage the Democrat and Chronicle in Rochester New York Two years later he asked Miller for an opportunity to persuade Holderman In their meeting Neuharth complimented the Tribune but told Holderman that she lacked the resources to win a competition Holderman was invited to Rochester for a meeting to talk with Gannett executives The Gannett corporate airplane flew four people from Florida to New York John Pound managing editor joined Holderman and her two granddaughters on the trip in May 1965 Convinced of Gannett s determination and at age 81 Holderman decided to sell and Pound told the executives they wanted 1 9 million in compensation Neuharth s response We told them that was a fair price and we certainly paid her more than she expected to get In 1966 Neuharth took charge of Gannett Florida After a few months the Hudson family in Titusville decided to sell the Star Advocate to Gannett for 1 million Neuharth started Today in Cocoa which eventually became Florida Today By June 1966 paid subscriptions were 33 000 far exceeding their goal of 20 000 by the end of the year The paper became profitable in 1968 after just 33 months Miller was succeeded by Al Neuharth in 1973 In 1978 Gannett acquired Combined Communications Corp operator of 2 major daily newspapers the Oakland Tribune and The Cincinnati Enquirer seven television stations 13 radio stations as well as an outdoor advertising division for 370 million The outdoor advertising became known as Gannett Outdoor before being acquired by Outdoor Systems previously a division of 3M before the company was sold to Infinity Broadcasting which later became part of Viacom and was part of CBS Corporation until 2014 when CBS Outdoor went independent and became Outfront Media The News Journal in Wilmington Delaware was purchased from DuPont and The Tennessean in Nashville in 1979 when the chain had grown to 79 newspapers In 1982 the broadcasting unit partnered with Telepictures Corporation to start out its Newscope program Gannett s oldest newspaper is the Berrow s Worcester Journal based in Worcester England and founded in 1690 In the United States the oldest newspapers still in circulation are the Poughkeepsie Journal founded in Poughkeepsie New York in 1785 and The Leaf Chronicle founded in Clarksville Tennessee in 1808 1984 2013 In 1984 John Curley was appointed president and COO In 1985 Curley became CEO and continued as president The company was headquartered in Rochester until 1986 when it moved to Arlington County Virginia Its former headquarters building the Gannett Building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985 Douglas H McCorkindale succeeded Curley as CEO in 2000 and chairman in 2001 That year the company moved to its headquarters in Tysons Corner Virginia a suburb of Washington D C Beginning in 2005 at the Fort Myers News Press Gannett pioneered the mojo concept of mobile multimedia journalists reporters who were initially untethered from conventional newsrooms and drove around their communities filing hyperlocal news in various formats including text for print publication still photos for print and online publication and audio and video for the News Press website The practice has spread throughout the chain In 2010 Gannett increased executive salaries and bonuses for example Bob Dickey Gannett s U S newspapers division president was paid 3 4 million in 2010 up from 1 9 million the previous year The next year the company laid off 700 U S employees to cut costs In the memo announcing the layoffs Dickey wrote While we have sought many ways to reduce costs I regret to tell you that we will not be able to avoid layoffs Logo used until March 6 2011 On March 7 2011 Gannett replaced the stylized G logo in use since the 1970s notably used on its TV stations as a corporate local ID with different animations and adopted a new company tagline It s all within reach In February 2012 Gannett announced that it would implement a paywall system across all of its daily newspaper websites with non subscriber access limited to between five and fifteen articles per month varying by newspaper The USA Today website became the only one to allow unrestricted access On March 24 2012 the company announced that it would discipline 25 employees in Wisconsin who had signed the petition to recall Governor Scott Walker stating that this open public participation in a political process was a violation of the company s code of journalistic ethics and that their primary responsibility as journalists was to maintain credibility and public trust in themselves and the organization On August 21 2012 Gannett acquired Blinq Media Around the first week of October 2012 Gannett entered a dispute against Dish Network regarding compensation fees and Dish s AutoHop commercial skip feature on its Hopper digital video recorders Gannett ordered that Dish discontinue AutoHop on the account that it is affecting advertising revenues for Gannett s television stations Gannett threatened to pull all