History
''The Oregonian'', the major daily newspaper in the Portland area, purchased ''The Hillsboro Argus'', a community newspaper in Hillsboro, in 1999. Pamplin Media Group, who publishes the ''News-Times'', a community paper in Forest Grove, launched the '' Hillsboro Tribune'' in August 2012 to compete with ''The Argus''. In October 2012, the Oregonian Publishing Co. announced it would launch a newspaper in Forest Grove, the ''Leader''. It had been rumored the prior month that the company would launch the paper. The new, free publication started on October 17, 2012, and replaced the ''Courier'', which had been a free ''Argus'' paper delivered to residents in western Washington County. The first issue was set to be mailed free to over 16,000 homes. The publisher planned to open a local office in Forest Grove after the ''Leader'' debut and hire new employees while also using existing staff. The move by the ''Leader''’s owners was seen as payback for Pamplin’s move into Hillsboro, with the newspaper war focused on winning the Hillsboro market. The Hillsboro market had 93,455 residents compared to 21,488 for Forest Grove, and household spending on retail goods in Hillsboro was 154 percent of the state-wide figure while the same figure for Forest Grove was only 41.9 percent. The competition between the media companies in Washington County was the focus of a "Think Out Loud" segment on Oregon Public Broadcasting in November 2012. In January 2013, Samantha Swindler was named as the editor of the paper. In December 2015, it was announced that the paper would be combined with the ''Beaverton Leader'' and the ''Hillsboro Argus'' to form the ''Washington County Argus''. The successor paper lasted only 14 months, being discontinued in March 2017.Coverage
The paper was designed to provide hyperlocal coverage to Forest Grove, Banks, Gales Creek,References
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