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Publications look for other options with Transcontinental closing P.E.I. printing plant

The closure of the Transcontinental printing plant in Borden-Carleton, P.E.I., has left some the Island's publications looking for alternatives.

'My number one concern right now is getting things across a bridge when the weather is not good'

The Transcontinental printing plant in Borden-Carleton will be closed by the end of January, the company said in a release Thursday. (CBC)

The closure of the Transcontinental printing plant in Borden-Carleton, P.E.I., has left some the Island's publications looking for alternatives.

Eleven employees will lose their jobswith the closure of the plant, according toKatherine Chartrand, senior director of corporate communications at TC Transcontinental.

The company announced the closure will take place by the end of January 2020,in a news release Thursday.

Currently, the plant prints multiple local publications, including:

  • West Prince Graphic.
  • Eastern Graphic.
  • Island Farmer.
  • County Line Courier.
  • The Buzz P.E.I.
  • Salty Magazine.
  • La Voix Acadienne.
  • The Employment Journal.
  • Penny Saver P.E.I.

"It's for sure going to cause us a bit of a problem," said MarciaEnman, managing editor of La Voix Acadienne.She said she is worried about the increased cost associated with shipping in her paper from off-Island.

"We'll have to work with that when it comes," she said. "We've challenged a lot of things through the years, like as far as surviving, we're still there. I just see this as another challenge and we'll get through it."

Peter Richards, managing editor of the Buzz P.E.I., says for its first 18 years, the paper was printed in Nova Scotia. (Travis Kingdon/CBC)

Peter Richards, managing editor of the Buzz P.E.I.,said his publication is also still figuring out how to move forward.

"We intend to keep publishing. Our readers will still want to get an issue every month and we're going to provide it," he said."So we have to look at what kind of options are going to be available to us."

This won't be an entirely new experience, he said. For its first18 years, the Buzz wasprinted in Nova Scotia.

Laura Weatherbie, publisher of Salty Magazine,said she was surprised by the announcement of the closure and thatthe change will take some getting used to.

'What happens if we have a three-day storm that has shut down traffic to high-sided vehicles on the bridge?' asks Laura Weatherbie, editor of Salty. (Travis Kingdon/CBC)

"It's going to take a little bit of work. We're putting together an RFP, request for print, and we're going to see how close we can get it to Prince Edward Island,"Weatherbie said.

"I mean, Salty is all about being local. So the idea that we have to print somewherethat isn't local, is difficult."

Shipping the magazine from off-Island is also worrying, she said.

"My number one concern right now is getting things across a bridge when the weather is not good," she said.

"We have a distribution schedule that we have to stick by, our advertisers require it. So, what happens if we have a three-day storm that has shut down traffic to high-sided vehicles on the bridge?"

Hard to replace

Weatherbie, Richards, and Enman all agreed thatthe quality provided by Transcontinental willbe hard to replace.

The printing company announced "a re-organization of activities" at the Transcontinental Halifax plant, in the release Thursday.

Last year,10 employees at the Borden-Carleton plant were laid offafter it was announced that The Guardian and Journal Pioneer would no longer be printed at that facility and would instead be printed in Halifax.

The company saidthis latest decision alignswith priorities to optimize its printing platform.

More P.E.I. news

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story incorrectly called Laura Weatherbie Salty's editor. In fact, she is the publisher.
    Dec 03, 2019 11:22 AM AT