.
Feedback

The Daily Voice Closes Some News Sites, Lays Off Some Staff

The regional media company, which has 41 online news sites in Westchester and Fairfield counties, closed its sites in Massachusetts and let go at least 11 employees in New York and Connecticut, according to news reports.

 

A hyperlocal online media company with sites in 41 communities in Westchester County NY and Fairfield County CT has closed 11 sites in Massachusetts, according to a March 4 report from The MetroWest Daily News.

The network of online news sites, originally called Main Street Connect, was the brainchild of Carll Tucker, former publisher of Trader Publications, whose flagship weekly was the Patent Trader of northern Westchester. Tucker sold the company to Gannett in 1999. The Journal News shut the weekly down several years later. 

Tucker started Main Street Connect with the Daily Norwalk in 2010. The plan was to expand into a national network of hyperlocal news sites. There are 41 Daily Voice sites in Westchester and Fairfield counties.

On March 4, the Daily Voice laid off 11 editorial and sales staffers in Massachusetts, The MetroWest Daily News reported:

Daily Voice Board of Directors Chairman and interim CEO Carll Tucker Monday said the company closed the sites in hopes of turning a profit this year.

"We were very close and unfortunately we couldn't do it with our friends in Massachusetts," he said.

Tucker said the company plans to focus on its websites in Westchester County, New York, and Fairfield County in Connecticut, which have a combined 41 sites.

An article by Jerrod Ferrari in The Hour citing former Daily Voice employee Mark Chapman, reported at least three people were let go from the company's Norwalk location. In Westchester, at least eight people were laid off.

Daily Voice CEO Zohar Yardeni, profiled in this January 2013 article on hyperlocal news by StreetFight, resigned March 1, The MetroWest Daily News reported.

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Rivertowns Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
jobobg2 May 19, 2013 at 11:23 am
I'd like to Thank everyone that came out to support the scholarship fund. We were able to raise overRead More $500. for the day.I also want to thank the students that came out to help. Bob Galinski,club advisor,Hastings schools
Renee Petro May 12, 2013 at 01:46 pm
The letter does not seem to mention if they have personal experience as an educator or as a parentRead More with kids now, kids past years or kids future years in the Irvington School District. Sometimes the perspective is different if you have lived the experience with kids in the Irvington School District. I have three kids -- one graduate last year and is at Cornell University, one is grade nine and one is grade three. All three got great teachers, small class size and extra help or enrichment as needed. I think the arts programs can be expanded -- music, drama, fine arts (both in classes and electives plus stipends to pay teachers for clubs and after school activities). However, this is a school district that values having small class size and keeping strong all the academics core subjects required for graduation and college plus making a priority sports opportunities middle school through high schools at all levels and types of sports. If you are high achiever it works grades k-12; if you are a child with special education needs or learning issues needs or extra help needs it works too. The average student is the one who is often forgotten in Irvington School District since they just do their thing in school, after school activities and move from grade to grade uneventful but nothing that will be memorable at least in my experience.
Teleman April 2, 2013 at 02:35 pm
The problem has always been skyrocketing costs- bamacare does absolutely nothing to address costs.Read More It is a complete scam that will only add to the uninsured because it makes employers accelerate dropping employer sponsored healthcare- dumping even more people into the arms of the government disaster.
Andromachos April 2, 2013 at 10:50 am
When employers are offering less and less health insurance, more people are self insured orRead More uninsured and are restricted to buying policies as individuals. With the cost at over $ 1,500 per month for standard, full coverage for a family of 4, it is no wonder there are so many uninsured or partially insured ( emergency/hospital care only).