Thursday, 28 February 2008

Western Mail Circulation drops below critical mass

Latest Western Mail circulation figures show continuing decline.

Latest figures issued by the Audit Bureau of Circulation show a continuing decline in the Western Mail’s circulation over the last six months.

The figures, published today, show that the while the Western Mail’s circulation continued falling in the first six months of 2007, the paper suffered an even steeper decline in the second half of the year. This represents an accelerating annual loss of some 2,000. Were this decline to continue, within a decade or so, Wales’s only “National Newspaper” will have an (unsustainable) circulation of around 15,000.

Particularly worrying for the paper’s management will be the dramatic fall in circulation of the key Saturday edition with its sports’ commentary and weekend television listings, which showed a fall of more than 3,000 in just one year. In the second half of 2006 the Western Mail’s circulation had already fallen below the all-important 40,000 credibility level – putting it on a par with minor regional and sub-regional newspapers and, crucially, putting into jeopardy a hitherto enormous Welsh public-sector advertising harvest. There are, after all, very few other outlets for mandatory public notices and other government-sponsored advertisements in Wales.

One wonders what plans are being discussed in the boardroom of the paper’s London-based owners Trinity Mirror this afternoon. One wonders, also, what the reaction of the Wales Assembly Government - with its vast public-sector advertising budget - will be.

Whatever happened to The Welsh Globe?

[Source: Reporter, Walesnews: 02/28/08]

Sunday, 17 February 2008

Daily Welsh newspaper abandoned

Quoted from http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/wales/mid/7245774.stm:
BBC NEWS | Wales | Mid Wales | Daily Welsh newspaper abandoned

Plans to publish the first daily newspaper in Welsh have been abandoned, it has been announced.

The company behind Y Byd (The World) said a £200,000 annual grant for the next three years was "insufficient".

Dyddiol Cyf also criticised the assembly government for not meeting a commitment to expand its funding and support for Welsh-language press.

In response, the assembly government said more than £1m will be invested in the sector over the next three years.

Ned Thomas, chair of Dyddiol Cyf, said they were "firmly of the opinion" the assembly government was not fulfilling a pledge in the coalition One Wales document to back moves to expand the Welsh-language sector, and set up a daily paper in the language.

Comment:
By Chris Jones, Cambria Online

So what now is the Assembly Government actually going to support in the print media sector? Or is the money just going to go back into central funds as usual or to be frittered away on supporting projects that nobody wants or understands. Or be given to grant chasing amateurs who only know how to fill in application forms which include all the correct buzzwords and press the right PC buttons.

We have always endorsed and supported the concept of Dyddiol Cyf . Wales needs a Welsh language newspaper to help underpin its sense of national identity and to support the growth of the Welsh language. Wales also desperately needs an independent English language national newspaper to provide an alternative to the Trinity Mirror owned Western Mail.

There is a view that maybe Dyddiol Cyf should never have relied on or sought support from the Assembly or its politicians - after all what are political promises worth in this day and age? History tells us that successful newspapers, magazines and publications have all arisen in the private sector paid for by advertising and by publishing content that people want to read and are willing to pay for. History also tells us that grants can be a 'poisoned chalice' especially when it is snatched away at the last minute or because of political expediency from the lips of the grant reliant addicted organisation.

We point out again that Cambria has never had a single penny of grant aid or support from Assembly Government or its departments in our entire ten year history and we are still here. It would be nice to think that some of the advertising spend currently given to the Western Mail and its ilk were also spread around to Welsh print and new media publishers like ourselves.

Friday, 8 February 2008

Garden's £1.9m debt is wiped out

BBC NEWS | Wales | Garden's £1.9m debt is wiped out: "Garden's £1.9m debt is wiped out
Glass house, National Botanic Garden
The garden negotiated with the assembly government for months
The National Botanic Garden of Wales is to receive up to £1.9m extra public money to pay off its debt.

Deputy First Minister Ieuan Wyn Jones said it was a one-off grant to put the £43m garden on a sound financial footing to attract private investment.

The money it receives each year from the assembly government will rise from £150,000 to up to £550,000.

Managers of the garden at Llanarthne in Carmarthenshire welcomed it as a 'monumental milestone'."
***************

Let us hope that this will be the final solution to what has been a 'monumental waste' of taxpayers money and a 'monumental lack of direction' in this 'monument to Millennium Dome Mentality'.

