27 April 2011 - 2:28pm| by | 2 comments

Guardian to close local news websites

Guardian to close local news websitesGuardian to close local news websites

The Guardian has today confirmed that it is 'retiring' its local news project and closing community websites serving Leeds, Cardiff and Edinburgh.

The paper said the three sites would be wound down "over the next month or so" because "the project is not sustainable in its current form".

It launched Guardian Local in March 2010 and recruited beatbloggers John Baron (Leeds), Hannah Waldram (Cardiff), and Michael MacLeod (Edinburgh) to report on news and council meetings in their cities.

But despite praising their efforts for having "real impact", the Guardian's head of digital engagement, Meg Pickard, today announced that the "experiment" had been canned.

Pickard wrote in a blogpost: "As an experiment in covering local communities in a new way, it has been successful and enlightening. Unfortunately, while the blogs have found engaged local readerships and had good editorial impact, the project is not sustainable in its present form.

"So over the next month or so, we're going to be winding down the Cardiff, Leeds and Edinburgh blogs and retiring the local project."

In the absence of the hyperlocal services, Pickard said the Guardian would "integrate communities and topics into our wider site coverage wherever possible".

Comments

Anonymous (not verified)
27 Apr 2011 - 15:12
Anonymous's picture

And STV are busy promoting theirs........I see another STV failure on the horizon!

28 Apr 2011 - 10:14
simon_wilson's picture
7
comments

The Leeds Guardian blog has certainly tapped into and connected with the local communities in a way that the local (Leeds-based) printed press seems not to these day, and the Leeds blog is a credit to the guys who worked on that local level. The engagement was excellent - and there was a some smashing bits of writing along the way, surely the main goal of this project. Well done John Baron and anyone else who worked alongside him!

A real shame that the Guardian cannot find a way to make this project "self sustainable", or even help fund it through the greater empire. Maybe in the "slightly older days" they would have, in the spirit and name of journalistic adventure that the Guardian seems to pride itself on still having.

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