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Minnesota Star Tribune Announces 15 Percent Workforce Cut Weeks After Pulitzer Win, Explores Non-Profit Foundation Model
MINNEAPOLIS — The downtown headquarters of the Minnesota Star Tribune fell quiet this week following management's announcement of sweeping layoffs affecting roughly 15 percent of its total workforce. The restructuring cuts approximately 65 out of 500 positions across the organization, including at least 15 newsroom staff roles. The difficult corporate down-sizing arrives just one month after the publication celebrated a prestigious Pulitzer Prize for its breaking news coverage of the local Annunciation shooting.
The jarring contrast between institutional celebration and staff contraction has reverberated deeply across the newsroom. Rohan Preston, co-chair of the Star Tribune Newspaper Guild, noted that the staff went from drinking champagne at a Pulitzer victory party one week to navigating tears and job losses the next. While union representatives confirmed that the current cuts do not directly target frontline reporters or photographers, they significantly impact vital support roles throughout the broader editorial department.
In a formal memorandum distributed to staff, Publisher Steve Grove characterized the workforce reduction as a painful but necessary step toward the future. With the vast majority of the publication's operational revenue now generated by digital subscribers and web advertising rather than traditional print editions, Grove stated that the reorganization is critical to stabilize the historic outlet as a digital-first media company.
For over a decade, the Star Tribune remained largely insulated from the severe financial headwinds plaguing legacy print media across the United States, primarily due to the stable backing of billionaire owner Glen Taylor. However, to foster long-term independence, Grove revealed the organization is actively exploring an alternative civic business model. Under the proposed framework, ownership of the newspaper would shift to a non-profit foundation, leveraging public donations and philanthropic endowments to fuel daily news gathering.
This non-profit trajectory mirrors successful structural turnarounds executed by other prominent legacy metro dailies facing digital deficits, most notably The Philadelphia Inquirer, which returned to steady profitability a decade after transitioning to a philanthropic trust. University of Minnesota Hubbard School of Journalism professor Scott Libin noted that while the foundation model is proven elsewhere, it represents a radical shift for the upper Midwest media landscape. Libin, who routinely discusses existential threats to legacy media like artificial intelligence and declining ad revenue with his students, expressed hope that the transformation will succeed in preserving local public-interest reporting.
Guild leadership emphasized that while they support management's overarching goal to keep the publication viable and relevant in the digital age, workers remain skeptical about the immediate execution of the down-sizing. As the operational transition unfolds over the coming months, regional media analysts will closely monitor whether philanthropic donations can effectively sustain localized journalism without sacrificing newsroom depth.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
June 4, 2026


