π¦ Crestone Eagle newspaper transitions to a nonprofit in rural Colorado
The news behind the news this week
In 2019, The Salt Lake Tribune made big news when it became the first large metro newspaper to convert to a community-supported nonprofit ownership model.
Since then, the Utah paper has laid out a playbook for others to emulate as the traditional advertising-based business model for newspapers continues to crumble. In Colorado, one newspaper has taken a cue β though on a much smaller scale. After more than three decades in operation, The Crestone Eagle, a monthly print paper in rural Saguache County, is set to transition to a nonprofit at the beginning of September.
As the paperβs longtime leader, Kizzen Laki, was looking to retire, a group of locals banded together to form a group called Crestone Eagle Community Media (CECM), raised money, rallied the community, and wrangled support to sustain the paper as an independent news organization.
Laki was a former Crestone mayor who also sat on the town council while serving as the local newspaperβs editor and publisher. This month, the Eagle welcomed John Waters as its next editor and is preparing for a βnew eraβ as a nonprofit newsroom.
From a recent column by CECM member Peter Anderson:
In an era when many local papers have disappeared due to dwindling audiences and revenues, sustaining the Eagle will be a formidable challenge. The Eagle, however, enjoys great community support, as indicated by the many contributors to its successful capital campaign in December of 2021. In its efforts to transition the Eagle into a nonprofit news organization CECM has had support from Saguache County Commissioners, the Colorado Media [Project], and Colorado College, whose journalism students will periodically join the Eagle staff as interns.
Nonprofit status will allow the Eagle to solicit funding from grants and donations to beef up its website, enhance its coverage, and become more financially sustainable, the paper reported in a December 2019 edition announcing its plans.
As it transitions, Jennifer Eytcheson, currently the Eagleβs advertising manager, will become the paperβs general manager where sheβll oversee operations, production, HR, intern program management, and βspecial projects to increase readership, news reach and revenue,β the paper reported.
In December, the Eagle was one of two dozen local news outlets in Colorado to take part in the Colorado Media Projectβs #NewsCOneeds year-end matching grant challenge. That βgave us an opportunity to reach out to our small community and tell the story of this big shift in the paperβs foundation,β Eytcheson said about the fundraising campaign.
Colorado Collegeβs Journalism Institute has been a partner along the way.
For a class called βThe Future and Sustainability of Local News,β students in the fall traveled to Crestone and stayed at the collegeβs Baca campus nearby. While there, they met with Eagle staff along with members of the CECM group and other area journalists, read archives of older area newspapers at the local museum, interviewed residents about where they get their local news and information, and spoke with a county public official about the efficacy of a potential sales tax grant to support local journalism.
The experience also led to a new CC internship program.
Marge Hoglin, a former journalist and entrepreneur who helped lead the transition on behalf of Crestone Eagle Community Media, told this newsletter last year how the Eagleβs circulation area near the Great Sand Dunes National Park has been changing. Economic development projects are in the works, she said, and money is coming into the region that has a diverse population. Growth is going to happen, she added, but the area could use some more robust news coverage.
βThere are so many new ideas to explore,β Eytcheson said in the latest Eagle column about the paperβs succession plan. Read the whole thing at the link above.
πΏΒ This weekβs newsletter is proudly supported in part byΒ Grasslands, Denverβs Indigenous-owned PR, marketing, and ad agency that is thankful for the tireless work reporters do to bring our communities the stories that matter. Founded by veteran Denver Post journalist Ricardo Baca, Grasslands β the recipient of a 2020 Denver Business Journal Small Business Award β is a Journalism-Minded Agencyβ’Β working with brands in highly regulated industries including cannabis, technology, and real estate. Operating from its new offices in Denverβs Art District on Santa Fe, the firmβs 20-person team of communications professionals is focused on a single mission: βWe tell stories, build brands and amplify value.β EmailΒ hello@mygrasslands.comΒ to see how Grasslands can supercharge your brandβs marketing program (and read some of ourΒ cannabis journalist Q&As here).Β Β πΏ
Advancing Equity in Local News: 2022 Grantee Convening
This just in from Colorado Media Project, which underwrites this newsletter:
Whether you're a Colorado journalist, a student or faculty member, a librarian or teacher, an advocate or business leader, a funder or community member or civic leader - we invite you to join us for a unique convening designed to inspire your sense of what's possible for the future [of] our local civic news and engagement in our democracy.
Register here.
WHY ARE WE CONVENING?
To learn, share, reflect and grow together. The primary goal of this convening is for CMP grantees from across Colorado to lift up what they're doing to advance equity in local news, to share what they're learning, to wrestle with big questions they're encountering, and to draw out new ideas for next steps. Every session is designed to be enlightening, thought-provoking, and inspiring - with a diverse mix of perspective and voices, including local journalists, national experts, community members and funders.
This convening is being designed for in-person attendance, though we will be streaming a handful of sessions live and recording some sessions.