of its stations should the skirmish continue beyond October 7 and Dish and Gannett fail to reach an agreement The two parties eventually reached an agreement after extending the deadline for a few hours Acquisition of Belo Corporation 2013 On June 13 2013 Gannett announced plans to buy Dallas based Belo Corporation for 1 5 billion and the assumption of debt The purchase would add 20 additional stations to Gannett s portfolio and make the company the fourth largest television broadcaster in the U S with 43 stations Because of ownership conflicts that exist in markets where both Belo and Gannett own television stations and newspapers the use of a third party company Sander Media LLC owned by former Belo executive Jack Sander as a licensee to buy stations to be operated by the owner of a same market competitor and concerns about any possible future consolidation of operations of Gannett and Belo owned properties in markets where both own television stations or collusion involving the Gannett and Sander stations in retransmission consent negotiations anti media consolidation groups such as Free Press and pay television providers such as Time Warner Cable and DirecTV have called for the FCC to block the acquisition On December 16 2013 the United States Department of Justice announced that Gannett Belo and Sander would need to divest Belo s station in St Louis KMOV to a government approved third party that would be barred from entering into any agreements with Gannett in order to fully preserve competition in advertising sales with Gannett owned KSDK The deal was approved by the FCC on December 20 and it was completed on December 23 On February 28 2014 Meredith Corporation officially took over full control of KMOV Acquisition of London Broadcasting Company stations 2014 On May 14 2014 Gannett announced the acquisition of six stations from the Texas based London Broadcasting Company in a 215 million deal including KCEN TV NBC in Waco Temple Bryan KYTX CBS in Tyler Longview KIII ABC in Corpus Christi KBMT ABC NBC in Beaumont Port Arthur KXVA FOX in Abilene Sweetwater and KIDY FOX in San Angelo The company s COO Phil Hurley will also join Gannett to continue his leadership role at the six stations The acquisition was completed on July 8 2014 in total Gannett stations now serve 83 of households in the state Post acquisition Gannett now outright owns and operates their first Fox affiliates KIDY amp KXVA Split and further deals 2014 2018 On August 5 2014 Gannett announced that it plans to split into two independent publicly traded companies one focused on newspapers and publishing the other on broadcasting Robert Dickey head of old Gannett s newspaper division became CEO of the newspaper company leaving Gannett s remaining broadcasting and digital operations under the leadership of Martore In a statement she explained that the split plans were significant next steps in our ongoing initiatives to increase shareholder value by building scale increasing cash flow sharpening management focus and strengthening all of our businesses to compete effectively in today s increasingly digital landscape Additionally the company announced that it would buy out the remainder of Classified Ventures a joint venture between Gannett and several other media companies for 1 8 billion giving it full ownership of properties such as Cars com On April 21 2015 Gannett announced that the publishing arm would continue to use the Gannett name while the broadcasting and digital company would be named Tegna an anagram of Gannett The split was completed on June 29 2015 The split was structured so that the old Gannett changed its name to Tegna and then spun off its publishing interests as a new Gannett Company Tegna retained old Gannett s stock price history under a new ticker symbol TGNA while new Gannett inherited old Gannett s ticker symbol GCI The two companies shared a headquarters complex in Tysons Corner for a time though Tegna has since moved to a new 440 000 square foot office tower nearby occupying roughly 60 000 square feet On October 7 2015 Gannett struck a deal to buy the Journal Media Group for 280 million giving it control of publications in over 100 markets in the Midwestern and Southern U S Similar to what Gannett had earlier done with its broadcasting assets the Milwaukee based Journal had separated its publishing and broadcasting arms in April 2015 with the E W Scripps Company acquiring the television and radio properties owned by the former s technical predecessor Journal Communications and spinning out their respective publishing operations into Journal Media Group In December 2015 Gannett announced that its local newspapers would be branded as the USA Today Network signifying a closer association with the national USA Today paper In April 2016 Gannett made an unsolicited bid to acquire the Tribune Publishing Company for 12 25 per share or around 400 million This deal was rejected by Tribune s shareholders in May 2016 in turn Gannett