Foundations invest $6 million in new fund to support local journalism in Minnesota

Some of Minnesota's largest foundations are backing a new local news fund that's collected $6 million so far in a five-year effort to bolster local journalism across the state.

Press Forward Minnesota, which launched last January, has raised $6 million in donations so far from the McKnight Foundation in Minneapolis, the Bush Foundation in St. Paul, the Glen Nelson Center at American Public Media Group in St. Paul and the Chicago-based MacArthur Foundation.

Mukhtar Ibrahim, who is a consultant on the initiative, said Friday he hopes to get more foundations to support the fund.

"We want to keep the momentum going," said Ibrahim, former CEO of the Sahan Journal in St. Paul and a former Star Tribune reporter.

The effort is part of a national Press Forward coalition that started last year, aiming to invest $500 million in newsrooms nationwide. Other regions have their own chapters, including Chicago, which has raised about $10 million.

Since 2005, more than 2,000 newspapers have closed in the U.S. — almost a third of all newspapers — with Minnesota, Iowa, North Dakota and South Dakota losing the most newspapers per capita between 2005 and 2023, according to the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.

That's leaving a growing number of communities without any local news source. Research has shown that when local newspapers close down fewer people vote or run for local office and cities approve higher bond spending. In Minnesota, eight weekly newspapers closed earlier this year, some after operating for more than a century.

Minnesota's fund will be administered by the Minnesota Council on Foundations, which will start accepting grant applications this fall. Ibrahim said it's too early to say how much the grants will be, but for-profit and nonprofit news organizations statewide will be eligible to apply.

"This will benefit the whole state," he said. "We need to see journalism as essential [to fund] as much as public works. ... It affects the health of a society."