The cuts are part of an ongoing restructuring "at a time of profound, unprecedented changes in the print media industry driven largely by the digital revolution," the company said in a statement yesterday.
Canada's largest media union, the Communications Workers of America Canada, blasted this third round of layoffs in a year, bringing the total Sun Media jobs cut to more than 1,000.
"Each time we think they have hit rock bottom, they bore down and find a new bottom," CWA Canada Director Martin O'Hanlon said. "Our newsrooms are already like ghost towns and I don't know how the smaller papers will even be able to cover basic local news anymore."
"The sad part is that these cuts aren't being made because newspapers are losing money - they are making money," O'Hanlon said.
He said the media chain has been diverting funds from its newspapers to its start-up television network Sun TV.
O'Hanlon said that as a result, several Canadian cities have had to "watch their newspapers be slowly cannibalized to keep an ill-conceived and laughably bad TV network alive.