It's a five-year commitment for 2,735 square feet of office space in a full-service building at 1250 Eye Street, which is five blocks from the association's current headquarters at 1020 16th Street. AAN will pay $37 per square foot in the first year of the lease, or $4.40 less than the average asking price for commercial real estate in the District, according to the "CoStar Office Market Watch" in this morning's Washington Post. The move is scheduled for July 1.
Bingo and Sally Barnes bought Boise Weekly in August 2001, and the paper's business plummeted a few weeks later in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. By October of that year, when Gannett announced the launch of its Boise faux-alt, Thr!ve, the Barneses were petrified. But their fears were unfounded. After revamping the paper and forging closer ties with the community, they have soundly trounced the faux alt in the three-plus years since its debut.
Blood. Frogs. Vermin. Hail. Locusts. Slaying of your first editor. Whatever. If you publish a paper long enough, sooner or later you will be hit with a disaster. With eleven papers to worry about, the folks at New Times are always thinking about these things, and they have agreed to share their disaster-recovery plans with business-stream attendees on Saturday, June 18 at 4:45 pm.
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