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Posted: 2024-04-18 06:57:19

Broken Hill's independently-owned newspaper the Barrier Truth has announced its shock closure after nearly 130 years.

Located on the edge of the desert in Far West NSW, the shutdown of the union-run newspaper — formerly the Barrier Daily Truth — is another blow to the mining town, after losing its nightly commercial news bulletin a year ago. 

The Truth was Broken Hill's longest ongoing news provider and had printed more than 33,000 editions.

A horse and cart collecting a newspaper from a child at the front of a building.

A horse and cart collecting a copy of the Barrier Daily Truth in days gone by.(Supplied: Gavin Schmidt )

Barrier Industrial Council president and Barrier Truth board chair Roslyn Ferry confirmed to ABC Broken Hill that the Barrier Truth had shut its doors.

On Tuesday, 15 staff were notified that the paper would not be published in the foreseeable future. 

The last edition of the paper was printed on Wednesday.

Ms Ferry said it "broke her heart" to cease operations of the paper.

It comes after social media giant Meta disbanded its News tab on its platform, effectively limiting the amount of news content that could be shared.

Slow creep of closures

For former employee Emily McInerney, who started at the Truth as an 18-year-old cadet fresh out of high school in 2010, it was a very sad day.

Ms McInerney witnessed the slow creep of regional newspaper closures over the last decade. 

"[But] when you're in the newsrooms, you just think about getting out the news," she said. 

A woman sits in front a building saying barrier daily truth.

 Emily McInerney worked at the paper for more than a decade.(Supplied)

Like many regional newspapers, The Barrier Truth struggled during COVID, even shutting its doors at one point. 

It was then that "A-grader" — a term used by locals to describe someone born in Broken Hill — Robert Williamson stepped up to the plate. 

A self-professed mining man with no background in media, he refused to let the then-daily newspaper close.

A large gathering of people standing in front of a building

An archived photo of the Barrier Truth newspaper on its opening day in the 1800s.(Supplied: Gavin Schmidt)

"I have contacts in [the mining] industry, so I talked to the mining leaders in Australia and said this town [still] needed a newspaper at that time," Mr Williamson said.

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