The
Connecticut Post is a daily
newspaper located in
Bridgeport, Connecticut. It serves the greater Bridgeport area,
Fairfield County, and the
Lower Naugatuck Valley. Municipalities in the Post's circulation area include
Bridgeport,
Ansonia,
Derby,
Easton,
Fairfield,
Milford,
Monroe,
Orange,
Oxford,
Redding,
Seymour,
Shelton,
Stratford,
Trumbull,
Weston, and
Westport. The newspaper is owned and operated by the
Hearst Corporation, a
multinational corporate
media conglomerate with $4 billion in revenues.
The Post
The paper has a weekday circulation of 85,168, according to the
Audit Bureau of Circulation, behind the
Hartford Courant (264,539) and the
New Haven Register (89,022). The paper competes directly with the
Register in Stratford, Milford, and portions of the Lower Naugatuck Valley.
The publisher is Robert Laska. The most recent editor, James H. Smith, departed abruptly on June 26, 2008. No reason was given to staff, but Smith later attributed his departure to "mutual agreement." Smith had attempted to take the newspaper in a different direction, stressing slice-of-life style features and enterprise and investigative work while downplaying court/police coverage. In recent years he has avoided layoffs despite economic pressures, opting instead to offer buyouts and drastically cut the freelance budget.
The
Post's coverage area presents problems as Bridgeport, Connecticut's largest city, is a poor and mostly minority area, while the surrounding eastern
Fairfield County and western
New Haven County area is affluent and mostly white. Consequently, while the Post does provide solid coverage of Bridgeport, most of the paper is composed of local stories regarding the surrounding towns.
History

Vending box
The newspaper was formerly the morning
Bridgeport Telegram and evening
Bridgeport Post before consolidating into a morning publication. The
Bridgeport Telegram ran from at least 1908 to 1929 and again from 1938 to 1990.
The Post was formerly owned by
Thomson Corporation, a national newspaper chain. In 2000, Thomson agreed to sell the Post for $205 million to
MediaNews Group, based in
Denver, Colorado, which also owns newspapers in
Massachusetts and
New Hampshire.
On
August 8,
2008 the Hearst Corporation acquired the Connecticut Post (Bridgeport, Conn.) and www.ConnPost.com, including seven non-daily newspapers, from MediaNews Group, Inc. and assumed management control of three additional daily newspapers in
Fairfield County, Conn., including
The Advocate (Stamford),
Greenwich Time (Greenwich), and
The News-Times (Danbury), which had been managed for Hearst by MediaNews had managed under a management agreement that began in April 2007.
Some significant stories the
Post has broken include Bridgeport Mayor
Joseph Ganim's bribery scandal and current Bridgeport Mayor
John Fabrizi's admission of using
cocaine.
In 2008, under Smith's leadership, the Connecticut Post received its first Newspaper of the Year Award from the New England Newspaper Association.
Comedian and actor
Richard Belzer, a Bridgeport native, was a paperboy and later a staff reporter for the
Post, before pursuing his career as an entertainer..