While touting a slowing in the decline of its operating revenue, Lee Enterprises (owner of the Quad City Times) announced this week it was cutting health care benefits for many of its retirees.
The changes to its health coverage/benefits is expected to reduce the corporation's liability by up to $30 million, according to the company's annual report filed with the U.S. Security and Exchange Commission (SEC). The move triggered protests by union members outside the offices of Lee's St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
In its filing with the SEC, Lee said it was eliminating the medical coverage for some retirees and increasing the share other retired employees would be responsible for paying for health coverage.
For its fiscal year ended Sept. 30, 2009, Lee's operating revenue was $842 million, a decline of 18 percent from the previous 12 months. Advertising revenue for the period declined more than 21 percent to $615 million.
The company lost $180 million in fiscal 2009, compared to a loss of $871 million in fiscal 2008.
Online page views for the newspaper chain increased nearly 8 percent from fiscal 2008, but online advertising revenue declined nearly 24 percent. Online advertising comprises 6.8 percent of Lee's total advertising revenues.
Daily and Sunday newspaper circulation also continued to decline. For the six months ended September 2009, daily circulation at its 49 daily newspapers was down 6.4 percent while Sunday circulation declined 5.8 percent.
At the Quad City Times, daily circulation currently is 50,373 while its Sunday circulation now stands at 65,415.
VENICE, Louisiana — Kindra Arnesen is a 46-year-old commercial fishing boat operator who has spent most of her life among the pelicans and bayous of southern... more
A fertilizer spill this month in southwest Iowa killed nearly all the fish in a 60-mile stretch of river with an estimated death toll of more than 750,000, according to Iowa and... more
The Iowa Senate on Monday sent a bill to the governor’s desk restricting stormwater and topsoil regulations, a measure Democrats say unfairly limits local control.