increased its offer to around 15 per share around 800 million Although the two companies held talks during the summer and into the fall of 2016 disappointing earning reports for Gannett for the second and third quarters of 2016 caused Gannett to pull out of talks on November 1 Gannett announced it would not be delaying print deadlines for the 2018 midterm elections in the United States meaning that next day newspapers would no longer contain the election s results instead directing readers to the Internet Sale to GateHouse Media and relationship with Softbank 2019 In January 2019 Digital First Media DFM made an unsolicited bid to acquire Gannett for 1 36 billion but it was rejected for being undervalued In an attempt to pursue a hostile takeover DFM built up a 7 5 stake of Gannett s public shares Gannett subsequently accused the company of engaging in a proxy fight After a failed attempt to place three DFM nominees on Gannett s board of directors through a proxy vote on May 16 2019 DFM sold shares lowering their ownership to 4 2 On August 5 2019 New Media Investment Group parent of GateHouse Media announced that it would acquire Gannett New Media Investment Group was managed by a private equity firm Fortress Investment Group Fortress was owned until May 2024 by the Japanese conglomerate Softbank Apollo Global Management funded the acquisition with a 1 792 billion loan Although GateHouse was the nominal survivor the combined company took the better known Gannett name Michael E Reed the CEO of GateHouse s parent company was named CEO The new management team immediately announced it would target inefficiencies which could lead to cutbacks at newspapers and reduction in newspaper staff In December 2019 CNBC listed Gannett along with 91 additional Fortune 500 companies that paid an effective federal tax rate of 0 or less in 2028 as a result of Donald Trump s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 As of 2022 Gannett s board of directors which does not include anyone with journalism background paid CEO Mike Reed a salary 900 000 and long term stock incentives adding to a total of 7 7 million in 2021 the first full year after the merger The total compensation was estimated with Gannett stock valued at the then current price During Reed s tenure Gannett stock has fallen 70 reducing the value of future equity incentive plan awards Sued for enabling sexual abuse of paperboys in 1970s New York and Arizona 2019 In 2019 Gannett was sued under the New York State Child Victim s Act by a former paperboy who accused the company of enabling a former district manager to sexually abuse him in the 1980s In late 2018 as Gannett was seeking partners for a merger fending off a hostile takeover and its stock fell this former paperboy emailed investigative reporters and Gannett management asking them to investigate his claims In response Karen Magnuson then Executive Editor for Gannett s Democrat and Chronicle told reporters to put their investigative reporting of abuse claims on pause and brought the email to the attention of Gannett s management to conduct their own investigation Gannett chief operating officer Michael G Kane sent the original claimant a letter indicating no evidence had been found and they were closing out the matter A few months later New York passed its Child Victim Act lifting statute of limitations on child sex abuse claims Four more lawsuits were filed in February 2020 Additionally three more men filed suit against Gannett for child sex abuse in September 2020 and April 2021 In December 2020 Gannett and its Arizona Republic newspaper were sued by two former paperboys in the Phoenix Arizona community for enabling its employees to sexually abuse them in the late 1970s As the New York state window to file under its Childs Victim Act closed in August 2021 another man sued Gannett in Rochester New York alleging child sex abuse by the same former district manager of paperboys This latest case brings the total to eleven men who are suing Gannett for enabling sexual abuse of former paperboys some as young as eleven at the time Nearly three years after the first lawsuit filing in July 2022 Gannett defense attorneys notified the court of their intent to file a motion to have the former paperboys Child Victims Act cases taken out of the state court system and turn them over to the New York Workers Compensation Board stating that the 11 14 year old paperboys should have applied for workman s compensation at the time of their injuries in the 1980s or upon enactment of the CVA in 2019 In December 2022 presiding Judge Deborah A Chimes acquiesced to Gannett s demands that NY Workers Compensation Board despite the existence of the Child Victims Act as NY State law determine if Plaintiffs have a valid cause of action for damages or whether they are limited to benefits under the Worker s Compensation Law This despite the fact that the Workers Compensation Board has no mechanism to consider this question of justice and