From 1895 to 1991,
The Times had competition from the afternoon Monday-Saturday daily, the since defunct
Shreveport Journal. The papers were later printed at the same 222 Lake Street address and shared opposite sides of the building, but were entirely separate and independent of the other. Publisher Charles T. Beaird, effective March 30, 1991, closed the
Shreveport Journal for financial reasons stemming from sharply reduced circulation. Thereafter, the page opposite the editorial page of
The Times, commonly called the
op-ed page, was reserved as "The Journal Page" for editorial comment until December 31, 1999. Following a massive downsizing of newspaper staffs in 2009 in cost-cutting moves across the country, The Times finalized efforts to trim its size as the second Gannett paper to install a Wifag offset press with modified tabloid format popular in Europe known as a
Berliner. This format introduction into the U.S gave publishers another way to cut down on newsprint and save money. Prior, The Times had the last letterpresses remaining in the Gannett company, a Goss Headliner installed in 1961. Gannett invested in personnel at this time, bringing together three
Rochester of Technology graduates to lead the organization. Beginning in October 2017,
The Times was no longer locally published because the distribution center in Shreveport closed to reduce production and labor costs.
The Times instead is printed at another Gannett publication, the
Longview News-Journal in
Longview, Texas, a commute of 65 miles one-way.
The Monroe News-Star, which had been published in Shreveport, is printed at the
Jackson Clarion-Ledger in
Jackson, Mississippi. The change is not expected to impact delivery schedules. In March 2022,
The Times moved to a six day printing schedule, eliminating its printed Saturday edition. == Sections ==