The Aspen Times’ top editor was fired after publishing columns the newspaper previously had killed
Andrew Travers thought he had assurances that his beloved newspaper, The Aspen Times, would let him do his job.
The editor’s firing marks the latest upheaval in a tumultuous time for the 141-year-old mountain newspaper. News staff already had beenLast month, the paper’s top editor, David Krause,, citing new management in addition to a health scare. Travers? Gone after less than a week on the job. “If something is wrong, you all must do something to stop it,” Councilman Ward Hauenstein said during a, pleading with Aspen’s wealthy residents to put in an offer for the paper. “The owner of one of our newspapers may be a bad fit for Aspen. We value truth and freedom. These values are being stolen from us. They were sold to the highest investor.”
“As a newspaper, we have a responsibility when someone raises a concern about our content to take that concern seriously, review it and, if it is unfair, inaccurate and not based on facts that are already established, then we should evaluate what steps we should take,” Stanford told The Post on Thursday.
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