legal rights as the Board is tasked by the state of New York solely to administer workers compensation disability benefits and Paid Family Leave On July 26 2024 this demand of Gannett received and accepted fully by Judge Deborah Chimes was reversed by the Fourth Judicial Department of the Appellate Division of the New York State Supreme Court The nine plaintiff cases remain pending action by Judge Chimes and her court COVID 19 2020 In March 2020 Gannett announced that due to COVID 19 it will be forced to make a series of cuts and furloughs Executives would also take a 25 reduction in salary Reduction of editorial content 2022 2024 In April 2022 a committee of Gannett editors made the formal recommendation that newspapers in the chain should significantly pare back the opinion material that newspapers traditionally publish on their editorial pages including editorials op ed columns syndicated columns and editorial cartoons According to the company wide memo Readers don t want us to tell them what to think They don t believe we have the expertise to tell anyone what to think on most issues They perceive us as having a biased agenda The memo additionally claimed that editorial content is the least read content in the papers while being the most likely reason someone gives for cancelling a subscription In March 2024 the company announced that effective March 25 it would end its legacy Associated Press premium subscription meaning it would no longer pay to publish AP dispatches photos and video from the wire service in Gannett owned publications According to a statement from the company this decision regarded by observers as a cost cutting move will give us the opportunity to redeploy more dollars toward our teams and build capacity where we might have gaps In that same memo Gannett said it signed an agreement with Reuters to publish the newswire s global content Gannett will continue to pay AP for its election related polling and vote counting and pay to access the AP Stylebook Gannet s contract with AP was set to expire at the end of 2024 It is unclear why the company ended the agreement early or how much it was paying AP Financial conditions and layoffs 2022 In the second quarter of 2022 Gannett s revenue was 749 million sustaining a loss of 54 million In reaction to the news the company announced In the coming days we will be making necessary but painful reductions to staffing eliminating some open positions and roles that will impact valued colleagues At the end of August the company announced that it was laying off 3 of its United States workforce which was about 400 employees At this announcement Gannett also said they would not be filling 400 open positions At the time of the announcement Gannett stock which was already down about 45 on the year fell an additional 28 5 In October the company announced the second round of financial austerity steps These included the requirement that all employees take a week of unpaid leave in December and a suspension of matching contributions to employee 401 k accounts Gannett also instituted a hiring freeze and is seeking volunteers for buyouts Gannett announced around 200 more layoffs or 6 of the news division in November 2022 As part of the cuts Gannett stopped printing six community papers collectively known as the Observer and Eccentric chain in southeast Michigan including the print editions of the Livonia Observer and papers covering Westland Farmington Plymouth Canton and Birmingham Gannett indicated that the publications would provide online content Acquisitions 1906 Elmira Gazette 1912 The Ithaca Journal 1928 Democrat and Chronicle 1943 Binghamton Press 1959 Courier Post 1965 Cocoa Tribune 1966 Titusville Star Advocate 1969 Pensacola News Journal 1971 Federated Publications 1971 Honolulu Star Bulletin 1972 Pacific and Southern Company Inc Taken over by Combined Communications 1973 Oregon Statesman and Capital Journal These two papers were merged into the Statesman Journal in 1980 1976 Tucson Citizen 1977 The Poughkeepsie Journal 1977 Speidel Newspapers 13 daily and 5 Sunday papers including Tucson AZ Stockton CA St Cloud MN and Iowa City IA Second largest newspaper acquisition in U S history at the time 1978 Combined Communications owner of newspapers television stations radio stations and outdoor advertising 1979 The News Journal Company from DuPont 1979 The Tennessean 1982 Mississippi Publishers owner of The Clarion Ledger 1983 WTCN TV now KARE from Metromedia and WLVI from Field Communications 1985 Des Moines Register and Tribune Co 1985 Family Weekly from CBS 1986 Courier Journal and Louisville Times Company 1986 Evening News Association and The Detroit News 1986 Arkansas Gazette 1988 WFMY TV and WTLV from Harte Hanks Communications 1990 Great Falls Tribune 1991 New Jersey Publishing 1992 The Honolulu Advertiser 1995 Multimedia broadcaster and publisher 1997 Army Times Publishing Company 1997 Asbury Park Press and Home News Tribune 1998 Daily Record 1999 