The Tribune鈥檚 publisher, Steven Saslow, made the announcement on Wednesday afternoon. He cited industry-wide advertising reductions, rising costs of producing content, and difficulty hiring staff.
Together, he said, those challenges made continuing the Mail Tribune 鈥渦nsustainable.鈥 Saslow could not be reached by phone for comment on Wednesday.
The paper as a merger between the Medford Mail and the Medford Tribune in 1909, guided by editor George Putnam.
The Mail Tribune was the first newspaper in Oregon to win a . It was awarded for standing up to unscrupulous politicians in Jackson County in 1934.
The paper expanded in the 1990s and early 2000s when it purchased the Ashland Daily Tidings and The Nickel 鈥 a local classifieds paper 鈥 in 2002.
It changed hands several times in the early 2000s. It was purchased by current owner and publisher Steven Saslow through Rosebud Media LLC in 2017. Saslow purchased the paper for $15 million from GateHouse Media.
In 2021, the Mail Tribune shuttered the Ashland Daily Tidings.
This isn鈥檛 the first challenge facing local journalism in Southern Oregon. The Klamath Falls Herald and News briefly lost its entire reporting staff in March of 2022. ceased printing in 2020 and the Coos Bay World went from publishing five days per week to two.
Online-only nonprofit Ashland.news opened in 2022 to fill the journalism gap in the Rogue Valley. It was started by Bert Etling, a former editor at the Daily Tidings.
The Mail Tribune ceased print operations last September. The final online edition will be published on Friday.