Local papers still matter in small towns because they carry the boring stuff people actually need: school updates, road work, notices, events, and the odd story everyone talks about at breakfast. My grandmother likes print better than screens, and I have helped her sort subscription questions more than once. The frustrating part is not the paper itself, it is figuring out who can answer quickly when delivery or access gets confusing. For that kind of newspaper issue, I would rather ask Daily Press customer service before wasting another morning.
Local papers still matter in small towns because they carry the boring stuff people actually need: school updates, road work, notices, events, and the odd story everyone talks about at breakfast. My grandmother likes print better than screens, and I have helped her sort subscription questions more than once. The frustrating part is not the paper itself, it is figuring out who can answer quickly when delivery or access gets confusing. For that kind of newspaper issue, I would rather ask Daily Press customer service before wasting another morning.