Newsquest newspaper and trade publisher in the United Kingdom Websites include the Glasgow based job board s1jobs com and Exchange and Mart 2000 News Communications amp Media newspaper publisher in the United Kingdom 2000 Central Newspapers six daily newspapers 2001 21 newspapers from Thomson Newspapers 2001 Surrey amp Sussex Publishing Horley Publishing and Dimbleby Newspaper Group newspaper publishers in the United Kingdom 2003 Clipper Magazine 2003 Three newspapers from Scottish Media Group 2005 Detroit Free Press and Tallahassee Democrat from Knight Ridder 2005 HomeTown Communication Network formerly The Observer amp Eccentric Media 2006 WATL from Tribune Company amp KTVD from Newsweb Corporation 2011 Reviewed 2013 Belo 20 TV stations in 15 markets plus 4 regional cable news networks 2014 6 TV stations in Texas from London Broadcasting Co 2015 Acquired remaining 56 36 ownership in Texas New Mexico Newspapers Partnerships acquiring control of 11 papers in 3 states 2015 Romanes Media Group UK regional publisher 2015 Company renamed to Tegna spin off of print assets to new company retaining Gannett name 2016 Journal Media Group 2016 ReachLocal 2016 North Jersey Media Group 2016 Golfweek 2018 WordstreamList of Gannett Co assetsGannett s media properties include the following newspapers among the top 100 by circulation in the United States USA Today Network The USA Today Network is the largest local to national publishing organization in the country according to Gannett USA Today as the national paper is its flagship brand The network uses reporting from local publications in the national publication and vice versa According to the New York Times in 2021 it included local papers published by Gannett in 46 states In 2023 the network hired dedicated reporters to cover Taylor Swift and Beyonce Gannett acknowledged in 2021 that it provided advertisers with inaccurate information for nine months misrepresenting where billions of ads were placed Print media USA Today of New York City Ventura County Star of Camarillo California The Times Herald of Port Huron Michigan The Arizona Republic of Phoenix Arizona Detroit Free Press of Detroit Michigan El Paso Times of El Paso Texas The Journal Sentinel of Milwaukee Wisconsin The Indianapolis Star of Indianapolis Indiana The Record of Bergen County New Jersey The Cincinnati Enquirer of Cincinnati Ohio The Columbus Dispatch of Columbus Ohio The Times Reporter of New Philadelphia Ohio The Oklahoman of Oklahoma City Oklahoma The Courier Journal of Louisville Kentucky The Des Moines Register of Des Moines Iowa The Florida Times Union of Jacksonville Florida The Tennessean of Nashville Tennessee Democrat and Chronicle of Rochester New York The Commercial Appeal of Memphis Tennessee Asbury Park Press of Asbury Park New Jersey The News Journal of Wilmington Delaware The News Sentinel of Knoxville Tennessee The Journal News of White Plains New York Reno Gazette Journal of Reno Nevada Providence Journal of Providence Rhode Island The Daily Independent of Ridgecrest California Observer Dispatch of Utica New York The Gadsden Times of Gadsden Alabama Naples Daily News of Naples Florida The Gaston Gazette of Gastonia North Carolina The Shelby Star of Shelby North Carolina The Daytona Beach News Journal of Daytona Beach Florida The Columbia Daily Tribune of Columbia Missouri Argus Leader of Sioux Falls South DakotaSignificant digital investmentsDigg sold to BuySellAds in April 2018Directors and senior executivesGannett has an eight member board of directors and 11 senior executives On October 6 2011 Gannett s chairman president and chief executive officer Craig A Dubow resigned citing health reasons He was succeeded by Gracia Martore Gannett s chief operating officer a 26 year company veteran From 2005 until 2008 Sue Clark Johnson was president of Gannett s Newspaper Division In May 2019 Barbara Wall was appointed as interim chief executive officer after Bob Dickey retired Mike Reed became Gannett s Chief Executive Officer in June 2020 His immediate predecessor Paul Bascobert served in the role for about ten months starting in August 2019 HeadquartersIn 2001 the company completed construction of its corporate headquarters at the Valo Park business park in Tysons Virginia The 1 5 million square foot facility sat on a 30 acre site and included a mile long jogging path softball fields tennis courts a fitness center athletic facilities and a helipad In February 2024 Gannett moved out of its headquarters and planned to relocate to a 24 000 square foot leased office space in New York City starting March 31 ReferencesFischer Sara Flynn Kerry March 7 2023 Gannett shed nearly half its workforce since GateHouse merger Axios Gannett SEC Filing 10 K 2019 PDF Archived from the original PDF on September 26 2020 Retrieved July 11 2019 Liu Nicholas March 10 2024 USA Today Owner Gannett Moves HQ from VA to the Theater District West Side Spirit Retrieved June 30 2024 Gannett Company Inc Library of Congress Retrieved