Monday, March 28, 2011

Let's remember why we're here

Financial woes can’t obscure
reasons we became journalists


By Wally Haas

Remember why you first became a journalist? For some of us it was because we loved to write, or we loved to read or we loved working with words or because we believed stories that appeared in a daily newspaper could make a difference in people’s lives.

We need to remember when we first walked into a newsroom, when we thought we were kings and queens of the information world. Remember your first big story, or remember that first election night when the adrenaline rush of working under deadline pressure gave you a high unlike any other.

We got into this business because we loved it and newspapers will survive because dedicated journalists believe in what they do.

Consider all the options available to a new journalist. There’s video, audio, blogging, texting, more ways to deliver information than ever before. We should celebrate that and not dwell on dwindling circulation numbers for our print products. People are reading us in different ways. We still make a difference.

No one knows what 2011 will bring. Early indications are that it won’t be pretty. Good journalists are leaving the business because they can no longer be confident that a paycheck will be there at the end of the week. We just saw another round of furloughs that affect our friends in the Gannett Company. Job security is at an all-time low.

We can’t ignore the financial realities that face us, but we can’t let them paralyze us either. In 2011 we can resolve to be the best journalists we can be, to serve our readers whether they pick up a print product or access us online. We can learn to use all the tools to inform, entertain and educate.

The Northern Illinois Newspaper Association is here to help journalists no matter their level of experience. We design workshops to help you learn the skills needed to be a 21st century information provider.

What journalists do is important.

By remaining dedicated to our craft, we give people the information they need to go about their lives.

We can’t forget that.

2011 NINA President Wally Haas is editorial page editor of the Rockford Register Star.

Redistricting: A Primer for Journalists

April 15 conference will help you
help your readers


Register online HERE

How does legislative redistricting work? How does it impact your community? And how can journalists monitor and question the process, and then involve their readers in the conversation?


With the redistricting process affecting all of Illinois in 2011, the Northern Illinois Newspaper Association is working with the Citizen Advocacy Center to help journalists learn about the process and how to explain to readers why they should care.

Redistricting will be the focus of NINA’s Spring Conference April 15 at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb. This important issue will help shape communities for the next decade.

“Redistricting might seem like government gibberish, but it’s going to determine the kind of elected representation your community will receive,” said Wally Haas, NINA president. “Journalists need to understand this process and help educate their readers. It will be well worth your time to attend the conference.”

The morning’s main speaker is slated to be Terry Pastika, executive director and community lawyer for the Citizen Advocacy Center, based in Elmhurst. Pastika last spoke to NINA journalists in 2010 at a session about Illinois’ new Freedom of Information law.


NINA Spring Conference
Friday, April 15, 2011

Schedule:
8:45-9 a.m. Check-in
9 a.m. - noon Program

Where: Blackhawk Annex, lower floor of Holmes Student Center, NIU-DeKalb. MAP.

Cost: $15. Includes light breakfast.

Parking: Please park in the NIU visitor lot, off Lincoln Highway and Carroll Avenue. Cost is $5.

To register: Contact Jim Killam, 815-753-4239. Or, register online HERE:


Registration deadline is April 7. Payment may be made at the door.



Monday, March 7, 2011

Working blue on the copy desk

A college paper (not mine, thankfully) recently ran a writer's byline, and the affiliation line beneath it said: "Bad Motherf-----." Only it didn't use dashes.

Our paper did once do a top-of-page-1 promo for a story about the horse-slaughtering plant in DeKalb. The designer needed a generic photo of a horse, so he grabbed one from AP and used it. Unfortunately, that horse was Barbaro, the Kentucky Derby winner who had shattered his leg and had just been euthanized.

At one paper I worked for, on the day musician Lawrence Welk died, a designer did a space-filler cutline that said: "Welk cutline here. Welkie welkie welkie cutline cutline cutline here here here." And of course it ran.

What's the worst / funniest thing that's ever made it into your paper unintentionally?