Yes, our provincial newspaper is published 21 times per year, on a biweekly bases, except during the three summer months and at Christmastime, when the newspaper is published only once a month. Subscribers received the newspaper in the mail. Since francophones are concentrated in three major areas, our subscribers are located in three major areas: here, in the Port-au-Port Peninsula, and in Labrador City. I also want to add that because the newspaper is not based in one particular region, it has the major advantage of reaching francophones who are not necessarily integrated into a community network or who live in even more isolated regions. For example, a number of newspaper are sent to Goose Bay, Labrador, where there is no francophone community organization but where there is, nevertheless a school and several francophones.
There is also enormous potential, that we are more or less successfully taping into, which is reaching the bilingual anglophone population and providing it with a window on the provincial francophonie. An attempt to reach this audience is to provide it with something in French on Newfoundland—and it is almost the only French publication in Newfoundland—but it is also to provide this window. They are very interested in information about a community organization and events.
As for community radio, to my knowledge, the only one in existence is located in Labrador City. I don't know very much about it because it is located in Labrador City, however it does exist and many volunteers worked there.