August 9 2020 Chen Angela March 12 2015 Gannett Split to Close By Mid Year The Wall Street Journal Retrieved June 9 2015 Guynn David Brinkerhoff and Jessica CEO of Gannett s operating company Paul Bascobert will leave company Mike Reed assumes responsibilities USA Today Retrieved September 8 2020 Tracy Marc November 19 2019 Gannett Now Largest U S Newspaper Chain Targets Inefficiencies The New York Times New Media and Gannett Complete Merger Creating Leading U S Print and Digital News Organization Press release Business Wire November 19 2019 Pound Jesse December 16 2019 These 91 companies paid no federal taxes in 2018 CNBC Retrieved February 11 2020 Lichtman Allan J 2008 White Protestant Nation The Rise of the American Conservative Movement Atlantic Monthly Press p 87 ISBN 978 0 87113 984 9 Ted Bartlett August 1985 National Register of Historic Places Registration Gannett Building New York State Office of Parks Recreation and Historic Preservation Archived from the original on September 20 2012 Retrieved November 1 2009 BREVARD HISTORY Al Neuharth s Vision Leads Way In Creating Newspaper Spacecoastdaily com Maverick Multimedia Inc June 24 2019 Retrieved January 26 2024 Allen H Neuharth to address Class of 1995 Udel edu University of Delaware Retrieved August 10 2011 Kleinfield N R May 9 1978 Combined Communications Agrees To a 370 Million Gannett Merger The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 6 2021 Gannett Combined Communications agree to 370 million merger St Petersburg Times May 9 1978 Retrieved April 1 2013 via Associated Press Gannett Corp wins giant merger OK Deseret News June 8 1979 Retrieved April 1 2013 via Associated Press Gannett Takes Over Wilmington Papers The New York Times February 5 1978 Retrieved April 26 2016 Gannett to Acquire Nashville Tennessean Sell Afternoon Paper ProQuest 134370640 Retrieved April 26 2016 Neiva Elizabeth M Chain Building The Consolidation of the American Newspaper Industry 1955 80 Archived June 19 2012 at the Wayback Machine Business and Economic History 24 1 Fall 1995 Daily news series to be offered by Gannett Telepictures PDF Broadcasting August 23 1982 p 49 Retrieved October 24 2023 John Curley Announces Retirement McCorkindale Succeeds as CEO Tegna Press release May 2 2000 Retrieved August 24 2019 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 John Curley Announces Retirement McCorkindale Succeeds as CEO TEGNA May 2 2000 Retrieved August 31 2021 Martyn Peter H 2009 The Mojo in the Third Millennium Journalism Practice 3 2 196 215 doi 10 1080 17512780802681264 ISSN 1751 2794 S2CID 142569754 Rich Carole 2013 Writing and Reporting News a Coaching Method 7th ed Boston MA Cengage Wadsworth p 98 ISBN 978 1111344443 Bullard Gabe June 21 2011 Gannett Executive Bonuses Criticized Amid Layoffs Louisville KY WFPL Lieberman David March 4 2011 Gannett launches corporate branding campaign USA Today Bercovici Jeff February 22 2012 Gannett Building Paywalls Around All Its Papers Except USA Today Forbes Lovett Genia March 24 2012 Genia Lovett column Post Crescent journalists shouldn t have signed Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker recall petitions The Post Crescent Appleton WI Archived from the original on March 27 2012 Yu Roger August 21 2012 Gannett buys social media ad company Blinq Media USA Today Retrieved August 22 2012 Loose Ashley October 5 2012 DISH customers may lose Gannett programming including 12 News KPNX over AutoHop feature KNXV TV Archived from the original on October 11 2012 Retrieved October 6 2012 Vuong Andy October 6 2012 Gannett threatening to black out stations in its dispute with Dish Denver Post Retrieved October 6 2012 Warner Melodie October 8 2012 Dish Gannett Reach New Deal The Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 8 2012 Gannett to buy Belo for 1 5 billion Reuters June 13 2013 Littleton Cynthia June 13 2013 Gannett in 2 2 Bil Deal to Acquire Belo Station Group Deal will expand Gannett s clout as owner of Big 3 affiliates Variety Retrieved June 22 2013 Eggerton John March 16 2018 Free Press Others Ask FCC To Deny Some Gannett Belo Transfers Broadcasting amp Cable Bachman Katy July 25 2013 Public Interest Groups Cable Companies Oppose Gannett Belo Merger AdWeek Eggerton John December 16 2013 Justice Sander Can t Keep KMOV Broadcasting amp Cable Retrieved December 20 2013 FCC OKs Gannett Belo And Tribune Local TVNewsCheck December 20 2013 Retrieved December 20 2013 Gannett Completes Its Acquisition of Belo TVNewsCheck Retrieved December 23 2013 Brown Lisa February 28 2014 Meredith Corp closes on 177 million purchase of KMOV STL Today Gannett Buys 6 London Broadcasting Stations TVNewsCheck May 14 2014 Retrieved May 14 2014 Gannett Completes London Broadcasting Buy TVNewsCheck Retrieved August 5 2014 Haughney Christine de la Merced Michael J August 5 2014 Media Giant Gannett to Spin Off USA Today and Print Business Gannett Reorganizing Buying Cars com TVNewsCheck August 5 2014 