That type of travel time from the press to the market is becoming common.
Here in Palm Springs, the Desert Sun is printed in Phoenix. It is about 4 hours, so, given that the Phoenix printing facility also has other papers to print, this means that the Palm Springs newsroom must put the paper to bed at 8 to 9 PM at the latest.
I recall when my stepbrother took me to the Cleveland Plain Dealer when they started the print run of 400,000 copies. He showed me how there was truth in the "stop the presses" and an updated edition could be done well after midnight and still get the papers to the store racks and to the kids who did home delivery.
Today, what we get with a print paper is news that is already about half a day old. With so much occurring in other time zones... such as Iran and the Ukraine... it is even more important to have new sources up to date. Printed newspapers just can't do that, particularly if printed elsewhere.