It's scaring scientists, and it can't be blamed on "the onset of El Niño, the infamous climate pattern that reemerged last month," Dance writes. "the hot conditions are developing too quickly, and across more of the planet, to be explained solely by El Niño. Records are falling around the globe many months ahead of the El Niño’s peak impact, which typically hits in December and sends global temperatures soaring for months to follow."
A digest of events, trends, issues, ideas and journalism from and about rural America, by the Institute for Rural Journalism, based at the University of Kentucky. Links may expire, require subscription or go behind pay walls. Please send news and knowledge you think would be useful to benjy.hamm@uky.edu.
Thursday, July 06, 2023
Record heat around the world is scaring scientists
It's scaring scientists, and it can't be blamed on "the onset of El Niño, the infamous climate pattern that reemerged last month," Dance writes. "the hot conditions are developing too quickly, and across more of the planet, to be explained solely by El Niño. Records are falling around the globe many months ahead of the El Niño’s peak impact, which typically hits in December and sends global temperatures soaring for months to follow."
Wednesday, July 05, 2023
Without print journalism, communities will be fragmented and uninformed, award-winning Minnesota editor says
Reed Anfinson holds a freshly printed copy of the Swift County Monitor-News. (Associated Press photo by David Goldman) |
Swift County Monitor-News, Benson, Minn.
This column is based on the speech given on acceptance of the Eugene Cervi Award at the annual meeting of the International Society of Weekly Newspaper Editors in Reno, Nevada, June 24.
There is no doubt that if print journalism disappears, so will a citizen’s focus on and knowledge of local civic news. Left to self-motivation to seek out news on the internet, many will put it aside for later, never to return to it.
Their news consumption will become infrequent, scattered to those times when they may be directly affected by the action of a council, county board, zoning committee, or school district. But then putting it aside won’t matter because it won’t exist – no one will be left covering local news.
In America, 76% of the communities are under 5,000 population – more than 14,600. These communities most likely cannot sustain a news operation based on digital revenue alone. We don’t have the views or advertising to generate anywhere near the income needed.
Despite the loss of nearly 2,500 newspapers in America, despite the loss of tens of thousands of reporters, and despite the inability of many quality internet news sites to make a profit leading them to cut staff or close, we still hear and read the overly optimistic promises of a rich journalistic internet world.
The lies are exposed in the reality of steadily declining coverage of public bodies and life in our communities.
We’ve been told that it can be folly to “romanticize print as somehow superior to digital-only” news. We subscribe more to a famous quote often attributed to Albert Einstein: “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.”
For two decades, we’ve been promised a revolution of civic participation built on the broad, deep knowledge citizens will gain from online reporting, that it will be a participatory process where we educate one another. The reality of the past two decades has exposed the faults in this thinking.
What we have experienced is an internet world that has fractured society into warring social and political groups no longer willing agree to disagree, but viciously attacking one another. Death threats, shunning, misinformation, and ridicule are more common than harmony, compromise, and enlightenment.
Lies gain power, and the truth is harder to find. With the coming explosion of artificial intelligence software that allows anyone to craft eye-catching and reasonably sounding internet stories and videos that are entirely false or misleading, our ability to sort truth from lie will become increasingly challenging.
Print’s loss matters; the impact of its absence visible. Rather than a representative democracy strengthened by more knowledge on the internet, we find wherever a newspaper has disappeared the opposite is happening. Where a newspaper closes fewer people vote, fewer people run for office, more incumbents are re-elected, people become more rigid in their voting, sticking to one party or the other, and malfeasance in office increases.
It is visible in the empty reporter desks in newsrooms where the print product has declined as newspapers transition to digital only. What isn’t visible, at first, is the impact of the lost reporting.
Five underlying qualities of journalism give community newspapers equal standing with the government, business, and social powers that make up a community:
- Survey after survey shows that the local community newspaper is the most trusted news source. We are trusted because people know us and feel they can give us direct feedback if they think we are unfair or slanted in the news we write.
- Our financial strength, now significantly weakened, gave us the resources to challenge power when it would frustrate the public’s right to know. Individuals lack the interest and finances to challenge government officials and attorneys.
- We show up – day after day, month after month, year after year. The public officials know that we will write stories about their actions or inaction at every meeting. We will follow up, reminding citizens of past successes and misdeeds.
- Our knowledge of the laws that govern public officials, such as the Minnesota Open Meeting law, ensures transparency and accountability. Citizens lack this knowledge allowing them to be deceived in their efforts to attend meetings or gather public information.
- Perhaps our most powerful attribute today is our physical presence. Newspapers have a deep reach among citizens in their communities. Elected leaders know that a story printed in the newspaper will circulate throughout the towns and rural areas. It is found on the store counter, around the house, in the library, and in the café every day of the week – its headlines, advertising, and photos catch your eye. Headlines in print reach out to everyone who passes by. People who don’t subscribe still see what is happening in their community at no charge. Without the print newspaper, many would never see those headlines or stories.
