Daily Mail and General Trust, the parent company of the Daily Mail and the Mail on Sunday, will cut “a number” of jobs as it merges its print and digital sides, it told staffers in an email obtained by the Press Gazette. The email said the goal is to “have reporters and editors producing stories for online and the papers” by the middle of March. The Mail on Sunday will also come further into the fold. “The aim is to target resources where they’re needed most—producing the superb-quality journalism and world-leading long-form features the Mail is famous for," the email read. Those who will lose their jobs will get a 30-day “consultation period,” indicating the cuts amount to less than 100 people, while some staffers will get reassignments. The news came after the company cut a number of staffers in its U.S. operation last year and after previous attempts at bringing the titles closer together created “redundancies.” Thursday’s cuts, however, will not impact the U.S. version. “Job losses are always deeply regrettable,” a spokesperson wrote. “But we firmly believe these latest changes—coupled with our long-term commitment to investing in journalism and razor-sharp focus on delivering for our audience—will position the Mail for an even brighter future.”