Brunswick News

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Brunswick News Inc. is a Canadian newspaper publishing company based in Moncton, New Brunswick. It is privately owned by James K. Irving.

Newspapers

Brunswick News employs more than 600 people and operates nearly all of the major print publications in New Brunswick, including three daily newspapers and several French and English language weeklies throughout the province.

Brunswick News operates the following newspapers:

Daily

Weekly

Brunswick News owns 14 English-language weeklies (6 paid subscription, 5 free) and 7 French-language weeklies (4 paid subscription, 3 free).

  • The Tribune (English language) (Campbellton and Restigouche County)
  • La Voix du Restigouche (French Language) (Campbellton and Restigouche County)
  • The Bugle-Observer (Woodstock)
  • Le Journal Madawaska (French Language) (Edmundston)
  • L'Étoile (French Language)
    • Édition provinciale
    • Édition La Cataracte (Grand Falls)
    • Édition Chaleur (Chaleur region)
    • Édition Dieppe (Dieppe)
    • Édition Kent (Kent)
    • Édition Péninsule (Acadian Peninsula area)
    • Édition République (Edmundston)
    • Édition Restigouche (Restigouche)
    • Édition Shédiac (Shediac)
  • Kings County Record (English language) (Sussex, Kings County area)
  • Miramichi Leader (English language) (Miramichi) (Three times a week)
  • The Northern Light (English language) (Bathurst)
  • Here (English language urban alternative weekly distributed to Saint John, Moncton and Fredericton)
  • KV Style (Kennebecasis Valley)

Media concentration controversy

Brunswick News Inc. is the largest owner of media in New Brunswick. It is privately owned by J.K. Irving, who is also co-owner of the "Irving Group of Companies," one of the largest industrial conglomerates in eastern Canada. It owns all of the English-language daily newspapers in New Brunswick and 29 other publications.[1] In light of this affiliation, many citizens accuse newspapers owned by Brunswick News of bias, and of failing to cover stories that depict subsidiaries in the Irving Group of Companies in a negative light.

The Irving media concentration of New Brunswick was investigated in the Davey report (1970) and the Davey Committee on combines and the Kent commission (1981)[2] during an era before extensive media concentration took place across Canada in the 1990s; at that time, the Irving concentration in New Brunswick was considered unique in the country's media landscape. The Davey Report recommended (in section 2.a) the creation of new legislation that would "require the break-up of regional monopolies, such as that of the Irving family in New Brunswick, by prohibiting the ownership of two or more newspapers having 75% or more of the circulation, in one language, in a defined geographical area".

In 2005, with a donation of $2 million, the Irving family endowed two chairs of journalism in New Brunswick: the Irving Chair in Journalism at St. Thomas University in Fredericton and the Roméo LeBlanc Chair in Journalism sponsored by Brunswick News at Universite de Moncton. An advisory board at each university makes the selections for the chairs.

References

  1. "Media convergence, acquisitions and sales in Canada". CBC online. Retrieved 3 April 2012. 
  2. Joseph Jackson, Newspaper Ownership in Canada- An Overview of the Davey Committee and Kent Commission Studies, PWGSC - Political and Social Affairs Division, 17 December 1999

External links

Coordinates: 46°05′16″N 64°46′55″W / 46.087713°N 64.782053°W / 46.087713; -64.782053

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