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A group called Journalism That Matters says Seattle is particularly big for new initiatives in reporting and in-depth information about public issues.
This story originally ran at the Washington News Council's blog and is republished here with permission,
In a city filled with unemployed reporters, creative talent, and entrepreneurial spirit, journalism experiments abound.
Among the new efforts brewing in Seattle are 10 projects that came out of the Journalism That Matters conference at the University of Washington in January. The four-day conference, "Re-imagining News and Community in the Pacific Northwest," brought about 250 members of the media and the broader community together to brainstorm ideas on journalism’s future.
Recent years in Seattle have been marked by the closure of two daily newspapers (the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the King County Journal) and ever-shrinking staffs at other local news outlets, so the discussions seemed particularly timely and urgent.
"In times of crisis, people start talking about new possibilities," said Mike Fancher, former executive editor of The Seattle Times who was one of the dozen or so conference organizers and stewards.
Journalism That Matters was co-founded by Peggy Holman of Bellevue and Stephen Silha of Vashon Island. She's author of motivational books The Change Handbook and Engaging Emergence. Silha is a former Christian Science Monitor reporter and now a documentary filmmaker.
JTM meetings have been held around the country since 2001, but the Pacific Northwest efforts are unique. In Seattle, business and civic leaders are as involved as members of the media, said Fancher and Holman.
"Seattle has attracted the broadest mix of activists," Holman said. And the conference organizers, who now call themselves the "Collaboratory," continue to meet monthly to help nurture the projects that spun out of the winter confab.
Since January, 10 different groups have been moving forward on various initiatives. Last month, representatives from nearly all of the groups met to report on their progress.
(Full disclosure: John Hamer, president of the Washington News Council, is a member of the Collaboratory and the WNC is sponsoring two of the projects. I, however, have had no involvement in this group.)
Whether all 10 initiatives that came out of the JTM Pacific Northwest conference can score the necessary funding to survive remains uncertain. While some have obtained initial grants, others remain unfunded. Fancher acknowledged that each will face heavy competition for financing.
"It won’t be easy," Fancher said. "But the passion people have for this is encouraging."
Here is a brief run-down of the 10 initiatives:
Heading forward, the Journalism That Matters Pacific Northwest Collaboratory is scheduling monthly presentations by the individual initiative teams, and the entire group plans to check in quarterly.
Time will tell if any of these projects gain traction and become sustainable. What do you think of these efforts, and which of them would you like to see move forward?
Comments:
Posted Mon, Aug 16, 7:42 a.m. Inappropriate
i am not sure what any of these project have to do with journalism. most of them are infrastructural resource initiatives, and there is nothing wrong with them, except the "happiness index", which is ludicrous. What Seattle needs is a good critical arts weekly that takes on architecture, the civic boosterism, theater, books, painting, music, one good editor can do that and get the writers to put it together. never happen by committee. there is an L.A. Review of Books in the offing run by Tom Lutz of UC Riverside, which really ought to be called WestCoast Review.
http://chronicle.com/blogPost/The-Los-Angeles-Review-of-/25674/