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A nonprofit lifeline for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as more papers seek nonprofit sector help

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A nonprofit lifeline for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as more papers seek nonprofit sector help
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A nonprofit lifeline for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette as more papers seek nonprofit sector help

2026-04-15 03:39 Last Updated At:03:50

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette announced Tuesday it had prevented an imminent shutdown because a nonprofit journalism operation had agreed to buy the struggling newspaper. It's the latest example of a news outlet turning to the nonprofit sector to avoid closing as advertising and circulation revenues continue to drop.

Here's a look at a few other prominent newspapers that have made similar moves.

The Salt Lake Tribune was the first legacy newspaper in the country to directly convert from a for-profit company to a nonprofit in 2019. The newspaper had to get IRS approval to make the precedent-setting conversion, which differed from other papers that were purchased by already-existing nonprofit companies.

As part of the switch, the paper installed a board of directors and began relying on donations. A strict firewall was set up between reporters and donors to prevent influence or sway from tainting the news report, and the paper's editorial board stopped making candidate endorsements.

The Salt Lake Tribune had gone through a number of different owners since its first edition was published in 1871 under the name “The Tribune & Utah Mining Gazette.” As internet use became widespread in the mid-1900s, the Salt Lake Tribune and the rest of the newspaper industry faced worsening financial instability as more readers shunned the print product for online sources, and advertisers turned to digital media.

Alden Global Capital, a New York-based hedge fund with a reputation as a ruthless cost-cutter, bought the Salt Lake Tribune in 2010 and saddled the company with $278 million in debt it took on for the acquisition. A subsequent restructuring led to layoffs and a U.S. Department of Justice probe.

Utah businessman Paul Huntsman bought the newspaper in 2016 and ushered in the company's switch to a nonprofit.

In 2022 Chicago Public Media completed a deal to buy the Chicago Sun-Times, creating one of the country's largest local nonprofit news organizations.

The Chicago Sun-Times was created in 1948 by department store heir Marshall Field III. Field had founded the Chicago Sun newspaper a few years earlier, and he purchased the local Daily Times because he was looking for printing presses. The two newspapers merged, becoming the Chicago Sun-Times.

The newspaper passed through a series of owners over the next several decades before the purchase by Chicago Public Media.

The public media organization already owned WBEZ, the local NPR affiliate. The radio station and newspaper began sharing content across their platforms, expanding the reach of both platforms.

The Tampa Bay Times got its start as the West Hillsborough Times, an weekly newspaper printed on a hand-cranked press starting in 1884.

In 1912, Paul Poynter, a former Indiana newspaper publisher, purchased a majority ownership, according to the St. Petersburg Museum of History. The newspaper remained in the Poynter family's hands for the next several decades, until Poynter's son Nelson Poynter died in 1978. He willed the newspaper to a local journalism school — the nonprofit Modern Media Institute — effectively making the newspaper a nonprofit enterprise.

The Modern Media Institute was later renamed for Poynter.

The United States isn't the only place the news industry is struggling. News organizations elsewhere — including in the Caribbean — have faced layoffs, folded entirely or attempted to bring in new revenue by soliciting donations or adding paywalls to websites.

The Associated Press is one of the world's oldest news organizations, started in the mid-19th century by newspapers looking to share the costs of reporting outside their immediate territory. AP has been a not-for-profit organization for decades, but that hasn't kept the company insulated from the industry's financial woes.

Boone reported from Boise, Idaho. AP Media Writer David Bauder contributed.

The printed edition of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette sits in a newspaper rack, Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

The printed edition of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette sits in a newspaper rack, Thursday, April 2, 2026, in Pittsburgh. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

ROME (AP) — The ATP Finals. The Davis Cup Finals. And now a Wimbledon tuneup on grass courts that could be played on the soccer pitch inside Milan’s San Siro stadium.

Led by top-ranked Jannik Sinner, who won Wimbledon last year, the Italian tennis movement keeps on adding new events.

The Italian Tennis and Padel Federation has purchased the rights for a 250-level ATP Tour tournament in Brussels that is held in October, federation president Angelo Binaghi announced Tuesday.

The event will be held each June starting in 2028.

“There’s still time to decide where to play it,” Binaghi said. “For climate reasons, it will probably be held in northern Italy.”

Binaghi noted that the Madrid Open is introducing practice courts inside Real Madrid’s Santiago Bernabeu stadium, so the San Siro could be an option: “For once, we wouldn’t be the first to do it.”

Italy previously hosted a WTA tournament on grass in Gaiba from 2022-24. The federation is also hosting the ATP Finals, currently in Turin, through 2030 and the Davis Cup Finals in Bologna through next year.

Meanwhile, the federation is preparing to host the Italian Open next month.

After Sinner beat Carlos Alcaraz in the Monte Carlo Masters final on Sunday, organizers are optimistic that he could become the first Italian man to claim the singles title at the Foro Italico since Adriano Panatta 50 years ago.

“We’ve got to try and win the men’s singles. The time is right,” Binaghi said at the tournament presentation, noting that Italy has three other players ranked in the top 25: No. 9 Lorenzo Musetti, No. 16 Flavio Cobolli and No. 21 Luciano Darderi.

Alcaraz beat Sinner in last year’s Rome final in Sinner’s first tournament back from a three-month doping ban; while Jasmine Paolini earned Italy the titles in both women’s singles and doubles (with partner Sara Errani).

Work on a retractable roof for Campo Centrale is slated to start immediately after this year’s Italian Open and be ready for the 2028 edition.

Capacity for the revised stadium will increase from 10,500 to 12,400 for tennis; and more for other sports such as basketball.

Binaghi also said he still hopes to make the Italian Open a fifth Grand Slam to join the Australian Open, the French Open, Wimbledon and the U.S. Open as the sport’s biggest tournaments.

Binaghi first raised the idea last year — which would upend a century of tennis history. His federation is interested in acquiring the license for the Madrid Open, which immediately precedes Rome in the tennis calendar. The idea is that by eliminating Madrid and making Rome bigger it could constitute a fifth Slam.

“I think about it every day,” Binaghi said. “There’s only a brief window when we can achieve this. … Italy would benefit from it for 100 years. It’s our dream.”

AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis

FILE - A general view of the San Siro stadium, in Milan, Italy, Sept. 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno, File)

FILE - A general view of the San Siro stadium, in Milan, Italy, Sept. 30, 2024. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno, File)

Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner at the opening day of the "Watches and Wonders Geneva" luxury watch fair, in Geneva, Switzerland, Tuesday, April 14, 2026. (Salvatore Di Nolfi/Keystone via AP)

Italian tennis player Jannik Sinner at the opening day of the "Watches and Wonders Geneva" luxury watch fair, in Geneva, Switzerland, Tuesday, April 14, 2026. (Salvatore Di Nolfi/Keystone via AP)

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