Wednesday, 6 February 2008

Editor's Letter

,

IT SEEMS RATHER LATE NOW to be wishing you all a very happy 2008 but perhaps with all the gloom and doom that seems to have accompanied this January maybe we need good wishes more than ever. If you are flying Aer Arann - welcome aboard!

For us, 2008 got off to a flying start with the news that Aer Arann will be carrying Cambria on all their flights in and out of Cardiff International Airport. They have picked up several of Air Wales old routes and are looking to expand their operations further in Britain and Europe.
The St. David’s Day Parade falls on a Saturday this year, so hopefully it will mean that many more can attend than in past years. It will certainly provide spectacle this year: a bagad – Bagad Penhars one of the finest Breton pipe bands and already well known to the people of north Pembrokeshire - is coming over from our sister nation Brittany, the Welsh Horse, the acclaimed Cambria Band and plenty of costumes, flags, banners, dancers and musicians.

This year it sets off from the steps of the National Museums and Galleries at 1.15pm, and will then go down to the Bay to end on the steps of the Senedd with an address by Lord Elis-Thomas. If you have the chance, get there early and spend a couple of hours touring the Origins exhibition, a condensation of 40,000 years of Welsh history and how we came to be.
The Welsh must be the perfect immigrants to any country. Our talent for blending in and integrating in newly adopted homelands has, however, meant that we are not as well recognised abroad as are the Scots and the Irish. Perhaps this ability comes from centuries of subjugation, from the threat of having one’s head removed if found in the wrong place, not being allowed to speak ones own language etcetera - all encouragements’ not to stand out but to blend in. Despite all efforts to stamp it out on a number of levels, the survival of the Welsh language makes us the envy of every other Celtic nation.

This year is the Year of Wales at the Interceltic Festival at Lorient in Brittany. Unfortunately it clashes with the Eisteddfod, but if you haven’t experienced it, it is well worth while doing so, and since it lasts for ten days it is quite possible with a bit of juggling to do both. Last year 850,000 people from all over Europe converged on the town for ten days of song, music and dance, culture, wine and food, so accommodation needs to be booked well in advance. That it has not been consistently well supported by, in particular, Welsh officialdom, unlike those of the other Celtic nations who embrace it with enthusiasm, has not gone without notice, and is interpreted by many in Brittany and elsewhere as a lamentable lack of interest and commitment. This despite the existence of an ambitious and impressive Memorandum of Understanding promising close cultural co-operation between the Welsh and Breton governments. The Bretons might rightly ask ‘Where’s the beef?’ It did not go unnoticed either, that this magazine was the sole representative of the entire Welsh media at the event. The festival is covered live by all the major European television networks, except, sadly, our own. 2007 was the Year of Scotland, and the Scottish government entered into the spirit of Lorient with customary zeal, taking full advantage of all the festival offers in terms of cultural and economic co-operation.

Lastly, the petition we launched for the Ray Gravell Cup has well exceeded 5000 signatures. Many have added comments and personal memories, heart-warming evidence of the love and respect which was felt for him. Those collected so far have been bound and will be presented to his wife and family by David Gravell at the Cofio Grav concert which is being held on 2nd March at the Lyric, Carmarthen. David Gravell and Mansel Thomas first organised the concert with the backing of Ray himself, at that time called Cyngerdd Grav, to raise awareness of diabetes. After his death it was decided that the concert should go ahead anyway and that all monies raised should go to charity. All those asked to participate have agreed and will do so for nothing. The line up promises to be astounding.

Monday, 4 February 2008

Hazardous container on Gower coast

BBC NEWS | Wales | Warning over washed-up container: "Warning over washed-up container
A container carrying a hazardous chemical has been washed up along the Gower Coast, west of Swansea.

The chemical is an irritant to the eyes and throat and police are urging the public to stay away from coastal paths in south Gower until further notice.

Police and coastguards had to leave the area, which is remote and away from housing, as a force eight gale blew in.

Work to remove the container - which is not thought to be leaking - will continue when conditions improve.

The Environment Agency has been informed of the incident.

The exact location is not being released at present to protect public safety."

Intrepid Cambria photographer Carl Ryan was there.

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