Thursday, May 20, 2021

What is Systemic Racism?




Defining Systemic Racism in 12 Charts


Ending racism is not a matter of poor people pulling themselves up by their bootstraps. Its a matter of the system being stacked against African Americans, and more broadly the poor.

I'm summarizing the article from USA Toady dated June 18, 2020.

Glenn Harris, president of Race Forward says systemic racism leads to disparities in many "success indicators," he says, including wealth, health, criminal justice, employment, housing, political representation and education. 

Disparities start in the delivery room

Black women die 3 times more often giving birth

Pregnancy-related deaths per 100,000 live births

Black Americans are dying at a disproportionate rate from COVID-19

Black Americans are also almost twice as likely as white Americans to lack health insurance, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, making it difficult to receive proper care. Disparities are seen across a number of chronic diseases, as well as in the current pandemic.

Black men and women live shorter lives



From the classroom to the C-suite ...

In schools, Black students face disproportionate suspension rates. For instance, Black girls often receive more severe penalties for the same behavior as white peers, experts say. They are nearly 6 times more likely to get out-of-school suspension. The disparities continues through graduation rates and college.


Black unemployment rate among highest

Four Fortune 500 CEOS are black

Black median household income trails other races

Black homeownership rates remain lowest in US

Black poverty rate more than double white rate

Criminal justice

Black men are 2.5 times more likely to be killed by police than white men, according to a study from the University of Michigan, Rutgers University and Washington University. Bias has also been documented in plea bargains and sentencing. After decades of rising incarceration rates that followed the “get tough on crime’’ mandate of the 1980s, ’90s and early 2000s, the problem of mass incarceration is slowly declining, according to Pew Research data.Voices in Washington

Voices in Washington

According to Pew Research, African Americans view “political representation as a potential catalyst for increased racial equality.” However, voter suppression remains a critical issue. While there has been increased Black political leadership in the House of Representatives, the Senate only has three Black senators. 

All of this data is backed by decades of research.





Saturday, May 15, 2021

What Is Audit Bias?



A December 2020 poll showed 77% of Republicans believe widespread fraud occurred during the election; 35% of independent voters also said they believe widespread voter fraud took place. (Quinnipiac Poll)

False Claims of a “Rigged” Election. For months prior to the election, Trump primed his supporters to believe false and baseless claims about voter fraud, repeating falsehoods about mail-in ballots and declaring shortly before the election, “the only way we can lose, in my opinion, is massive fraud.” (FactCheck.org)

What Is Audit Bias?

That audit in Arizona, the one that assumes the election was stolen, when there is no evidence of voter fraud, the audit based on a conspiracy theory that has been discredited because there is no evidence to confirm a massive conspiracy to steal the election. You know, the audit that is paid for by taxpayers and mysterious private sources at the behest of Republicans?  That audit is likely suffering from confirmation bias—the tendency to interpret information in a way that confirms preconceptions—can seductively slip into an audit and derail its proper execution. Five pragmatic steps can help auditors avoid this pitfall and can improve decision making in other areas of the audit as well. (Babson College)


1. Take It All in; Don’t Jump to Conclusions

Treat the initial data-gathering stage as a fact-finding mission, without trying to understand the specific causes of any identified fluctuations.

2. Brainstorming: The Rule of Three  

If possible, identify three potential causes for each unexpected data fluctuation that is identified.


3. Flag It

When identifying potential causes of a financial fluctuation, take note of the specific information that triggered a hypothesis. Present those data to a colleague to see whether he or she comes up with similar explanations. If the explanations are different, the colleague has assisted you in expanding your hypothesis set. 

4. Prove Yourself Wrong

Once an initial set of hypotheses has been developed, it’s natural to seek out evidence that confirms these explanations. However, accepting evidence as support ignores the fact that the same evidence could also indicate a different explanation. In a similar fashion, it’s also common to subconsciously ignore contradictory evidence. 

5. Circle Back

After identifying your initial hypotheses, the next required step is to investigate the data further to determine which (if any) is the actual cause of the data fluctuation. While performing this investigation, additional information will invariably be analyzed to confirm or disconfirm these explanations.

And all of this is closely related to Confirmation Bias, the tendency to interpret new evidence as confirmation of one's existing beliefs or theories.



