Early last week it looked as if Hawes
Spencer was the only casualty in a brutal
power
struggle between the three owners of
Portico Publications Ltd., the
Charlottesville, Va.,
publisher of AAN paper C*Ville Weekly
and Blue Ridge Outdoors.
He was ousted from his editorship of
the alt-weekly and removed from the
company
board by co-owners Bill Chapman and
Rob Jiranek Jan. 14., Spencer says.
But Spencer re-emerged with plans
to launch another alt-weekly in
Charlottesville to be called The
Hook and has so far grabbed four staff
members from C*Ville, as well as a
regular columnist and six freelancers.
Courteney Stuart, associate editor,
Lynn Jameson, proofreader, Chris
Conklin, art
director, and Jen Fariello, photographer,
have all moved over to The Hook and will
serve
in the same roles at the new weekly.
The disruption at the top has clearly
been felt throughout C*Ville Weekly,
though
Chapman, co-owner and publisher,
declines to discuss the details of the
shakeup.
"We've sort of decided that's a
personnel issue we don't want to talk
about," Chapman
says about Spencer's departure.
Cathy Harding, who worked for
C*Ville previously, as well as serving as
features editor
at AAN-member Isthmus in Madison,
Wis., will fill the editor's vacancy left by
Spencer.
The remaining vacancies don't pose a
significant problem, Chapman says,
indicating
that Charlottesville has a talent pool
sufficient to fill the remaining editorial and
art
positi ons.
As far as Spencer's remaining
ownership in Portico, Chapman was still
uncertain what
would become of it, saying, "We haven't
talked about that."
Spencer, however, has asked his
attorney to sell his share in the company,
"because I don't think they're ever going
to be as valuable again as they are right
now," he says.
Chapman also had no comment
about allegations Spencer made in a
letter he sent to
several people, a letter that Chapman
has read and that was also received by
AAN.
In the letter, Spencer charges that he
was ousted for his refusal to support
publishing
decisions he didn't agree with and
because he sought help from a
mediation firm to
settle the problems between him and his
partners.
After his attempts at mediation,
Spencer says he was offered the option
to resign, maintain an amiable parting
and receive a $5,000 severance. At 10
percent of the $50,000
salary he drew in 2001, Spencer declined
the offer.
"When I was presented with that 'take
$5,000 and shut up and go away' option,
it just
wasn't a very attractive idea," he says, not
just for the money, but also because he
was being pushed out of a company he
co-founded with Chapman in 1989.
C*Ville's first issue appeared on Sept. 19
of that year.
Chapman moved to New York shortly
after the company's founding, returned
four years
later and re-purchased his share in the
company. At the same time, Rob Jiranek
also
bought into Portico, creating a three-man
ownership and board. From the
beginning of
the tri-part arrangement it was agreed
and written into the company's bylaws
that any
decision over hiring, firing or spending
more than $5,000 would require
agreement from
each of the owners, Spencer says.
Spencer says that arrangement was
abandoned after his repeated protests
about the handling of C*Ville money.
According to Spencer, Chapman and
Jiranek found a loophole in the original
bylaws and rewrote them such that any
decision only
require d a majority and no longer
agreement from all three partners.
"We've reorganized the bylaws of this
company a couple of times," Chapman
says,
insisting they were necessary changes to
accommodate the company’s growth.
"Neither
of those updates was done with the
intention of firing anyone."
C*Ville’s profits were being poured
into Blue Ridge Outdoors, another Portico
publication started as a special section of
C*Ville, Spencer says. BRO has only
recently begun to make a profit, he sa ys.
"I got tired of continuing to support it,
but more specifically I objected to a
transfer of
six figures of C*Ville money to expand it
(BRO) into North Carolina," Spencer says.
"I
asked them to fund that themselves and
stop using C*Ville as a bank."
Spencer adds, "Investing in Blue
Ridge Outdoors might be a great idea,
but not when
someone just forces it on you."
Within 48 hours of his ousting,
Spencer says he received three offers
from another publishing company, a
television company and some individual
investors, respectively; each interested in
starting a print publication in
Charlottesville.
Working with Blair Kelly, who has
launched five real estate publications in
the past, and
another unnamed investor, Spencer is
launching The Hook, a new alt-weekly in
Charlottesville that will be on the stands
Thursday, Feb. 7, he says. Kelly will
serve as
publisher of the new paper while the
other investor will remain uninvolved in
operations.
Spencer will also be an owner of the new
paper.
"It's a little eerie; it's a similar
three-owner setup," he says, but adds
that the new
company has a more bulletproof structure
to require a three-person agreement on
decisions.
He anticipates the new co mpany will
spend around $200,000 before ad sales
begin to
catch up with costs.
So far Kelly has hired two ad sales
staff, both former C*Ville employees who
had left that paper more than a year ago.
On whether two alternative
newsweeklie s can survive in
Charlottesville, Kelly says, "I think it partly
depends on what niche we carve out and
the direction we take."
Former C*Ville art director, and
current art director at Cleveland Free
Times, Bill
Ramsey doesn't give two alt-weeklies
much hope of surviving in Charlottesville,
though.
"The daily paper, The Daily Progress,
is very small and weak, so people turn to
C*Ville and read The New York Times
and The Washington Post for news. It is a
real
monopoly," he says. "I suppose it's
possible, but not likely, that both would
survive.
C*Ville has 12 years of history behind it,
but Hawes Spencer was co-founder and,
like
him or not, Hawes was C*Ville."
Seth Wharton is a freelancer writer
in New York City.