Santa Barbara News-Press bankruptcy brings uneasy end to an owner's bitter tenure
SANTA BARBARA, CA-JULY 24, 2023: Overall, shows the former headquarters of the Santa Barbara News-Press on Anacapa St. in Santa Barbara. After more than 150 years of newsgathering, the Pulitzer-Prize winning newspaper has posted its last online edition a month after the News-Press ceased publication of its newspaper and went all digital. Before closing, they moved their location to Goleta, where the paper was printed, before going all digital. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)
The Santa Barbara News-Press, founded shortly after the Civil War, operated from this Spanish-style headquarters for more than a century. (Mel Melcon / Los Angeles Times)

This city of red-tile roofs, temperate breezes and coastal charm has long glimmered as one of those exceptional California places.

Its natural beauty attracts a literate and engaged population, and its residents, at least from afar, seem unduly blessed with fine weather, prosperity and more than a dose of the good life.

That good fortune appeared to shine on Santa Barbara in 2000, when one of the state’s richest women bought the Santa Barbara News-Press, a venerable newspaper that at the time had been at the heart of the city’s public life for more than 130 years. Santa Barbarans cheered at the notion of having a local in charge after more than a decade under the ownership of New York Times Co. They saw in Wendy McCaw an owner with the financial resources (once pegged by Forbes at $1.5 billion) to ensure long-term viability of the Pulitzer Prize-winning news outlet. And they liked what they knew of her politics: environmentalist; champion of wildlife. McCaw seemed in step with the liberal-leaning beach and university community.

The reports of a match made in heaven proved greatly exaggerated. Within a few years, McCaw’s relationship with newsroom leaders — and then with many readers — began to crumble. A “bloodbath” exodus of top editors in 2006 unleashed what would become a slow-motion unraveling of the newspaper and its credibility.

Santa Barbara News-Press owner Wendy McCaw in a 2007 photo.
Santa Barbarans initially cheered when Wendy McCaw, one of the state's richest women, bought the News-Press in 2000. But reports of a match made in heaven proved greatly exaggerated. (Damian Dovarganes / Associated Press)

The downward spiral reached rock bottom July 21, when Ampersand Publishing, the McCaw-led company that owns the News-Press, filed for bankruptcy. The finishing stroke came without fanfare or public notice. "All of our jobs are eliminated, and the News-Press has stopped publishing," Managing Editor Dave Mason wrote in a brief email to the outlet's staffers. "They ran out of money to pay us."

Santa Barbarans reacted to the shutdown with measures of sadness and resignation. Many said the newspaper’s fate had been sealed ever since McCaw began warring with her staff and injecting her right-leaning, government-upbraiding views deep into the news pages. Whether through inexperience or intent, her critics said, McCaw transformed a respected local news organization — steeped in industry standards of fairness and independence — into a tormented plaything. Circulation swooned.

“It’s been like watching a cancer victim die,” said Dawn Hobbs, a former News-Press reporter, who was fired in 2007 after she called for readers to boycott the paper because of McCaw’s purported meddling in editorial decisions. “You are so sad at the end. But you’re almost relieved that the entity has been put out of its misery.”