Andrew Burchill Lynch

Andrew Burchill Lynch (December 27, 1941 – February 24, 2001) was an early partner and, later, publisher of Monday Magazine, a left-wing alternative weekly newspaper in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.

Andrew Burchill Lynch
Born(1941-12-27)December 27, 1941
Toronto, Ontario
DiedFebruary 24, 2002(2002-02-24) (aged 60)
Victoria, British Columbia
OccupationPublisher, Journalist
NationalityCanadian
SubjectPolitics, Media

From the late 1970s to mid-1980s Lynch operated Monday Magazine alongside founding publisher Gene Miller and third partner George Heffelfinger. When Miller sold his one-third interest in the publication in 1988, Lynch and Heffelfinger continued on as partners. As publisher, Lynch maintained a prominent role in the overall operations of Monday. In the 1990s Lynch faced increasing pressure from media conglomerate Island Publishers Ltd. which sought to assume control of the independent weekly.[1]

When Monday Magazine was finally purchased by media baron David Holmes Black's Island Publishers Ltd., in 1996, Lynch moved on and embedded himself as a reporter covering the B.C. Legislature. In 1997, he founded The Lynch Report on B.C. Politics, a newsletter covering the ins and outs of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. Rich Coleman, Member of the Legislative Assembly for Fort Langley-Aldergrove, regarded Lynch's newsletter as "required reading" for MLAs.[2]

Shortly after founding of the Lynch Report, Lynch was elected by his peers as president of the B.C. Legislature Press Gallery. He remained president until his death in February 2001.[3]

Personal life

Lynch was the son of Canadian journalist and author Charles Lynch and the maternal grandson of Canadian Press journalist and poet Andrew D. Merkel. Lynch died from cancer in 2001.[4]

gollark: Nature fairly bad, as they say.
gollark: BRB, engineering new forms of pathogen to infect your machine-based body.
gollark: The problem is that biology is poorly architected. All the parts interlock and do 10 different confusing things and there's no documentation.
gollark: Drug development often runs into ridiculous safety issues, sometimes even ones which didn't turn up in animal testing, actually.
gollark: The effectiveness is worse → it is uncool.

References

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