Montreal's La Presse to become non-profit entity - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 10:03 AM | Calgary | -16.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Montreal's La Presse to become non-profit entity

A bastion of Quebec journalism, La Presse, is undergoing a major change, severing ties with the powerful Desmarais family and becoming a non-profit entity.

Desmarais family, the publication's longtime owners, will donate $50M before severing ties

La Presse publisher Guy Crevier, left, responds to a question as president Pierre-Elliott Levasseur looks on during a news conference in Montreal, where the media company announced plans to adopt a not-for-profit structure. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

A bastion of Quebec journalism, La Presse, is undergoing a major change, severing ties withthe powerful Desmarais family and becoming a non-profit entity.

The announcement Tuesday is aimed at enabling the French-language publication to accept private donationsas well as government support.

Non-profits are a common model in the U.S., where wealthy foundations and donors help bankroll investigative and public interest journalism.

The Desmarais family has owned La Presse for more than 50 years as part of its conglomerate, Power Corp.

The familywill donate $50 million to the new entity.

"The newstructureis designed to be a modern approachadapted to the realities of today's written media," La Presse said in a statement.

"La Pressewill be able to pursue itsmission: producing high-quality, thorough and reliablenewsand promotingdiversity of opinion with respect for ideas and individuals."

Thechange instructure requires the repeal of aprovision of aPrivate Act adopted in1967 under Quebec law regarding the ownership ofLa Presse.

Support from Ottawa?

At the announcement,La Presse president Pierre-ElliottLevasseururged the federal government to financially support the written press through philanthropic models and direct assistance.

The Canadian government indicated it would do so in its last budget, tabled in February.

The Liberal government proposed $50 million over five years to support independent, non-governmental organizations that will spur on local journalism in underserved communities.

Levasseursaid that a non-profit model makes it easier for the Liberalsto justify using taxpayer dollars to bail out struggling media organizations.

"They understand the important contribution that written media plays in a healthy democracy, but they're not willing to help rich families or rich companies," Levasseursaid.

In December 2017, La Presse stopped printing paper copies and went exclusively digital. On Tuesday, it was announced that La Presse was cutting ties with the Desmarais family and becoming a non-profit entity. (Benjamin Shingler/CBC)

The budget also said the government will spend the next year exploring models that would allow private giving or philanthropic support for non-profit journalism and local news.

Foundedin 1884, the French-language newspaper was created by conservatives who were dissatisfied with then Prime Minister John A. Macdonald.

In December 2017, the newspaper stopped printing paper copies and went exclusively digital, featuringa website, mobile app and a daily tablet edition called La Presse+.

La Presse has one of the largestnewsrooms inCanada, with 585 employees.

With files from The Canadian Press