CHATFIELD, MINN. — Pam Bluhm started working at the Chatfield News 40 years ago, barely out of high school, thinking it would be all right until something better came along.
Something better never did come along. And now Bluhm, 60, owns and publishes the paper in this town of 2,800 residents some 20 miles southeast of Rochester.
That's a bigger deal than it sounds. Because Bluhm singlehandedly resurrected a newspaper that's older than the state of Minnesota — an organization that its previous owner left for dead, closing the News in March after 164 years and leaving Chatfield without a hometown paper.
Bluhm, the paper's office manager, was stunned when she found out that the News, which traces its history to 1856, would be closing. But it didn't take her long to figure out her next step.
"I didn't know what I was going to do after 40 years," she said. "And I thought, 'This [ownership] is what I gotta do.' And Chatfield needs a newspaper.
"It was either this or go to work at the deli."
The News is a throwback to a simpler time, when practically every small community across the nation had a locally owned newspaper. That's not always the case anymore. In the last 15 years, more than one-fourth of the country's newspapers have disappeared, according to a report by the Hussman School of Journalism and Media at the University of North Carolina.
That's left millions of Americans — mostly in rural areas — living in "news deserts," lacking a news organization to cover local happenings. That's an ominous development, said Reed Anfinson, who owns three weekly papers in west central Minnesota and serves as president of the National Newspaper Association Foundation.