Star Tribune editorial page editor and vice president Scott Gillespie said Thursday that he will retire in June after more than 40 years in newspapers.
Gillespie has led the editorial and opinion pages since 2007 and is leader of the editorial board, which operates independently of the newsroom.
He joined the Star Tribune in 1991. Before leading the editorial page, Gillespie held newsroom leadership roles on the business and local news teams and was managing editor.
“It is a privilege to do the work you love for an entire career,” he said. “As the son of a newspaper editor, I couldn’t have asked for more.”
Gillespie said he was proudest of two Pulitzer Prize finalists produced under his leadership: “Separate and Unequal,” a 2015 series of editorials on underfunded Bureau of Indian Education schools; and “Not this mine. Not this location,” a 2019 special report on proposed mining near the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.
He also reflected on the award-winning coverage the Star Tribune produced during his tenure as a newsroom leader, including reporting on the war in Iraq, the death of Minnesota U.S. Sen. Paul Wellstone and the Interstate 35 bridge collapse.
“As I get ready to wrap it up, I think about how much the journalism we’ve all done together has mattered for Minnesota,” Gillespie said. “That’s what you want. That’s what you hope for. I’m filled with gratitude.”
Jill Burcum, an editorial writer who wrote the Pulitzer finalists and worked with Gillespie in the newsroom, said he was never afraid to take a chance on an idea or free up a reporter to explore an important topic.