Decline of local news coverage radically occurred in 1996, when the paper and its sister, the Saskatoon
StarPhoenix, were acquired from their owner based in
Markham, Ontario, Armadale group, by
Hollinger Inc., a company that was headed by the Canadian media baron
Conrad Black. Within three months, the staffs at each newspaper had been cut by one quarter, which becoming a
cause célèbre in Canadian journalism. The event with substantial elimination of staff and coverage of local news corresponded with one at the Regina television station
CKCK-DT, once locally owned but by 1985 no longer so. An immediate effect was a significant reduction in coverage of local and provincial news, and a greater coverage of national events. Loss of news reporter staff, the increasing television news coverage and the arrival and growth of the internet all increased difficulty in preserving, much less increasing, the
Leader-Post significance. Black's company subsequently divested itself of the
Leader-Post in 2000, together with most other Canadian news media it had owned, in conjunction with Black's renunciation of his
Canadian citizenship to obtain a
British peerage. Eventually branding itself as the
Regina Leader-Post, the newspaper shut down its printing facilities in 2015 in favor of being printed in Saskatoon with the press of
The StarPhoenix. In 2023, Postmedia announced that the
StarPhoenix press would be shut down; both the
StarPhoenix and
Leader-Post were to continue publication, but printed at facility in
Estevan. In early 2025, the paper along with the
StarPhoenix had to explore other printing options following the closure of the Estevan print facility. Both papers are now printed in Alberta, marking the end of newspaper production in Saskatchewan. == Circulation ==