Moorabool News 10 May 2022

Page 12

Page 12 The Moorabool News – 10 May, 2022

News Papers face print cost surge

Email - news@themooraboolnews.com.au

Are you aged 70 years or older? You must still vote in the federal election.

By Lachlan Ellis

The federal election will be held on Saturday 21 May 2022. Voting is compulsory even if you are 70 years of age or older. If you can’t make it to a polling place on election day you may be eligible to vote early. For more information go to www.aec.gov.au or call the AEC on 13 23 26. COVID-19 measures at polling places A range of COVID-19 safety measures will be in place as you cast your vote. At all times you should follow local rules and public health directions, as well as instructions from AEC staff. To protect the health and safety of the community, you should not attend a polling place if you’re showing any COVID-19 type symptoms. Go to www.aec.gov.au for the latest updates and advice, including what happens if you are not able to vote.

Voting is compulsory for Australian citizens aged 18 years and older. If you don’t vote, you may be prosecuted. If you vote more than once it is a criminal offence.

Federal election, Saturday 21 May 2022

13 23 26 AEC22_O7VLC_VIC

aec.gov.au | 

Authorised by the Australian Electoral Officer for Victoria, 2 Lonsdale St, Melbourne.

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The Moorabool News on 5368 1966 news@themooraboolnews.com.au

Australian newspapers are facing a hike of up to 80 per cent in printing costs, with fears of jobs being lost and papers closing under the financial burden. Norwegian-owned Norske Skog is the only manufacturer of newsprint and magazinegrade paper in Australia, and closed its Albury and New Zealand mills in 2019 and 2021 respectively, with the New Zealand closure “a process made necessary by the secular decline of the publication paper industry and the impact of COVID-19”. This leaves just one mill for newsprint in Australasia, Norske Skog’s Boyer mill in northern Tasmania. Andrew Manuel is President of Country Press Australia (CPA), which represents over 250 regional media outlets from across the country. He said Norske Skog had not been profitable in Australasia for some time, but the amount that printing costs is set to jump came as a shock. “It’s definitely a surprise. We were told at the start of the year there’d be price increases, so we’ve been bracing for that…but a doubledigit price rise, in any industry, is drastic,” Mr Manuel told the Moorabool News. “There’s been a reduction in need for newsprint during the COVID pandemic, and obviously there’s a digital transformation happening. Norske Skog have told us they haven’t been making money from newsprint in Australia, so they’re now trying to do that by lifting prices from July 1. “It’s going to mean different things for different publishers. It’s obviously going to mean they’ll need to find money to pay for this rise...the price of advertising may need to

increase, cover prices may need to increase, and business models may need to change.” Mr Manuel said the hardest thing for newspapers was the uncertainty of the price jump. “Some publishers have seen a 20 or 30 per cent increase already this year, and don’t have a [printing] contract from July 1. And like any business, if a cost jumps up 80 per cent in three months’ time…it’s kind of like the fuel crisis, when fuel went up to $2.50 overnight and everyone panicked,” he said. “If papers are only just viable now, and now they have this pressure increase, we might say more closures. The biggest concern we’ve heard from CPA members is the unknown, people want to know what’s going on.” CPA is lobbying the federal government to provide emergency funding for newspapers, to help them weather the price rise.


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