Philly newspaper owner files for Chapter 11
By BOB LENTZ
Associated Press Writer
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The owner of The Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia 
Daily News filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Sunday in an effort to 
restructure its debt load.
Philadelphia Newspapers Inc., owned by Philadelphia Media Holdings LLC, is the 
second newspaper company in two days, and fourth in recent months, to seek 
bankruptcy protection.
“This restructuring is focused solely on our debt, not our operations,” chief 
executive officer Brian P. Tierney said in a statement. “Our operations are 
sound and profitable.”
The filing Sunday indicated the company has between $100 million and $500 
million in assets and liabilities in the same range. The company said it will 
continue the normal operations of its newspapers, magazines and online 
businesses without interruption during the debt-restructuring process. In a 
story posted on its Web site Sunday, the company says it has a debt load of 
$390 million.
“In the last two years, we experienced the rare trifecta of a dramatic decline 
in revenue, the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression and a debt 
structure out of line with current economic realities,” Tierney said.
Tierney said the company’s goal was to bring its debt in line with “the 
realities of the current economic and business conditions.”
The company said it decided to turn to bankruptcy court after negotiating with 
its lenders for the last 11 months.
The filings reiterate that the newspaper company hopes to reconfigure its debt 
rather than restructure its operations. The company was profitable by one 
accounting measure last year, earning $36 million before interest, taxes, 
depreciation and amortization, and excluding one-time items. That figure is 
expected to be at least $25 million in 2009.
Tierney said in his statement that, in conjunction with its filing, the company 
is seeking court approval of up to $25 million in debtor-in-possession (DIP) 
financing. The proposed DIP financing, plus the cash flow from operations, will 
ensure the company’s ability to satisfy obligations associated with its normal 
course of business, including wages and benefits, as well as payment of 
post-petition obligations to vendors under existing terms.
The company has long sought to offset declines in advertising revenue and 
circulation with moneysaving moves and improved efficiency, including sharing 
editorial functions of the two papers’ newsrooms.
The Newspaper Guild of Greater Philadelphia notified its union members of the 
filing in an e-mail Sunday night.
The e-mail, obtained by The Associated Press, tells members to stay calm and 
report for work and that “the company is still in business, the papers are 
still publishing.” The communication tells Guild members the union contract 
remains in full force and that workers’ wages and benefits will continue to be 
paid.
A group of investors led by Tierney bought the two Philadelphia papers for $562 
million in June 2006.
According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the Inquirer had an average 
weekday circulation of 300,674 as of Sept. 30, down 11 percent from the prior 
year. That made it the nation’s No. 19 daily by circulation.
The paper’s Sunday circulation averaged 556,426 as of Sept. 30, down 14 percent 
from the prior year. It ranks as the eighth-largest Sunday paper.
As of March 31, 2008, the last audited report from the ABC, the Daily News had 
an average weekday circulation of 109,923.
The filing is the latest blow to newspapers. The Journal Register Co. filed for 
Chapter 11 on Saturday. The Chicago-based Tribune Co. sought bankruptcy 
protection in December, and The Star Tribune of Minneapolis followed suit last 
month.



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