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The Times-Standard is the only major local daily newspaper covering the far North Coast of California. Headquartered in Eureka , the paper provides coverage of international, national, state and local news in addition to entertainment, sports, and classified listings.
Though Eureka has been the base for two major daily newspapers at different times in its 150 years, only the Times-Standard, owned by the Colorado-based Media News Group, survives. The Times-Standard printed nearly 20,000 papers per day as of 2004; [140] as of 2018, its distribution was 13,000 and it published online-only on Mondays. [141]
The oldest continuously operated paper on the North Coast (also the oldest paper north of Sacramento) is the Eureka Times-Standard, which has been in continuous publication since it began as the Humboldt Times in September 1854. Its longest operating competitor was the Humboldt Standard, which began in 1875.
The Eureka Times-Standard is the only major regional daily publication covering Arcata. The Arcata Eye was a former weekly newspaper covering Arcata and Blue Lake until it merged with the McKinleyville Press newspaper in 2013 to become the Mad River Union. [67]
Times-Advocate: Escondido 15,000 Weekly Evergreen Times: Evergreen: Times Media, Inc. Weekly Community The Sun-Gazette: Exeter Mineral King Publishing, Inc. 3,000 Weekly Tulare County news since 1901 Fontana Herald News: Fortuna: Times Media Group: 14,381 Weekly Fullerton Observer: Fullerton Fullerton Observer, LLC 10,000 Bimonthly: Orange ...
Betty Kwan Chinn (關惠群) is a philanthropist who lives in Eureka, California. She has helped the homeless—including the mentally ill, disabled veterans, runaways, and drug abusers—since the 1980s. She won the 2008 Minerva Award. [2]
The Scotia Mill and log pond. Pacific Lumber (or PL, as locals have known it for generations) began during the heat of the US Civil War in 1863 when A. W. McPherson and Henry Wetherbee purchased 6,000 acres (24 km 2) of timberland on California's Eel River at the rate of $1.25 per acre.
The two stations share studios on South Broadway in Spruce Point near the southwestern corner of Eureka; KVIQ-LD's transmitter is located along Barry Road southeast of the city. Until 2017, KVIQ operated as a full-power television station on digital channel 17.