"Full time statehouse reporters are now a luxury for many news organizations," Nick Karpinski reports for the Gateway Journalism Review. Part-time journalists from nonprofit newsrooms have increasingly stepped up to plug some of the coverage gaps—their ranks have nearly quadrupled since 2014, according to a recent Pew Research Center study—but much has still been lost, said a panel of journalists during a May 4 virtual discussion panel, "The State of Statehouse Reporting."
Panelists agreed that widespread layoffs mean there aren't enough veteran journalists to guide younger reporters on the statehouse beat, Karpinski reports. "We have lost so much institutional knowledge," said Hannah Meisel, NPR Illinois' state government and politics editor. "Along with institutional knowledge, we’ve also lost a lot of folks to look up to and model our journalism and our approach to statehouse reporting. If you don’t have model journalists and model editors with institutional knowledge then the guardrails are off."
The pandemic has made statehouse reporting more difficult, too. "In terms of the access at the Capitol, it’s absolutely gotten worse since Covid-19," said Jerry Nowicki, the statehouse bureau chief for Capitol News Illinois. "There’s a lot of locked doors in the senate. Sometimes the elevators are off. You can’t even get up to the areas where lawmakers mingle and where you might learn something that you won’t print but it will help inform the type of stories that you print."
"Meisel agreed and said this lack of access prevents reporters from getting to the meat of legislation in their stories and prevents them from providing substantive information," Karpinski reports.
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