Torstar was founded after the
Ontario government passed a law barring the provisions of late-
Toronto Star owner
Joseph Atkinson's
will from being enacted. Atkinson had bequeathed the newspaper to a charitable organization he had founded. The
Progressive Conservative provincial government of
George Drew passed a law banning charitable organizations from operating profitable entities such as newspapers. Rather than sell the newspaper, the trustees of the Atkinson Foundation bought out the Star privately and founded Torstar as a private corporation. On November 26, 2010, it was announced that the
Canadian Press news agency would be taken over by a for-profit corporation, with Torstar serving as one of its investors. On November 27, 2017,
Postmedia and Torstar announced a transaction in which Postmedia would sell seven dailies, eight community papers, and the Toronto and Vancouver
24 Hours to Torstar, in exchange for 22 community papers and the Ottawa and Winnipeg versions of
Metro. Except for the
Exeter Times-Advocate,
St. Catharines Standard,
Niagara Falls Review,
Peterborough Examiner, and
Welland Tribune, all acquired papers were to be closed. Torstar stated that it wanted to focus on building synergies within its existing markets served. The swaps effectively remove competition between the two companies in the affected markets; the
Competition Bureau stated that it would review the proposed deal. and in March 2018, formally accused the companies of using
no-compete clauses to reduce competition in the newspaper industry, in violation of the
Competition Act. On December 20, 2018, Torstar applied to the Ontario Superior Court for an order to keep documents seized from its offices by the
Competition Bureau sealed from the public.
Sale to NordStar Initial NordStar proposal On May 26, 2020,
Toronto Star publisher John Honderich announced the sale of Torstar to Nordstar Capital LP, which was formed by former Fairfax Financial President Paul Rivett and Jordan Bitove, for $52 million. The price for the class A voting shares and class B non-voting shares was set at 63 cents in the deal. At the time of the most recent quarter, Torstar had $69 million in cash on its balance sheet – more than the $52-million acquisition price from Nordstar. However, Torstar's share price had suffered from the company's inability to generate enough revenue or cost savings to pay quarterly dividends, which were suspended late in 2019. The suspension pushed the publicly traded B shares to what was then the lowest level since at least the late 1990s — 53 cents. Weeks prior to the announcement of the deal, Torstar had reported a $23.5-million loss for the first quarter of 2020. The new owners planned to make Torstar a private company with former
Premier of Ontario David Peterson as chair of the board. This effectively put an end to the bidding process because the terms of the revised bid meant that "the Voting Trust and Fairfax can't change their votes to support any other bid". In the shareholder vote held on July 21, 99.7% of the class A shareholders favoured the NordStar offer as did 98.1% class B shareholders. However, only 81.9% of minority shareholders (not including the Voting Trust or
Fairfax Financial) voted to accept the NordStar offer. On July 23, Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP, an international corporate law firm representing Torstar, brought forth a motion on behalf of Torstar before Ontario Superior Court Justice Gilmore to approve Torstar's plan of arrangement with respect to the acquisition of Torstar. Grant Vingoe, chair of the Ontario Securities Commission, had previously said in a letter to Andrea Horvath that the court was the appropriate venue to challenge the proposal. He further said that the test to be applied by the court was whether the process leading to the arrangement was fair and reasonable. On July 25, the
Globe and Mail published an interview with Butch Folland, a significant member of Torstar's voting trust and the great-grandson of the founder of Torstar, Joseph E. Atkinson, Torstar's original publisher and the author of the Atkinson Principles. Folland is also the grandson of Harry Hindmarsh, who was President of the Star following Atkinson's death in 1948. His personal ties to the
Toronto Star date back to age 13 when he took a job as an office boy. In that article. Folland is quoted as saying, "I was really disappointed in the outcome. I felt that the process wasn't really fair in the way it affected me." Late in the evening on July 27, an Ontario court approved the $60-million takeover of Torstar Corp. by private equity firm NordStar Capital LP over the objections of a rival bidding group, which immediately said it planned to appeal the judge's decision. Ontario Superior Court Justice Cory Gilmore ruled NordStar, could close their purchase of Torstar.
Rivett-Bitove split In September 2022, Rivett filed a court application split to the assets of Nordstar due to his relationship with Bitove deteriorating. On February 8, 2023, a deal finalized by arbitrator
Douglas Cunningham gave Bitove the
Toronto Star and the
Metroland Media Group while Rivett received
iPolitics and ''Queen's Park Briefing''. == Operations ==