(AP) Warren Buffett's company is planning to close a small Virginia newspaper that it bought from Media General earlier this year.
The 10,000-circulation Manassas (Va.) News & Messenger, which began publishing in 1869, has been struggling to compete in the Washington, D.C., suburbs. It will print its last issue on Dec. 30.
Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc. said Wednesday it has no plans to close any of its other newspapers.
The Manassas closing will eliminate 33 jobs. An additional 72 corporate positions that Berkshire acquired with the Media General deal will be eliminated.
The Omaha World-Herald reported the closure on Wednesday. Officials at Berkshire's newspaper unit, which is run by World-Herald executives, did not immediately respond to a message.
Buffett did not immediately respond to a message sent to his assistant Wednesday.
After Berkshire bought the Media General newspapers, Buffett said Berkshire may buy more newspapers as long as they cover their communities well and aren't very large.
The Manassas newspaper certainly fit Buffett's criteria as a small publication, but Terry Kroeger, who oversees Berkshire's newspaper division, told the Omaha World-Herald that the News & Messenger had a difficult time maintaining a sense of community in the area it covered, and it had been losing money for years.
The News & Messenger, which is based in Prince William County, Va., is also competing directly with several other media outlets in the Washington D.C. metropolitan area, including the Washington Post, in which Buffett's company has a large ownership stake.
We didn't see any way to really turn it back into a profitable enterprise, reliably, so what made the most sense was to just cease publication, Kroeger said to the Omaha World-Herald.
Along with the Manassas newspaper, a companion newspaper, NOVA Weekly, and two websites associated with the publications will close.
Aside from the 62 Media General papers Berkshire bought earlier this year, Buffett's company owns the Buffalo News, the Omaha World-Herald and several other newspapers in Nebraska and Iowa.
Buffett said in May that he was looking to purchase newspapers in cities and towns where residents care deeply about where they live.
If a citizenry cares little about its community, it will eventually care little about its newspaper, Buffett said.
Newspapers remain a relatively small part of Berkshire Hathaway, which owns an assortment of more than 80 subsidiaries and holds major investments in companies such as Coca-Cola Co., Wells Fargo and IBM. Berkshire's subsidiaries include insurance, manufacturing, railroad, utility, furniture and restaurant firms.
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Follow Josh Funk online at www.twitter.com/funkwrite
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Online:
Berkshire Hathaway Inc.: www.berkshirehathaway.com
Associated Press





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