Monday, April 27, 2020

Seattle Times, Tampa Bay Times get federal loans


The Seattle Times Co. has gotten a $9.9 million federal coronavirus-aid loan, the paper reported.
“This is a lifeline for us for the next 60 days,” said company President and Chief Financial Officer Alan Fisco.
The loan comes under the $349 billion Payroll Protection Program (PPP), which lets small businesses borrow as much as two and a half months of payroll, up to $10 million.
The Times also owns the Walla Walla Union-Bulletin, the Yakima Herald-Republic and a printing facility in Kent.
The federal government usually defines small businesses as companies with fewer than 500 staff, but the SBA includes exceptions for some industries, including newspapers, which can have up to 1,000 employees, according to The Times.
“At least for now, we are putting on the back burner any plans for broad scale layoffs, or cuts to hours worked,” Fisco wrote in a note to staff last week. “There still may be some targeted reductions, but nothing to the extent of cuts we would have had to make without this support.”
A Tampa Bay Times spokeswoman said the paper and its other publications would get an $8.5 million forgivable loan, Reuters reported. Chairman and Chief Executive Paul Tash said the loan would let the paper bring a “few colleagues back from furlough, and we are reversing a pay cut for most employees a month sooner than we had planned.” Bigger pay cuts for top executives will not be changed, Reuters said.
Meanwhile Axios Chief Executive Jim VandeHei said the company was eligible for almost $5 million under the program, Reuters said.
Newsday has gotten a $10 million loan from the program, publisher Debby Krenek saidhttps://www.newsday.com/business/coronavirus/newsday-ppp-loan-1.44074364
Many papers don’t qualify for the loans because they are owned by large chains.


News and Tech

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