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved August 5 2014 Yu Roger April 21 2015 Gannett to change name to TEGNA amid print unit spinoff USA Today Neibauer Michael June 17 2016 Tegna lands new home in Tysons bizjournals com Retrieved August 17 2022 Roger Yu October 7 2015 Gannett to buy Journal Media Group for 280 million USA Today Gannett introduces USA Today Network uniting local national properties USA Today Gannett Company Gannett and Tribune Publishing execs trade barbs as takeover battle heats up Los Angeles Times May 20 2016 Retrieved May 20 2016 Tribune Publishing shares surge after Gannett launches takeover bid Los Angeles Times April 25 2016 Retrieved May 20 2016 Doctor Ken Tribune chair Sell to Gannett We ll buy Gannett Politico Archived from the original on May 20 2016 Retrieved May 20 2016 Channick Robert November 2016 Gannett pulls offer for Tronc publisher of Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune Doctor Ken November 1 2018 Newsonomics Digital defeats print is the headline as Gannett steps away from printed election results Nieman Foundation for Journalism Arbel Tali February 4 2019 Gannett rejects 1 36 billion buyout offer from Digital First Media Chicago Tribune Retrieved March 11 2019 Hayes Dade February 11 2019 Gannett Rebuffs Board Maneuver By Digital First Media In Proxy Fight Blasts Takeover Proposal As Deficient Deadline Retrieved March 11 2019 Edwards Christian Digital First Media is reportedly planning to make an offer to buy USA Today publisher Gannett Business Insider Retrieved March 17 2019 Tyko Kelly May 22 2019 Hedge fund owned MNG reduces stake in Gannett to 4 2 USA Today Retrieved May 23 2019 Lombardo Cara Trachtenberg Jeffrey A August 5 2019 GateHouse Media Parent to Buy Gannett for 1 4 Billion The Wall Street Journal Retrieved August 6 2019 Fortress Management and Mubadala Complete Acquisition of Fortress Investment Group Fortress www fortress com Retrieved January 6 2025 Newsonomics Softbank Fortress Trump and the real story of Gatehouse s boundless ambition Nieman Lab Retrieved September 2 2020 Bomey Nathan August 5 2019 GateHouse Media owner to acquire USA Today owner Gannett USA Today Retrieved August 6 2019 Darcy Oliver August 5 2019 USA Today owner Gannett merges with GateHouse Media to form massive newspaper company CNN Archived from the original on August 11 2019 Retrieved August 13 2019 New Media Investment Group to Acquire Gannett Business Wire August 5 2019 Retrieved August 13 2019 Tracy Marc November 19 2019 Gannett Now Largest U S Newspaper Chain Targets Inefficiencies The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved September 2 2020 Gannett Proxy Statement April 27 2022 Brian McGrory Gannett s CEO is getting rich by gutting a newspaper near you Opinion Boston Globe March 23 2023 Richard Bates Complaint v Democrat and Chronicle and Gannett Complaint Summons Scribd Bloomberg January 14 2019 Hedge fund known for milking newspapers for cash takes aim at Gannett Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 3 2022 Manzhos Mariya December 20 2021 Former paperboys await justice after suing Gannett for allowing sexual abuse four decades ago Poynter org Retrieved December 20 2021 Former paperboys await justice after suing Gannett for allowing sexual abuse four decades ago Poynter December 7 2021 Retrieved January 3 2022 Andreatta David More Gannett paperboys allege sexual abuse CITY News Two more former paperboys come forward to allege sexual abuse by supervisor Lawsuit ABC News Baxter Erasmus December 15 2020 Former Paperboy Sues Arizona Republic Over Child Sex Abuse Ring Phoenix New Times Astor Will September 8 2022 Gannett s legal gambit Rochester Beacon Dean Andrew July 28 2022 Letter to Judge Deborah A Chimes iapps courts state ny us Information About the New York State Workers Compensation Board www wcb ny gov Retrieved March 1 2025 Suit alleging child sex abuse wrongly sent to workers comp business insurance Edmonds Rick March 30 2020 Gannett responding to the coronavirus related downturn announces a series of cuts Poynter Kornfield Meryl June 9 2022 The biggest U S newspaper chain wants less opinion in its pages Washington Post Retrieved June 10 2022 Korach Natalie March 19 2024 Gannett to Halt Use of AP Content in its Publications TheWrap Retrieved March 19 2024 Korach Natalie March 19 2024 USA Today Publisher Gannett to Drop Associated Press Content Across All Publications Yahoo News Retrieved March 19 2024 Bauder David March 19 2024 Gannett news chain says it will stop using AP content for first time in a century Associated Press Retrieved March 19 2024 Edmonds Rick August 4 2022 Gannett reports disastrous financial results layoffs are coming Poynter Retrieved March 19 2024 Fu Angela August 31 2022 After weeks of silence Gannett revealed that it laid off 400 employees and cut 400 open positions Poynter Retrieved September 3 2022 Fu Angela October 12 2022 Gannett announces new cuts including mandatory unpaid leave and buyouts Poynter