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“It’s like the one small contribution we can make to make things normal for the community,” said Enterprise-Record Editor David Little. “You know, the paper still lives; it’s kind of a symbolic, important message to send to the community, that not everything’s lost.”
Members of the Enterprise-Record staff were among those who lost their homes, Little told CNN’s Brian Stelter in an interview this week on “Reliable Sources.”
“We’ve had 10 people who work at the newspaper lose their homes,” he said, adding that other staffers were still under evacuations orders. “And of course everybody’s touched by friends and family members who have lost homes.”
“Both the Paradise Post and the Enterprise-Record had a good number of subscribers in Paradise,” Little said, “and now we don’t have a town to deliver it to.”
“Because we know a lot of people aren’t staying at evacuation centers,” Little said. “They’re with friends and family and maybe that’s a way for them to get their Paradise Post newspaper.”
For safety reasons, many Paradise residents have not been allowed back into town to see the destruction for themselves.
“I don’t think they know how little is left until they come here,” Paradise Post Managing Editor Rick Silva told CNN. “It’s complete. It seems like a complete removal of the town, of what it once was.”
It’s important, Silva said, that readers know the paper is being published in the face of crisis, and see it recording the history of their town, even though not much of it is left.
“The printed newspaper has such staying power,” Little said, “so we all know that years from now, people will look back at these print editions as sort of a history book for what happened during the fire.”
Silva said, “It’s the voice of the community — has been since 1947. We have to continue that.”
CNN’s Ryan Young reported from Chico, while CNN’s Dakin Andone reported and wrote in Atlanta. CNN’s Stephanie Becker contributed to this report.
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