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

No comments:

Post a Comment