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Key links:
Primary website:
thetyee.ca
Primary Twitter:
@TheTyee

Editor’s Note: Encyclo has not been regularly updated since August 2014, so information posted here is likely to be out of date and may be no longer accurate. It’s best used as a snapshot of the media landscape at that point in time.

The Tyee is an online news organization that covers public-interest news and culture in British Columbia.

The site was launched in 2003 by David Beers, a former Vancouver Sun journalist. It received $190,000 in initial funding from the British Columbia Federation of Labor and a labor-affiliated capital fund.

The Tyee is structured as a for-profit organization, though it is not intended to make any money. It operates on about $500,000 to $600,000 per year, which is funded by a mixture of equity sales, advertising, grants, events and donations.

The Tyee solicits donations for large-scale projects through the nonprofit Tyee Fellowship Fund, which brings in freelance reporters for investigative projects. It also directly asked its readers for donations in 2009, raising $25,000 and again in 2013, raising more than $60,000. The site also runs staff-taught adult education classes.

The site is staffed by six full-time employees and 20 regular freelance contributors.

The site doesn’t brand itself as liberal, though more than half of its money comes from unions. It also runs a nonprofit group called the Tyee Solutions Society.

The Tyee has won the Edward R. Murrow Award and the Canadian Journalism Foundation’s Excellence in Journalism Award.

Video

A 2009 interview with Beers on donations from readers:

Peers, allies, & competitors:
Recent Nieman Lab coverage:
Feb. 21, 2012 / Justin Ellis
Adult education: How The Tyee wants to maximize its readers through master classes — The small Vancouver news site is offering seven weekend courses, ranging in price from $195 to $395, to engage readers and increase revenue....
June 24, 2010 / Michael Andersen
Cash from every corner: Three kooky ways Vancouver’s Tyee pays for top-shelf regional journalism — If “diversified revenue” is journalism’s newest cliché, I dare you to dig up a better anecdote than The Tyee, an oddly named gem in Vancouver, B.C. The seven-year-old online newsmagazine, which pounds ...

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Primary author: Mark Coddington. Main text last updated: November 14, 2013.
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