Retrieved October 13 2022 Edmonds Rick November 17 2022 Gannett tells its news division that more layoffs are coming Dec 1 Poynter Retrieved November 17 2022 Gustafson Anna December 17 2022 Everyone s just a dollar sign to them Gannett Michigan Advance Livonia Observer Mondo Times Retrieved December 19 2022 Muffled Sound of Death Knell for a Once Real Newspaper Plymouth Voice December 18 2022 Gannett a Virginia based publisher the largest newspaper chain in the U S announced they will cease printing six local publications part of the Observer and Eccentric community papers The final print editions of the bi weekly Plymouth Canton Birmingham Farmington Westland and Livonia Observer were published on Sunday Dec 4 Congressional Record Recognizing the 125th Anniversary of the Pensacola News Journal Retrieved February 15 2017 The Pittsburgh Press Google News Archive Search Retrieved April 26 2016 Observer Reporter Google News Archive Search Retrieved April 26 2016 William H Jones and Laird Anderson Gannett 73 Papers and Still Counting The Washington Post July 30 1977 Combined Communications Agrees To a 370 Million Gannett Merger The New York Times May 9 1978 Retrieved April 26 2016 Gannett Buys 11 Newspapers The New York Times June 2 1982 Retrieved April 26 2016 The Milwaukee Sentinel Google News Archive Search Retrieved April 26 2016 permanent dead link Gannett Gets Family Weekly The New York Times February 22 1985 Retrieved April 26 2016 Gannett Gets Louisville Papers for 300 Million The New York Times May 20 1986 Retrieved April 26 2016 Gannett Acquires Evening News The New York Times February 19 1986 Jones Tim July 25 1995 Gannett Widens Scope Acquiring Multimedia Chicago Tribune Gannett Government Media Archived from the original on June 16 2015 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Google News Archive Search Retrieved April 26 2016 permanent dead link Jobs in Scotland on s1jobs com the number 1 Scottish job site s1jobs Gannett announces terms of offer to acquire U K s News Communications amp Media Archived from the original on January 2 2014 Jones Tim June 29 2000 Gannett Agrees To Buy Central Newspapers Chicago Tribune Gannett to acquire Thomson properties including 21 daily newspapers Archived from the original on September 17 2013 Gettysburg Times Google News Archive Search Retrieved April 26 2016 Davidson Paul August 4 2005 Three way newspaper deal USA Today About Us Livonia static hometownlife com Gannett completes the acquisition of WATL TV Channel 36 in Atlanta Archived from the original on January 2 2014 USA Today Acquires Reviewed com Press release Cision PR Newswire Retrieved August 9 2019 Gannett Completes London Broadcasting Buy TV News Check July 8 2014 Retrieved April 26 2016 Gannett acquires 11 media organizations digital first media gannett com Press release Archived from the original on September 16 2015 Retrieved June 29 2015 Gannett announces acquisition of Golfweek Golfweek October 5 2016 Retrieved July 20 2018 O Brien Kelly J May 11 2018 WordStream acquired by Gannett for up to 150M Boston Business Journal Retrieved March 19 2024 Top 100 Newspapers in the United States Infoplease Sandbox Networks Inc Retrieved April 8 2016 Brands Gannett Retrieved October 28 2023 Tracy Marc July 7 2021 USA Today will make readers pay for its website joining other top news outlets The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 29 2023 Medina Eduardo September 13 2023 Taylor Swift and Beyonce Get Their Own Press Corps The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 29 2023 Haggin Patience March 9 2022 WSJ News Exclusive USA Today Owner Gannett Co Gave Advertisers Inaccurate Information for Nine Months Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved October 29 2023 The beloved Digg once the chief rival to Reddit was just sold to an advertising tech company Business Insider April 25 2018 Retrieved September 23 2018 Bomey Nathan May 16 2019 Gannett board members reelected as shareholders reject MNG nominees USA Today Retrieved August 6 2019 Krantz Matt October 7 2011 Gannett CEO Dubow resigns Martore named successor USA Today Johnson Andrew Wiles Russ January 11 2008 Gannett exec Sue Clark Johnson will retire in May return to Valley Arizona Republic p 31 Retrieved October 23 2023 Neibauer Michael May 7 2019 Gannett CEO exits as company battles hostile takeover bid Washington Business Journal Retrieved August 6 2019 Brinkerhoff David June 20 2020 CEO of Gannett s operating company Paul Bascobert will leave company Mike Reed assumes responsibilities USA Today Retrieved September 29 2021 Woolsey Angela March 4 2024 USA Today publisher Gannett moves out of longtime Tysons HQ FFXnow Retrieved March 19 2024 Gannett USA TODAY Headquarters Clark Construction Retrieved March 19 2024 External linksMedia related to Gannett Company at Wikimedia Commons Official website Business data for Gannett Co Inc GoogleReutersSEC filingsYahoo

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