Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

Transcontinental Closing Its Last Two English-Language Newspapers In Quebec

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Oct, 2015 11:27 AM
    MONTREAL — Transcontinental is closing its last two stand-alone English-language newspapers in Quebec.
     
    The weekly West Island Chronicle and the Westmount Examiner will cease publication Wednesday, with the loss of three jobs.
     
    The Chronicle dates to 1924 while the Examiner started in 1935.
     
    The media company (TSX:TCL.A) said the papers were no longer financially viable.
     
    The company's last remaining English-language newspaper in the province — the Huntingdon Gleaner — is inserted inside the French-language weekly paper Le Journal Saint-Francois.
     
    Meanwhile, the company  says that next month it will launch Ambiance, a second monthly, bilingual publication to join Rendez-Vous in the Montreal area. Neither   publication will be distributed in the West Island of Montreal.
     
    Transcontinental also publishes papers in Saskatchewan and the Atlantic provinces.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Searching For Driver Two Days After Truck Lands In B.C. River

    Police Searching For Driver Two Days After Truck Lands In B.C. River
    RCMP Cpl. Dave Tyreman says that early Tuesday morning, a passerby spotted the vehicle in the water near the northern Interior community of Houston.

    Police Searching For Driver Two Days After Truck Lands In B.C. River

    Surrey Board of Trade Disappointed with Transit Plebiscite Results

    Surrey Board of Trade Disappointed with Transit Plebiscite Results
    The Surrey Board of Trade, its Directors and Transportation Team, will work with the City of Surrey, the Province and the Federal Government’s, and other partners to ensure that Surrey gets the Transportation and Transit improvements that it needs.

    Surrey Board of Trade Disappointed with Transit Plebiscite Results

    Vancouver Canucks Make Sweeping Front-Office Changes, Firing Gilman, Henning, Crawford

    Vancouver Canucks Make Sweeping Front-Office Changes, Firing Gilman, Henning, Crawford
    VANCOUVER — The Vancouver Canucks cleaned out their front office, firing assistant general managers Laurence Gilman and Lorne Henning and director of player personnel Eric Crawford.

    Vancouver Canucks Make Sweeping Front-Office Changes, Firing Gilman, Henning, Crawford

    Old School Or New? Math Teachers Debate Best Methods As Scores Fall

    Old School Or New? Math Teachers Debate Best Methods As Scores Fall
    There are generally two camps: those in favour of the old-school method to lecture kids with a "drill-and-kill" format that preaches practice, and another, ever-growing group that believes a more creative approach is needed to engage students.

    Old School Or New? Math Teachers Debate Best Methods As Scores Fall

    WestJet's Vancouver-To-Toronto Flight Diverted Following Threat; Company Believes It's A Hoax

    WestJet's Vancouver-To-Toronto Flight Diverted Following Threat; Company Believes It's A Hoax
    CALGARY — A bomb threat believed to be a hoax prompted WestJet to divert a Vancouver-to-Toronto flight to Calgary on Wednesday night.

    WestJet's Vancouver-To-Toronto Flight Diverted Following Threat; Company Believes It's A Hoax

    Vancouver Pot Protest Arrests Don't Contradict New Regulations: City Manager

    Penny Ballem says she sees no contradiction between the arrests and Vancouver's recent decision to become Canada's first city to regulate an illegal industry.

    Vancouver Pot Protest Arrests Don't Contradict New Regulations: City Manager