Full disclosure: Tucson's remainng paper, the Arizona Daily Star, is owned by 
Lee Enterprises, whose media empire includes The Sentinel, which also happens 
to employ me. 

Tucson Citizen to cease print publication
By ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
Associated Press Writer
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Arizona’s oldest continuously published daily newspaper, 
the 138-year-old Tucson Citizen, will publish its final print edition Saturday 
after its owner failed to find a buyer.
The closure makes Tucson the latest two-newspaper town to lose one of its 
dailies. The Citizen published in the afternoon while the Arizona Daily Star 
has appeared mornings. Both papers have a joint operating agreement.
The news prompted Attorney General Terry Goddard to file a motion for a 
temporary restraining order and a lawsuit alleging that the Citizen’s closure 
violates state and federal antitrust laws.
“I believe serious questions must be answered about whether this action 
violates the antitrust laws,” Goddard said in a statement.
In a phone interview, Goddard said he believes his office has a strong legal 
argument that what is being done isn’t permissible under the antitrust laws. 
“And action would be taken to put the pieces back together,” Goddard added.
It wasn’t clear when U.S. District Judge Raner Collins could rule, but Goddard 
said he was told the judge wasn’t available before Monday.
Kate Marymont, Gannett Co. vice president for news, said late Friday company 
lawyers were studying the documents filed by Goddard but declined further 
comment.
Earlier in the day, Marymont told the newspaper’s staff that the Citizen will 
continue online with commentary and opinion but no news coverage. A printed 
Tucson Citizen editorial weekly will be distributed with the Star.
“Dramatic changes in our industry combined with the difficult economy ... means 
it is no longer viable to produce two daily printed newspapers in Tucson,” said 
Bob Dickey, president of Gannett’s U.S. Community Publishing Division.
Gannett, the largest newspaper publisher in the country, announced in January 
that it would close the Citizen if it didn’t find a buyer for certain assets by 
March 21.
Four days before the planned closing, Gannett announced the Citizen would 
remain open while it negotiated with two interested buyers. Those talks 
ultimately proved unsuccessful.
“In the end, there were no buyers,” Marymont told the Citizen staff.
Goddard’s complaint said that Santa Monica Media Co. offered to pay Gannett 
either $250,000 immediately or $400,000 over time for Citizen assets. Gannett 
demanded a bid of $800,000 and broke off negotiations when the company 
declined, according to the filing.
Profits for Gannett and Lee’s business partnership, Tucson Newspapers Inc., 
were $16.5 million in 2008 and its profit margins exceeded 19 percent.
The complaint said that Gannett and Lee Enterprises Inc., publisher of the 
morning Arizona Daily Star, were closing the Citizen to increase profits to 
both companies, and doing so would “substantially lessen competition.”
The final issue of the Citizen will be a 40-page commemorative edition, with 
25,000 to 30,000 copies printed and distributed to home subscribers, in vending 
machines and by street vendors, editor Jennifer Boice said.
On its Web site Friday, the Citizen feature a multimedia medley, from “Our 
Epitaph” written by Boice and photos of historic front pages to other staffers’ 
memories and comments, video farewells and photo slideshows.
“I’m really sorry to see it go,” Boice said. “We served a function in this 
community. We made other news media better.”
During its lifetime, the Citizen reported on Arizona’s biggest stories, 
including Marshall Wyatt Earp’s fabled 1881 shootout at the OK Corral and the 
1934 arrest of bank robber John Dillinger and three other gang members hiding 
out in Tucson.
But the Citizen has struggled for years against the Star, a 117,000-circulation 
newspaper. During the Citizen’s heyday in the 1960s, circulation was about 
60,000, but it had fallen to 17,000.
The Citizen becomes the latest casualty of a newspaper industry struggling to 
survive despite the economy, dwindling advertising revenues and Internet 
competition. The battle has been especially tough in two-newspaper towns like 
Tucson.
Already this year, E.W. Scripps Co. closed the Rocky Mountain News in Denver, 
and Hearst Corp. stopped printing the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, making it 
online-only. The Christian Science Monitor stopped daily publication in favor 
of a weekly print edition with daily online news.
On Thursday, the Ann Arbor News in Michigan said its last day of publication 
will be July 23, to be replaced by an online-focused news operation with 
twice-weekly print editions.
Other major newspaper companies, including publishers of the Chicago Tribune, 
the Los Angeles Times and The Philadelphia Inquirer, have filed for bankruptcy 
protection.
Marymont said the Web site envisioned for the Citizen has no existing model. 
She said Tucson residents may post to it, but she didn’t have details on the 
extent of the public’s involvement.
Marymont said she’s hopeful the site will draw advertisers. “But this is first 
and foremost an effort to preserve a voice in a community, the voice of the 
Citizen,” she said.
Rick Edmonds, media business analyst for the Poynter Institute, a nonprofit 
journalism organization in St. Petersburg, Fla., said the model has 
possibilities. Something similar to a local version of Slate.com, a national 
Web site of commentary, might work, he said.
Such a Web site will not be extremely expensive for Gannett, “so it might be 
worth a try,” Edmonds said.
David Nelson, director of the media management project at Northwestern 
University’s Medill School of Journalism, agreed such a format might work.
He cited a similar two-newspaper joint-operating-agreement situation in 
Madison, Wis., where Lee Enterprises publishes the Wisconsin State Journal 
while the city’s second newspaper went to a primarily online model last year. 
The Capital Times still publishes twice-weekly free print editions.
“If Lee is happy with the arrangement in Madison, there’s absolutely no reason 
why they shouldn’t move forward with a similar business arrangement with 
Gannett in Tucson,” Nelson said.
Marymont said Gannett would honor severance pay arrangements that had been 
announced in January after the initial closure announcement. It was unclear how 
many of the Citizen’s 65 employees would lose their jobs.
The Arizona Citizen was founded on Oct. 15, 1870, by John Wasson, a newspaper 
man from California, with behind-the-scenes help from Richard McCormick, the 
territory’s governor and later territorial delegate to Congress.
The newspaper changed ownership several times over the next 100 years until 
Gannett bought it in 1976, just a few years after a U.S. Supreme Court case 
involving the Citizen led Congress to pass the Newspaper Preservation Act and 
new rules for JOAs for competing newspapers doing business together. Gannett 
also changed the name to the Tucson Citizen.
The joint operating agreement Gannett has with Lee will end Saturday. Under the 
JOA, Lee and Gannett shared costs and profits; Tucson Newspapers Inc. handled 
all non-editorial functions, including advertising and circulation. Marymont 
said that partnership will continue outside of the legal framework of a JOA.
———
On the Net:
http://www.tucsoncitizen.com



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