Find the schedule here. Organizers say they are βthrilled to be sharing a venue and collaborating with the Colorado Press Associationβs Annual Conferenceβ that runs from Sept. 15 to 17. βMore detailed session information will be forthcoming,β they said in an announcement. The event will be at the Lowry Conference Center at 1061 Akron Way, Building 697, in Denver.
Ms. Mayhem needs your help
A Colorado publication dedicated to inclusive coverage is suspending operations as it seeks sustainable funding.
When Madison Lauterbach graduated from Metro State University in Denver in 2019, she had a plan. βI wanted to create a publication focused on telling stories and news about the parts of Denver I care most about,β she recently wrote.
A year later she founded Ms. Mayhem with a group of friends, and self-funded it. The site launched during a summer of uprisings over Black lives, which she described as baptism-by-fire. From a recent column.
As much as weβve educated our audience on the wide range of subjects weβve coveredβpelvic floor therapy, sobriety during the pandemic, how to file taxes as a sex workerβweβve learned just as much. Over the last two years, we as journalists have been afforded the opportunity to cover topics brand new to us. Weβve developed new skills, knowledge and awareness of the impact of our words.Β β¦
Weβve published stories that have impacted the daily lives of Coloradans in many ways: bringing attention to a broken system, boosting the profile of independent artists, highlighting important health issues or explaining ballot measures. We had reporters on the ground in Washington, D.C. for the insurrection and the inauguration. Two of our stories from 2021 won the Colorado chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists Top of the Rockies awards. The Casting Forward team spent a year on an ambitious video project and organized a successful premiere event.
But, like plenty of local news startups in Coloradoβs fractured media environment, Ms. Mayhem has struggled to sustain itself financially without institutional support. More from the column:
[D]espite how much weβve impacted the community, weβve faced some revenue issues since we launched. I have self-funded this venture from the beginning, hoping that down the road weβd find advertisers, paid content opportunities or a reliable group of Patreon members. As firm believers in free access to the stories weβve published, we refused to put up a paywall. But we are now staring down the barrel of significant financial loss that I can no longer justify. Unfortunately, the Ms. Mayhem team and I have come to the decision to suspend publication temporarily until we can find a dependable source of income. Our last stories will be published no later than July 31.Β
Lauterbach says she would like to continue the site if they can secure funding. βWeβd also like to expand our community-based reporting to other parts of Colorado, and perhaps even other cities,β she wrote. βAnd if given the resources, expanding our video and photo work and breaking into podcasting would be our first priority.β
More here. Anyone interested in supporting the outlet or who has ideas can reach out to mlauterbach [at] msmayhem [dot] com.
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Collaborative journalism update: βChasing Progressβ
Colorado has become a model for statewide collaborative journalism.
News organizations here are forging partnerships among disparate formerly competing outlets with an understanding that they are stronger together during a time of late-capitalist local news decline. Other states, from Oklahoma to New Mexico, Ohio, and elsewhere are building out local news collaborations.
The latest project, fostered by the Colorado News Collaborative, is Chasing Progress. The multi-newsroom initiative seeks to examine the βsocio-economic and health equity among Black and Latino Coloradans over the last decade.β Each installment is also available in Spanish.
The project βtraces back to I-News/RMPBSβ Losing Ground, which in 2013 tracked equity gaps in poverty levels, homeownership rates, educational attainment and median family income among Black, Latino and white Coloradans from 1960-2010,β COLab reports. βThe name, βLosing Ground,β announced its findings.β Chasing Progress examines what succeeded it, βa period that saw a historically long economic expansion sandwiched by the upheavals of the Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic. The ongoing series looks not only at what happened, but why and how and what comes next.β
From COLabβs Tina Griego in a recent newsletter:
No single newsroom in these tight-budget, staff-starved days could devote enough time and resources to a project of Chasing ProgressβΒ breadth and depth. But together, and with the added brainpower and experience of community members, we can. We each take one piece of the greater whole. We learn together. We push one another. This is the promise of collaboration. It is the joy of collaboration.
Griego recently talked about the project with Chandra Thomas Whitfield on Colorado Public Radioβs statewide program Colorado Matters. Listen to the whole conversation here.
RMPBS journalist Dana Knowles shared her story of addiction and recovery
More and more, journalists are opening up about their personal lives with their audiences.
Some newsroom managers might embrace an opportunity for the personal experiences of their journalists to inform their reporting, and some (more unreconstructed ones) might see such experiences as a conflict. Rocky Mountain PBS has publicly stated itβs a newsroom that adheres to the former orthodoxy.
This week, RMPBS multimedia journalist Dana Knowles told her personal story of addiction and recovery in a first-person video and essay.
βAnother reason Iβm not anonymous anymore,β she said, βis because I want all the introverts, dreamers, sensitives, people with depression, anxiety, addiction, eating disorders or any other mental health issue to hear me and see me, so that they can hear and see themselves and not be afraid to ask for help.β
More Colorado media odds & ends
π€ βColoradans recognize the threat of Big Techβs stranglehold over the news and media space and are united in their desire to curb Big Techβs outsized power and influence,β political analyst Douglas Schoen wrote this week in a guest column in The Aspen Times that relied on a recent Schoen Cooperman Research poll.
