Ontario Press Council

The Ontario Press Council was a voluntary media adjudication body which investigates complaints about newspapers in Ontario, Canada. On September 1, 2015, it was amalgamated into the newly formed National Newsmedia Council.[1][2]

History

The council was founded in 1972 with Davidson Dunton as its founding chair. The immediate past chair was Robert G. Elgie who lead the council from 2006 until his death in 2013.[3]

228 newspapers ranging from metropolitan dailies to community monthlies were members of the council as of the beginning of 2009. However, in July 2011, Sun Media withdrew 27 of its titles from the Ontario Press Council citing concerns over 'political correctness', leaving the council with only 10 daily newspapers and 191 community newspapers.[4]

gollark: Not all rails. You could run fossil fuel trains or ship batteries with electric trains.
gollark: The rails are a fixed cost. And you'd need charger stations for drones.
gollark: Rail can ship stuff down 4000 block nether tunnels quicker than drones.
gollark: You'd want dedicated buffer warehouses in each final destination for common items.
gollark: Not really. Better than drones. They're very costly and they'd take ages.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.