Several more Vermont newspapers are taking drastic measures to survive the coronavirus pandemic.
Three Chittenden County weeklies — the Milton Independent, Essex Reporter and Colchester Sun — announced Tuesday that they will cease publishing print editions “until further notice.” The papers will continue reporting local news online, executive editor Michelle Monroe wrote on their respective websites.
“This is a fast-changing and developing situation so we will be assessing our publishing plan real-time to determine the next print publication date,” she wrote.
The papers are owned by Jim O’Rourke, who also publishes the St. Albans Messenger. It was not immediately clear Tuesday night whether the Messenger, a six-day-a-week paper, would follow suit.
In her note, Monroe said that the three weeklies have no plans to lay off employees “as we work through the crisis.”
The West Lebanon, N.H.-based Valley News, which reports on both sides of the Connecticut River, announced several new cost-cutting measures Tuesday, including layoffs, pay cuts for managers and reduced hours for several departments.
According to editor Maggie Cassidy, the paper laid off two sports reporters and a features reporter on Tuesday, shrinking its full-time newsroom staff from 20 to 17. It had previously let go three part-time employees and opted to leave another features position vacant. Cassidy said the editors of the sports and features sections would become reporters. The Valley News also plans to share production duties with its sister paper, the Concord Monitor.
“Although we hope that we can bring staff back once things return to normal, we don’t know when or if we will be able to do that,” Cassidy said.
Earlier this week, the biweekly Addison County Independent announced that it would suspend its Monday print edition “throughout the duration of the coronavirus health crisis” and publish only on Thursdays.
“With more businesses closing and advertising diminishing with those accounts, we have to conserve our resources as carefully as we can to keep the Addison Independent profitable,” publisher Angelo Lynn wrote in Monday’s edition. “That hasn’t been easy these past few years, and this health care crisis will make that even harder.”
Seven Days itself has been hit hard by the outbreak. It temporarily laid off seven employees on Monday, the paper reported. Last Friday, the Rutland Herald and Barre-Montpelier Times Argus laid off 20 staffers for a two-week period. Earlier that week, the publisher of three southern Vermont newspapers — the Brattleboro Reformer, Bennington Banner and Manchester Journal — announced companywide furloughs.



For the sake of social distancing near and far–as well as the paper’s self-professed social conscience–why isn’t 7D suspending print publication and go full and complete digital too?…It’s not as if, FOR INSTANCE, the papers are dropped off by drone!?!?!?
Hi! Amazon, UPS, and the Posal service are still delivering and taking precautions. Our drivers are as well. They’re equipped with gloves, hand sanitizer, and are following the latest preventative precautions from the Vermont Dept. of Health. They rarely interact with people along their routes anyway, but they are practicing social distancing as they drop off papers around the state!
Get real and stop comparing yourselves with Amazon, UPS and the Postal Service, which are much more critical than this print publication. Be better, less egotistic and do the right thing.
It’s an unnecessary risk Seven Days is taking and endangering others. The preventative precautions from the Governor are STAY AT HOME!!
To reply to angry comments – you’re right in that only essential services should be provided, but remember that many have no computer, so for them, this is the way the community makes announcements! There are no longer broadsides on bulletin boards about epidemics. If you didn’t see it in a paper or hear it on a radio or see it on TV or have email, you Might Not Know how this whole thing was progressing! We should stay at home, but the village has to be able to make proclamations through the media.
Cool your jets – they are pros. Thank you Gillian, and everyone at Seven Days.
Because, CrossFire, not everyone has a computer! As a matter of fact, I get SEVEN DAYS dropped off on my doorstep every week!
Margo Howland