π¨ Ana Campbell is leaving as editor of Denverite and moving to Texas to be closer to family, she said. There, sheβll be βthe first-ever audience editor for The Texas Newsroom,β a collaboration among Texas public radio stations.
π¬ Denver Post sportswriter Kyle Newman apologized for what he called βan extremely poor choice of wordsβ after he deleted a tweet in which heβd opined about batters who celebrate after a home run. (You can find it yourself if youβre curious enough.) A fellow Post reporter publicly called him out for it.
βοΈ Faith Miller is leaving Colorado Newsline to go to law school at the University of Denver.
π³ Heidi Ganahl, the Republican candidate for governor in Colorado, chose as her running mate Danny Moore, who The Gazette reported once called CNN βthe βChineses [sic] News Networkβ and [accused] them of β¦ βlying to the American people and endangering the lives of Americanβs [sic] and those of the world.β He further claimed, βThey know it, but they are lying to you anyway.ββ The Denver Post reported he also once βclaimed that 9News βstagedβ a deadly interaction between a security guard and a conservative protester by goading the protester.β Hereβs how Ganahlβs pick played in the headlines.
π Pat Ferrucci, a professor in the journalism department at the University of Colorado in Boulder, published a new study with others that βreveals a path to revenue growth for weekly and rural newspapers.β
π° The Denver Post is accepting applications for the paperβs fall 2022 part-time paid news reporting internship. βApply through Handshake or via email,β an editor says. βDeadline to apply is Aug. 31.β
π Jordan Lucero, an incoming senior at Pueblo West High School, βlearned from some of the biggest names in media at the 2022 Washington Journalism and Media Conference at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia,β The Pueblo Chieftain reported.
π§ͺ βA Colorado Springs man who argued the stateβs law against manufacturing controlled substances is unconstitutional because it infringes on the protected βspeechβ of chemists ran into resistance last week from the Court of Appeals,β Michael Karlik reported. βBecause chemistry is not intended to convey a message, it is not legally speech, a three-judge appellate panel concluded.β
π³ Denver Post reporter Conrad Swanson responded to a potential reader who was turned off by the newspaperβs paywall on an important story about the Colorado River drying up. Swanson said he is a βbig proponentβ of micropayments so audiences can read single stories. (Simon Owens has laid out the reasons why news companies resist that.)
π βDenver police officers interviewed both Weldehiwet and Alexander in the hospital, but told neither Weldehiwet nor Alexander that police had shot them. They said they didnβt realize who had shot them until they read news reports the next day,β was one heck of a line in a Denver Post story this week.
π Bookmark this: βReimagining the public square: Whatβs happening in Coloradoβs information ecosystem right now.β
π Tim Miller, a Littleton, Colorado native who became a national Republican political consultant before ditching the party, spoke Thursday about his recent book βWhy We Did It: A Travelogue From the Republican Road to Hell,β at the Tattered Cover in Denver. 9News anchor Kyle Clark interviewed him. Teague Bohlen interviewed Miller for Westword.
π° Messan Mawugbe, a corporate communication consultant based overseas who is currently visiting the country and living in Castle Rock, analyzed Colorado news coverage to get a sense of how local media presents children. He published his findings in Modern Ghana. He says he largely looked at headlines because of paywall issues and he hopes his findings are a starting point that might spark a discussion among journalists and advocates for children in Colorado.
π’ Mike Lindell, an election-conspiracist pillow salesman, told Colorado Newsline Editor Quentin Young if he wrote a story, βI will be calling out your name nationally, every minute of every day of my show β¦ And you will be known as the worst journalist this country has ever seen. Do I make myself clear?β (Young wrote the story.)
βοΈDenverite is hiring βsomeone to direct news coverage and steward long-term vision and mission in our modern, fast-paced and entrepreneurial newsroom.β They will pay between $71,900 and $95,800.
π Denver journalist Chris Walker might have the coolest title in Colorado media right now as a Ferriss β UC Berkeley βPsychedelic Journalism fellow.β The program supported his new City Cast Denver podcast Ballot Trip. (Want a similar title? Apply here by July 31.)
Iβm Corey Hutchins, interim directorΒ of Colorado CollegeβsΒ Journalism Institute. For nearly a decade Iβve reported on the U.S. local media scene for Columbia Journalism Review, and Iβve been a journalist for longer at multiple news organizations. TheΒ Colorado Media Project, where I write case studies,Β is underwriting this newsletter, and my βInside the Newsβ column appears at COLab, both of which I sometimes write about here. (If you would like to underwrite this newsletter like CMP and Grasslands, hit me up.) Follow meΒ onΒ Twitter, reply or subscribe to this weekly newsletterΒ here,Β or e-mail me at CoreyHutchinsΒ [at] gmail [dot] com.