Defunct paper sued: More than two years after the Pulse of the Twin Cities, a Minneapolis-based altweekly, ceased publishing, its publisher is facing a lawsuit. In a posting at his existing paper, the Southside Pride, Ed Felein relates that Sela Roofing and Remodeling is suing Pulse for a December 28, 2005, story it thought was defamatory. The company is asking that the story — about exploitation of Latino workers — be removed from the Web site and is seeking $50,000 in damages, according to Felien… despite the fact that the statute of limitations for such an action has expired. Felein is asking for financial help to mount a legal defense, and writes that support so far has been “overwhelming and humbling.”
Hoppin replaces Stassen-Berger: With Pioneer Press political reporter Rachel Stassen-Berger heading over to the Star Tribune, the St. Paul paper announces that her replacement will be reporter Jason Hoppin. A good move, but as editor Thom Fladung noted in his memo, Hoppin’s old beat — covering Minnesota’s capitol city – won’t be refilled.
Bridge shuttered: The Bridge, a community newspaper covering Mississippi River neighborhoods in the core of Minneapolis, stopped publishing its print edition a month ago, and now its website — rebranded as Bridgeland News — seems to be following suit. In a July 13 editors note, Dan Nordley wrote that, despite getting 1,000 email subscribers, the publication fell short in its fundraising efforts to switch to online-only newsgathering. The site — last updated on Aug. 6 — will get occasional new content, but, he writes, “the site will be like the Stone Arch Bridge—more of a nostalgic place than a structure that’s still used for commercial traffic.”
Health care debate goes online: Local social media types, fed up with mayhem wrought at public forums on health care by anti-Obama activists, are hoping for a calmer discussion of the issues online. Blogger and online media consultant Paul Saarinen has started a video conversation on “What bothers you about the health care debate?” Video commenters so far include Mediation blogger Taylor Carik and Matt Thompson, online journalist and former deputy web editor at the Star Tribune. All are welcome to participate.
Hubbard sues Ramsey County: In June, Hubbard Broadcasting — owner of KSTP, KAAL and others — filed a data practices request to see all uncounted ballots in the protracted Norm Coleman/Al Franken Senate contest. Now, after Coleman conceded defeat and with Al Franken serving his fifth week as Minnesota’s second senator, the company has filed suit against Ramsey County to get their hands on unopened absentee ballots. This week they did the same in St. Louis County.













1 Comment »
Comment posted August 13, 2009 @ 8:30 am
Thanks for the link, and shout out Paul. To be completely transparent, I am frustrated by the town hall meeting format. I do think the loudest person gets the attention there, but I’m not putting blame on pro or anti-Obama supports. I think it’s fair to say it happens on both sides. Just sayin’ for the record. Thanks again for the link, and I’d love to hear your thoughts at the site.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URL
Leave a comment