INNovation: What's New in Nonprofit News
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Through a historic power outage and hostile weather, INN members in Texas are still reporting — How they’re doing and how you can help
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Throughout Texas, a severe winter storm and failures in government planning have caused millions of people to be without electricity, heat and water during below-freezing weather this week.
In Austin, grocery stores closed for a couple of days and then reopened with limited hours and restrictions on how much customers could buy because deliveries had not been coming. Lines of hundreds of people waited outside the groceries when they reopened. Ken Martin of investigative outlet The Austin Bulldog said he and his part-time reporter have been staying out of harm's way as they continue digging into several ongoing investigations.
The Breckenridge Texan is an online-only community news site covering rural north-central Texas, staffed by two journalists that work from home. As such, they faced the same issues in their “newsroom” as they did at home: no water, sub-freezing temperatures that heaters just couldn’t overcome and slow internet service. They relied heavily on phone calls, email, text messaging and Facebook posts to keep on top of everything going on in the county, providing public service reporting to let the community know what was going on and how they could get help.
The Texas Observer, impacted by blackouts, has focused on several deeper dive pieces that speak to the Texas Observer's signature strengths in digging beyond the headlines and contextualizing news events, focusing on communities whose stories are too often ignored or poorly told. It’s been covering the state’s electricity system for years and recently published a series from nine Texans around the state, sharing their experiences from these last few days.
Bob Moore at El Paso Matters reports that El Paso is the only large city in the state that is not on the ERCOT electric grid. The city saw three inches of snow and unusually cold weather, but no power failures or other disruptions, and the outlet continued to cover the city’s most important issues.
All said it’s been a long week for their teams. This state of emergency has also affected thousands across Oklahoma and Louisiana. Here’s how you can help:
- Subscribe to their newsletters or follow on social media to stay up-to-date on statewide and local news, including opportunities to get involved
- Consider a donation to help fuel these essential reporters. You can donate to multiple INN newsrooms in Texas and across the country at newsforgood.org.
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For-profit to nonprofit news conversions: New Jersey Media Group, Baltimore Sun
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In the last two weeks, we’ve touched on outlets that were started in response to for-profit shutdowns, influenced by the pandemic. In both cases, the outlets were started by laid-off journalists who felt strongly about continuing the reporting needed to serve their communities.
During the pandemic, and even before, we’ve seen a new trend: conversions of for-profit outlets to nonprofit status.
The big nonprofit news this week was the announcement that Maryland’s biggest statewide newspaper, The Baltimore Sun, may be acquired by a nonprofit formed by businessman and philanthropist Stewart Bainum Jr. to operate the organization for the benefit of the community. The acquisition is part of a deal to sell the Sun’s parent company, Tribune Publishing, to venture capital firm Alden Capital — without The Sun and several other Baltimore-area publications.
This is part of a series on nonprofit news startups and conversions during the pandemic. Read previous features on Eden Prairie Local News and North Shore Record.
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Due today: Applications to speak at INN at Home
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Speak to the largest gathering of nonprofit news professionals! We’re seeking speaker proposals for this year’s INN at Home, June 8 - 10, 2021 — the journalism business conference that focuses on revenue generation, audience development, racial equity, community engagement and other potential topics related to running a nonprofit news organization. For an idea of what we’re looking for, browse former conference agendas and speakers. The session proposal submission deadline is today, Feb. 19.
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Sahan Journal
Texas Tribune
Columbia Insight
InsideClimate News
California Health Report
Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting
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Bright Ideas: Illuminating Resources for Public Service Journalism
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đź’ˇ The Knight Foundation is giving newsrooms up to $20K to adopt/manage the digital publishing solution of their choice. Applications open March 3.
đź’ˇ Public Interest News Foundation is launching the PINF Index, the first comprehensive survey of the independent news sector in the UK, which is based on the INN Index.
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This Week in Collaboration
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INN member International Consortium of Investigative Journalists is no stranger to collaborations, creating world-wide change through 100+ outlet investigative projects. If you’re interested in large-scale projects, ICIJ’s innovative open-source research platform gained a host of new features in 2020 — and will continue to evolve throughout the year ahead.
Datashare is a free open-source project to keep all documents and notes in one place for an easier way to analyze large-scale, investigative projects.
Learn more about ICIJ’s plans for Datashare in 2021.
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INN Members in the Spotlight
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ProPublica has announced that Richard Tofel, its founding general manager and president since 2013, will retire from the company when a successor is in place and that its Board of Directors has launched a nationwide search to fill the post.
Editor and Publisher reports the launch of Asheville Watchdog, a free, local, nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization devoted to informing the citizens of Asheville by providing fair, factual and reliable news about local government, institutions, issues, and people
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Block Club Chicago
CALMatters
Pulitzer Center
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