The Hudson Reporter
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | Lucha Malato and David Unger |
Founder(s) | Joseph Barry |
Editor | Caren Matzner |
Founded | 1983 |
Headquarters | 447 Broadway Bayonne, New Jersey 07002 |
Country | United States |
Website | Official website |
The Hudson Reporter is a newspaper chain based in Hudson County, New Jersey. It is the only weekly newspaper chain in Hudson County and one of only two newspaper companies in this busy metropolitan area. The Hudson Reporter publications focus on local politics and community news. In addition to articles written by the staff, the papers print readers' letters to the editor. The oldest newspaper in the chain is the Hoboken Reporter, founded in 1983.
The company publishes eight weekly newspapers and three local lifestyle magazines. The papers cover news and features in Bayonne, Hoboken, Jersey City, North Bergen, Weehawken, Secaucus, West New York, Union City, and Guttenberg. The lifestyle magazines cover Bayonne (Bayonne: Life on the Peninsula), Hoboken (07030), and Jersey City (Jersey City Magazine).[1]
History
The Hudson Reporter was founded in 1983 by Hoboken-based developer Joseph Barry, founder of the development company Applied Housing, who bought the weekly Hoboken Pictorial and its group of local newspapers. Its first newspaper was The Hoboken Reporter,[2][3] which Barry published out of a small building in downtown Hoboken. It subsequently moved to a basement office on 14th Street. As Barry's real estate holdings in Hudson County grew throughout the 1980s, the organization bought a chain of local newspapers and consolidated them into a coordinated weekly paper group. In 1995 the chain moved to a large, historic bank building at 1400 Washington Street, across the street from the basement office.[1][2] Lucha Malato joined the company in 1983 and David Unger in 1985.[3] both becoming his minority partners.[2] In 1987, the chain began The Secaucus Reporter. It eventually added similar papers as part of its Reporter brand for Jersey City, North Bergen, Weehawken, Union City, and West New York. The company purchased the Bayonne Community News in 2004 and relocated to Bayonne in 2016.[3] In 1999, with the real estate market becoming even busier, Barry no longer had time to dedicate to the newspapers, and sold his majority share in the company to Malato and Unger. In 2004, the group bought the Bayonne Community News.[1][2][3]
After both offices lost power during Hurricane Sandy in October/November 2012, the staff worked out of Palisades Medical Center.[4]
In early June 2016, after 33 years in Hoboken, the paper moved its main office to 447 Broadway in Bayonne, three blocks from the 22nd Street Light Rail station. The consolidation of the staff at the new location also saw the closing of the small satellite office in Bayonne that published the Bayonne Community News for years. Among the reasons Malato cited for the move was the amount of unused space at previous Hoboken location, such as the large darkroom that became obsolete since the staff's adoption of digital photography around 2000. The company continues to maintain its distribution facility in North Bergen.[1]
On June 10, 2018, it was announced that publishers Lucha Malato and David Unger had sold the Hudson Reporter Assoc. LP, the company that publishes their papers, to the Newspaper Media Group (NMG) of Cherry Hill, New Jersey, a publisher of more than 50 weekly community newspapers in Central and Southern New Jersey and Philadelphia, as well as a monthly newspaper on Staten Island. Newspaper Media Group Owner & CEO Richard Donnelly stated, "The decision to purchase the Hudson Reporter was an easy one. The award-winning publications fit perfectly into our successful business model of community newspapers. Pooling resources and talent will ensure an even greater success story down the road. We are excited to add this exceptional group of papers to our growing family."[3][5][6]
Accolades
The chain and its writers have won numerous awards for investigative reporting,[3] going beyond the norm for weekly newspapers. The company has become a training ground for reporters and writers in the New York area, having sent two to The New York Times, and several to other top publications including The Star-Ledger and news organizations like Associated Press.[citation needed]
Other writers have published novels[7] and nonfiction books, and written for television.[citation needed]
Publications
Current publications
As of June 2018, The Hudson Reporter publishes the following eight community newspapers:[3][5]
- Jersey City Reporter[3][5]
- Hoboken Reporter[3][5]
- Union City Reporter[3][5]
- West New York Reporter[3][5]
- Weehawken Reporter[3][5]
- North Bergen Reporter[3][5]
- Secaucus Reporter[3][5]
- Bayonne Community News[3][5]
The company also publishes three magazines:[3][5]
- Jersey City Magazine,[3][5][8] printed twice annually
- 07030, a magazine about Hoboken[3][5]
- Bayonne: Life on the Peninsula[3][5]
Former publications
- Hudson Current, an arts and entertainment publication[citation needed]
- Gateway Guide, a quarterly New Jersey tourism magazine published until late 2006[citation needed]
References
- ^ a b c d Pasquariello, Rory (June 12, 2016). "Hudson Reporter offices move: Newspaper chain relocates to new building in Bayonne". The Hudson Reporter.
- ^ a b c d "Hudson Reporter chain expands Newspaper company purchases Bayonne Community News". The Hudson Reporter. February 6, 2004.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Clark, Zane (June 10, 2018). "Newspaper Media Group acquires the Hudson Reporter newspaper chain". The Mt. Laurel Sun.
- ^ "About this special edition". The Hudson Reporter. November 4, 2012. Page 1
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Newspaper Media Group (NMG) acquires Hudson Reporter Assoc. LP, a group of 8 weekly local newspapers". Philadelphia Weekly. June 8, 2018
- ^ "Reporter newspaper chain sold to Newspaper Media Group". The Hudson Reporter. June 9, 2018.
- ^ Steinberg, Becki (June 10, 2010). "College alumnus to re-release lauded novel". The Daily Pennsylvanian. Retrieved June 13, 2010.
- ^ Jersey City Magazine Archived 2009-02-08 at the Wayback Machine