From Kristen Hare | Poynter <[email protected]>
Subject Wanna catch up?
Date August 7, 2024 12:34 PM
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There’s … well, there’s a lot of news Email not displaying correctly?
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Wait, how is it August already?
I’m unsure, but I can tell you I’ve been collecting a lot of news to share with you. Let’s start with a report from the Center for Community News ([link removed]) . As a reminder, this program out of the University of Vermont has the mission to “grow and support partnerships between college reporting programs and local news outlets.”
In July, the CCN announced it got $7 million from several funders, including the Knight Foundation and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation ([link removed]) , to “ramp up research, programming, education, and advocacy for student reporting programs, which are playing an increasingly vital role in reporting local news for Americans.”
The CCN just published its latest impact report ([link removed]) .
Meg Little Reilly, the CCN’s managing director, shared some big takeaways:
* University-led reporting is now filling significant gaps in local information that have been left by the newspaper industry as it recedes. Where it was once an additive, it's now essential in many communities. Without the reporting that these university partnerships provide, whole beats and even regions would be underserved.

* Our methods for measuring the breadth and impact of student reporting haven't kept up with its growth. Our hope is that, one year from now, news-academic partnerships will have more standardized and reliable methods for measuring how many stories were published and how many people saw them. It will be easier to make the case for the value and promise of this field when we can capture its impact.

* Demand for student reporting — from newsrooms, communities and students — is still greater than supply. Universities have a huge opportunity before them today to step into their role as civic pillars and invest in these reporting programs.

More to share:
* Yesterday was another tough one for local news. Axios laid off 50 staffers ([link removed]) , or 10% of its workforce. The Tampa Bay Times, which Poynter owns, also announced buyout offers, with the goal of cutting 20% of total staff ([link removed]) .
* Here’s Kati Kokal’s guide to creating a community aid network ([link removed]) to support laid-off colleagues.
* Last week, Wired wrote about “zombie alt-weeklies … stuffed with AI slop about OnlyFans.” ([link removed]) That piece included such content at the Riverfront Times, a once-beloved alt in St. Louis. After this tweet thread from the site’s new editor ([link removed]) , St. Louis Public Radio’s Jessica Rogen reported ([link removed]) “The Riverfront Times and its new executive editor, JD Davis, appear to share a phone number with an OnlyFans creators promotional company.”
* From E&P, read about the work of staff at the Uvalde Leader-News ([link removed]) , who covered the mass shooting at Robb Elementary in 2022. That work is the subject of a documentary from ABC News called “Print it black.” ([link removed])
* The National Press Foundation created Guidelines for Covering Women in Politics ([link removed]) , which includes how to cultivate women sources, how to avoid tokenism as well as references and resources.
* One bright spot: MLK50: Justice Through Journalism is a nonprofit newsroom in Memphis. This week it announced a $1 million grant from the MacArthur Foundation ([link removed]) as part of MacArthur’s work with Press Forward.


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That’s it for me. We weathered a tropical storm with about two days of rain. I’m grateful as always that it wasn’t worse and thinking of everyone impacted by Debby. Hang in there.
Kristen Hare
Faculty
The Poynter Institute
@kristenhare ([link removed])

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