Monday, May 10, 2021

Local Journalism Is Essential

 


Local News Coverage Builds Community

Today there are 50% fewer newspaper journalists than in 2008.  The result is a decrease in quality and quantity of public service journalism. Often, no reporter shows up at town council meetings, nor do the journalists at many newspapers receive the time or encouragement to produce in-depth analytical pieces that illuminate and inform. Strong community newspapers encouraged social cohesion and political activism. Just as all politics is local, all news that matters is ultimately local. Readers of local newspapers are residents not only of a county, but also of a region, a state and a nation. Strong news organizations put into local context issues that may seem to be national or regional ones, such as health care, education, jobs, community safety or the opioid crisis.[1]

Reviving Trust

The idea is to train young journalists in coverage of community issues and investigative reporting. This type of reporting revives trust with the community and offers the community the chance to become involved in the issues that shape their lives. Local news makes a huge difference. PEN America study concluded with the loss of local news, citizens are less likely to vote, less politically informed, and less likely to run for office, according to the study. Democracy loses its foundation.[2]  With each story, a bond of sorts is built between community groups and institutions as trust in the fairness of the reporting increases.

Catalyst for Change

Today, less local journalism—and less meaningful journalism—moves through a diminished network. Perhaps under the old scenario, the growing disaffection of rural, inner-city, and small-city residents would have been widely recognized much earlier than the post 2016 election analysis. So might another under-reported story: the apparent willingness of many people, across the country, to tolerate bigotry and misogyny. This, too, is a story for local, as well as national, journalists. An informed community helps build better schools, addresses health care needs, and creates safer communities. In other words, it starts the discussion for a hopeful future.[3]

Journalism’s Decline

Revenue has fallen dramatically. Layoffs mean fewer reporters covering critical issues. The lack of transparency resulting from the lack of coverage leads to distrust and a feeling of powerlessness. The public has not made the connection between revenue and reporting. In fact, 71% of the people we surveyed by Pew Research believe local media are doing well financially. The journalism industry has been struggling for over a decade now to find a revenue structure for the digital era, so it is a huge challenge for the industry to see such a large share of the public believe that local news media are doing well financially and not participate in the revenue model themselves.[4]

Benefits to Target Population

A robust local news presence will better serve the community. Pew Research found, Local news consumers prize community connection. Older Americans, black adults and those with a high school education or less show considerably more interest in local news than their counterparts. In-depth local news coverage increases community involvement in local issues and politics. Overall, about two-in-ten Americans say they have ever spoken with or been interviewed by a local journalist. That changes when reporters actively cover their community. Recently some 61% of U.S. adults say they follow COVID-19 news at both the national and local level equally, and 23% say they pay more attention to local news. Americans who mainly get their news on social media are less engaged and less knowledgeable. At the same time,  U.S. adults in this group are less likely to get the facts right about COVID-19 and politics and more likely to hear some unproven claims.

 

Benefits of Systemic Change

If reporting on politics is focused issues and not personalities…

Then the community becomes informed and increases participation in the process.

If reporting on educational issues includes voices from the community…

Then the community has a voice in how the schools are run.

If reporting on health care issues includes voices from the community…

Then the community has a stake in the health of its people.

If reporting on community safety includes voices from the community…

Then the community and the justice system start working on solutions together.

If reporting on issues is fair and factual and includes a variety of views…

Then constituencies within the community will start to work together to seek answers.

 

Return-on-Investment

The Website, Saving Community Newspapers. put it this way, “In order to survive and thrive, community news organizations must employ three strategies simultaneously. As a publisher, you need to reduce costs associated with producing and distributing the physical paper so you can invest the savings in building loyal readership across multiple platforms (print, web, mobile, in-person events).  This, then, allows your newspaper to aggressively pursue new sources of advertising revenue across the various platforms.” 

The return on investment will be measured by increased readership. Since this is primarily an on-line newspaper analytics will be used to measure the number of hits to the site and specific stories. Metrics like users, new users, duration, bounce rate and pages per session will be used. These metrics can be applied to individual pages and stories on the website. Increased use of push notification through email and Social Media will be used to drive readers to stories based on their interest. Increased utilization of podcasts will be used. The success of podcasting is measured by downloads. The primary income driver for Connecticut News is reader donations. These changes should result in increased donations from individuals, foundations, and corporate support.

 



[1] Why Local News Matter, NYSBA, Penny Muse Abernathy

[2] The Atlantic, The Constitution Doesn’t Work Without Local News

[3] Nieman Reports, Election 16: Lessons for Journalism

[4] Pew Research, Local News in the US, March 2019

Monday, May 3, 2021

Local Journalism's Fade or Resurgence




Prologue

 I thought it rather serendipitous that I have the chance to reflect on the need for more local news coverage on the 50th anniversary of NPR. You might be thinking, "what is he talking about? NPR is national, not local." Let me just say that everything that comes out of your radio speakers is local. Any public radio station that can bring the issues reported on by NPR and put them in local perspective is accomplishing at least a part of their mission. As it was 50 years ago, it is now. Your support is needed more than ever.

