
Paul Bass Photo
The surviving reporters at the New Haven Register have learned that their newsroom probably wonât move downtown, after all.
The daily newspaperâs parent company, Digital First Media, had been negotiating with the owners of the block-long 900 Chapel St. former mall building across from the Green to move the newsroom to the 10,000-square foot space (pictured). The site, sandwiched between Dee Asian Kitchen and the Omni Hotel, was formerly occupied by the Bottega clothing store. The move had been anticipated to take place this August. The companyâs non-editorial employees were to move to offices at a separate location.
Digital First execs originally said they planned to move the newsroom downtown as part of their successful campaign to persuade the city to grant them zoning relief in order to sell their largely empty 220,000 square-foot headquarters on Sargent Drive on Long Wharf. The city granted the relief in December, and the company struck a deal to sell the building to Jordanâs Furniture.
The paper is not under any legal obligation to relocate downtown.
The company has since changed its mind about splitting the workforce (an estimated 150âââ170 employees) in two locations. It is now looking for a single location, according to several people familiar with the discussions. It is concerned about the egress and cost of downtown parking. It has made visits to, among other sites, an industrial park on Gando Drive right on the border of the North Haven-New Haven line. But it hasnât signed a lease there or anywhere else.
City Economic Development Administrator Matthew Nemerson said the Harp administration has been in continual conversations with company officials. He declined to offer details of those discussions.
âWe have talked to them every day this week. Iâm working to try to keep the New Haven Register part of downtown New Haven,â Nemerson said. ââWeâre well aware that the journalism industry is under tremendous pressure. Weâre trying to balance what weâd like to have versus whatâs possible.â