The nonprofit Maine Journalism Foundation made public over the weekend its intent to raise $15 million from donors to buy the state’s largest newspaper group, but its effort began last year when the owner indicated he was willing to sell.
Reade Brower, owner of Masthead Maine, first said publicly in March he would be willing to consider selling his news empire, which includes the Portland Press Herald and four other dailies, 25 weeklies and six specialty publications. He told his employees then that he was looking for either a new owner or partners and was willing to consider new ownership models, including nonprofits.
Last summer, Masthead Maine Publisher Lisa DeSisto reached out to business and community leaders, including retired Press Herald columnist Bill Nemitz, former Graham Media Group CEO Emily Barr and former Weather Channel Companies CEO Bill Burke, to gauge interest in a nonprofit journalism model.
Those three came together to form the Maine Journalism Foundation, which was incorporated as a nonprofit July 25, 2022. They have no promise in hand from Brower, but company employees from management to newsroom staff are hailing the potential move to an emerging model for journalism across the country.
“We came together knowing that Reade was at a crossroads and wanting to find an opportunity to preserve local journalism here in Maine,” said Nemitz, who is the president of the foundation.
He said the foundation doesn’t want the Portland and other papers to suffer the fate of newspapers in other markets that were bought by hedge funds or predatory investors that slashed the staffs and budgets. Masthead Maine is the foundation’s first focus, but it plans to look at helping news organizations throughout the state keep afloat.
Brower had been talking to other potential buyers, including foundations, Nemitz said. When those talks stalled Maine Journalism Foundation got aggressive in ramping up and has “really been grinding” the past couple of months, he said.
Brower and DeSisto did not respond to a request for comment on the foundation’s interest in a purchase, but Brower told the Press Herald that he has had preliminary discussions with the foundation and knew about Sunday’s announcement.
“They were asking if I was open to looking at that as an alternative,” Brower said. “I am open to considering this because I’m looking at all the paths that I see that are financially viable.”
Nemitz said he is heartened by Brower’s response, saying the owner is “maintaining a very open mind toward all of this.” The nonprofit wants to make sure it has a seat at the table if other buyers bid on the news empire or parts of it, Nemitz said.
Brower has not said whether he will try to sell all the publications or only part of his operations, which include a South Portland printing operation that also prints the Bangor Daily News, the only Maine daily Brower does not own.
Nonprofit news outlets have been on the rise across the United States over the past decade as newspapers struggle to stay solvent. Flagging advertising, growing competition from digital news and high paper and other expenses have eaten away at profits over the past two decades, making nonprofit models more enticing.
“I think every newspaper in the country is going to go all digital at some point over the next 10 years,” said Carlos Barrioneuvo, director of Public Media Co. in Georgetown, who was an advisor to the Chicago Sun-Times when it became a nonprofit last year and is working with the foundation.
Nemitz said Maine outlets must innovate around how news gets to people, but with the state’s older demographics, the foundation would continue to print the newspaper if it reaches a purchase agreement with Brower.
The foundation brings great potential, but there still are many questions about what a nonprofit model means for news in Maine, said Megan Gray, a Press Herald reporter who serves as president of the News Guild of Maine, which represents staff at the Portland paper and the Morning Sentinel in Waterville. Gray said the union has reached out to Brower and DeSisto for a meeting and hopes to have one within a couple weeks.
The number of nonprofit news organizations in the United States has risen sharply in the past five years, according to the Institute for Nonprofit News, which represents more than 400 nonprofit news outlets. There have been more than 135 new nonprofit news outlets created since 2017, double the number in the previous five years, it found in a 2022 member survey.
“We want to preserve assets and build off of them,” Barrionuevo said.
That is good news to Jarrod Maxfield, a town councilor in Windham. He said news in the town, whose population is the 13th highest in Maine, has not been covered by the Press Herald and its affiliates in the past three years since the local reporter left. He hopes a nonprofit newspaper that doesn’t have to worry about making money first will shift more resources toward providing news, especially local news.
“Having local reporters who are informed to ask us questions and hold our feet to the fire and then pass that information on to the local population is immensely important,” he said.