Statement of Need

The Importance of local journalism

A little over a year ago, the second largest school district in Delaware found itself in trouble. It was staring down a deficit of $10 million. The specter of teacher layoffs, the end of athletics and extracurriculars, and the end of a promising magnet school program seemed imminent. The district, already staggering from issues that other urban districts are facing, the exodus of well-off families to private and charter schools — whose 14,000 students are roughly 75% nonwhite, 40% low-income, and more than 20% with special needs — it felt like the type of blow that could echo for generations.

According to Will Oremus, the lead writer, One Zero, at Medium, Leaders and parent advocates in the district, the Christina School District in Newark, Del., had been banking on the referendum to pass. They used a strategy that had always worked in the past. Believing they had a built compelling case; they had no reason to believe the referendum would not pass. What they had not counted on, was the role Social Media had taken on.[1]

No Local Journalism Has Consequences

Leaders in Newark, Delaware did not understand the effect misinformation on the Social Media sight Nextdoor was having on the debate for convincing residents to raise their own property taxes, often on behalf of kids other than their own. “Nextdoor posts claimed that the district was squandering money, that its administrators were corrupt, and that it already spent more money per student than certain other districts with higher test scores. The last of those was true — but left out the context that Christina hosts both the state’s school for the deaf and its largest autism program. Nextdoor evolved from a listserv where you could find a good plumber to a political platform where misinformation could easily be shared. well-documented issues with racial profilingstereotyping of the homeless, and political ranting of various stripes, including QAnon.[2]

The referendum failed. Nobody was there to check the veracity of the statements made on social media, or to amplify the points based on facts and need by the school district. The district faced draconian cuts, endangering the future of their children and the community.

Social Media Doesn’t Fill the Void

Pew Research reports about half of U.S. adults (53%) say they get news from social media “often” or “sometimes,” and this use is spread out across a number of different sites, according to a survey conducted Aug. 31-Sept. 7, 2020. [3]

Social Media is stepping in to fill the void left by the disappearance of journalism, especially local newspapers. Since 2004, about 1,800 newspapers have closed in the United States, Penny Abernathy reported in her research on news deserts. 1,700 are weeklies. The pace of closures, up till now, has been about 100 a year. Since the start of the Pandemic, 70 more local newspapers have closed their doors. Abernathy, a professor at the University of North Carolina’s Hussman School of Journalism and Media points out when you lose a small daily or a weekly, you lose the journalist who was going show up at your school board meeting, your planning board meeting, your county commissioner meeting,” she said. Communities lose transparency and accountability. Then, she said, research shows that taxes go up and voter participation goes down.[4]

Making Informed Decisions

The right to know is baked into the Constitution. Our democracy is dependent on a well-informed democracy. National news outlets continue to survive, but advertising funding for local print journalism has dried up, closing newsrooms. The collapse of local journalism has created a crisis for democracy. Residents no longer get the information they need to understand the critical issues facing their community, to make good decisions for their family, and hold elected officials accountable.[5]

That Won’t Happen Here

It already has. Regional newspapers are seeing a decline in reporting. The Hartford Courant has gone from a staff of 450 in 2000 to 50 reporters in 2021. Hartford City Council urges an end to job cuts.[6] Without resources, the declines will continue. Reporting on urban and rural issues are critical to Connecticut. Education levels and income levels show a huge disparity between the suburbs and the rest of the state. According to Census Data, per capita median household income in Hartford was around $34,000 in 2019. It was just over $104,000 in the next town over, West Hartford. The disparity in education level is just as eye opening. In Hartford, the percentage of people with a college education was 17% and 65% in West Hartford.[7]

Uphill Battle

Local Journalism gives voice to the unheard. It also informs decisions based on facts, and it increases awareness among the influencers and decision makers in our communities. Part of the solution lies in training new reporters. Funding new reporters goes beyond creating a new app or collecting pennies from the paywall. Newsrooms will need to pivot to philanthropy. Foundations and other organizations are already onboard. Journalism philanthropy has quadrupled in the last eight years.[8] The Knight Foundation, PBS News, The Poynter Institute, The Nieman Lab, Newsrooms Across America, and The American Journalism Project are just a few examples. We must ask. We can no longer wait for it to come to us.

 



[1] Will Oremus, Nextdoor is Quietly Replacing the Small Town Paper, Jan 27, 2021

[2] Will Oremus, Nextdoor is Quietly Replacing the Small Town Paper, Jan 27, 2021

[3] Pew Research, News Use Across Social Media Platforms in 2020, Jan 12, 2021

[4] Poynter Institute, The Corona Virus Has Closed More Than 70 Newsrooms Across America, Apr 26, 2021

[5] Report for America Website

[6] Hartford Courant, City Council Urges an End to Job Cuts, Sep 14, 2020

[7] US Census Quickfacts 2015 - 2019

[8] Giving Compass