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Costs of corruption fall as top Oregonian political reporters leave

You don’t have to be an economist to figure out what will happen to the quantity of political corruption in Oregon without the oversight that these reporters have provided. Nigel Jaquiss of WWeek has the bad news, here:

Metro columnist Steve Duin, two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Richard Read, senior political reporter Jeff Mapes and investigative reporter Bryan Denson are among at least 13 staffers who have said they will take the paper’s offer of 1.25 weeks of pay for every year of service.

The paper is seeking to reduce its newsroom by 25 people, and is expected to conduct layoffs to reach that number.

Not all the news news is bad. Non-profit groups like the SPJ and MuckRock are using social media to fight back against the PR flacks:

INDIANAPOLIS—The Society of Professional Journalists and MuckRock today launched the #AccessDenied Project, which gathers journalists’ access issues when working with Public Information Officers.

Since at least 2009, journalist organizations, including SPJ, have been pushing back on the lack of access to government employees and information.

In recent years journalists have seen an increasing number of stall tactics being used and a lack of access to government employees and information. 

These include agencies forcing reporters to go through Public Information Officers (PIOs) to speak to any employee, which often silences staff on critical matters. Then, once a PIO is contacted, there are sometimes other obstructions or monitoring that takes place. These can include, PIOs sitting in on interviews, asking to review questions or denying direct access to an employee.

These are just some of the reasons SPJ and MuckRock are partnering to launch this project. 

“We believe a journalist’s access to direct information from government employees is important,” said Lynn Walsh, SPJ President-elect. “Lack of access, delayed access and even blocked access by a government public relations professional, communication personnel or public information officer, prevents, delays and can impede a journalist’s job: to accurately, fairly and ethically inform the public.”

MuckRock Founder Michael Morisy agrees that giving journalists access to government officials is key to informed democracy. “The increasing trend of pushing off hard questions or even basic queries to press offices and canned statements may make public officials’ lives easier in the short term, but it robs them of the chance of truly engaging with their constituents and undermines public accountability and trust,” he said.

Has this happened to you? If so, SPJ and MuckRock want to hear about it. With #AccessDenied, the two organizations are hoping to gather and share information about how journalists are experiencing this pushback. 

Journalists can submit their stories by clicking here

Stories can also be shared on Twitter using the following hashtag: #AccessDenied or by Tweeting to @SPJ_Tweets and @MuckRock. 

SPJ and MuckRock encourage journalists to submit the information and allow it to be shared publicly so other journalists can see what others are experiencing firsthand. It will also allow SPJ and MuckRock to share the information on social media and with government agencies. 

The form also allows for anonymous submissions and the choice to keep submissions private. That information will be kept in the database and used in general terms or a broad analysis.

Click here to read more about SPJ and other journalism organizations’ push over the years to end these practices or view the timeline here.

One Comment

  1. Quackster 12/09/2015

    Think about this development for a while. Then go see the movie “Spotlight.” Then think some more about the kind of work that won’t get done in the shrinking world of American journalism.

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