As they have lost print subscribers and advertising dollars, some newspapers increasingly focus on their digital products. They put up paywalls and, in the process, exclude most of their local residents from the news of their community.
If the news that binds us together in common purpose is gone, if the stories we share about our fellow citizens disappear, our sense of community weakens. When we don’t feel shared responsibility, the vital work that improves our schools, healthcare, public safety, recreational facilities, and cultural experiences fades. These aren’t exaggerations; they are realities based on what happens in communities that lost their newspaper.
At 95% of the public meetings we cover, we are the only person in the room who isn’t an elected official or staff. Though there is an online link to the meeting, no one tunes in. Without a community journalist in the room, the stories of your local government won’t be told.
A newspaper’s physical presence is a constant reminder that there is news you should be paying attention to in your community.
When you sit down with a print newspaper, you are more focused than you are online, where you suddenly find yourself on social media, shopping, or skimming sites for entertainment.
Print is patient. It is present. It is a physical reminder of community. It is community pride and spirit. Online, it loses those unique qualities that unite us with a common identity. Print is local.
Newspapers are a public good that deserves public support. Urge your members of Congress and the Minnesota Legislature to support legislation that helps finance their future.
Calif. law giving sows more room takes effect; state delays enforcement until Jan. 1; U.S. pork industry must adjust
Piglets and a sow in a farrowing crate on a farm in Walsh, Illinois, that meets California’s new standards. (Photo by Jeff Roberson, The Associated Press) |
Now, pork sold in California must have come from pigs raised in farrowing crates that have at least 24 square feet of floor space, "allowing them to fully turn around in their living area," Goldberg notes. The law, passed in a 2018 referendum and cleared May 11 by the U.S. Supreme Court, "targeted the practice among some farmers of keeping sows in cramped stalls separate from other pigs. . . . While the law went into effect Saturday, the state allowed for pork killed before that date to be sold in California through the end of the year."
As the court case proceeded, the Biden administration sided with pork producers, who "argued that California, which consumes around 15% of pork nationwide but only produces a marginal amount, should not be allowed to dictate the rules of pig farming to farmers outside of the state. Opponents of the law said it would be a massive burden on producers and that the costs of the changes would be passed on to consumers." They also warned of a slippery slope in regulation of animal agriculture.
Labor Department proposes rule to give miners same protection against silica dust as those in other industries
The Mine Safety and Health Administration, part of the Labor Department, announced the proposal Friday. Before it can take effect, it must be published in the Federal Register and MSHA must hold public hearings. It says those will be held in Arlington, Va., and Denver, but did not announce dates.
The change would reduce the exposure limit to 50 micrograms per cubic meter of air from 100. “This is a good day for miners, although it has been a long time coming,” said United Mine Workers of America President Cecil Roberts. "Just two weeks ago, the UMWA had noted that MSHA under the Biden administration had not yet proposed a new silica dust rule in a statement announcing that the union was not ready to make an endorsement in the 2024 presidential race," Mountain State Spotlight notes.
DEA chief says U.S. needs laws to keep social-media platforms from being used to promote and sell fentanyl
CDC graph shows large increases in deaths from fentanyl; click on it to enlarge. |
Host Chuck Todd asked Milgram asked if social-media companies were cooperating with federal law enforcement in trying to fix the problem. She said, “We have not, until recently, gotten nearly as much cooperation as we need. . . . The deputy attorney general convened all of us in April of this year and made it very clear, number one, that the companies have to comply with their own terms of service, which say, ‘This is illegal. You cannot be selling fake pills. You cannot be selling drugs on social media websites’.”
Milgam also said law enforcement needs to be able to get information from social-media companies. Asked if there was something the DEA does not have that Congress could give them that would help them address the issue, she said, “So we talk a lot with Congress about social media. We talk a lot about the need for these platforms – essentially, one of the main ways we see Americans dying right now is through social media, the purchase of pills, fake pills on social media. So, again, if we’re after, how do we stop 110,000 Americans from dying?” She said Congress was “a place to start.”
Monday, July 03, 2023
Rural Blog will go into low gear as free National Summit on Journalism in Rural America nears; register by tomorrow!
SNAP benefits' work rules may leave some rural residents struggling; waivers exist but not all governors can/do apply
Rural regions can have too many people and not enough jobs, so some residents who receive Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits may struggle to meet the newly reinstated federal work requirements. "Able-bodied adults without dependents must work 80 hours or more per month to continue receiving benefits through SNAP, formerly known as food stamps. The Trump administration suspended the requirement at the start of the pandemic, and the old requirements resumed in May," reports Sarah Melotte of The Daily Yonder. Rural areas "on average have fewer jobs, greater transportation needs, and less broadband access. . . . . Rural America still doesn't have as many jobs as it did before Covid-19."
There are no SNAP work requirements for "able-bodied people
without dependents between the ages of 18 and 50" for the first 90 days,
Melotte explains. After that, "people have to work at least 20 hours
per week to continue receiving benefits. . . . But for the recipients
who live in places with insufficient jobs, that's easier said than done.
A 2022 survey
of 25,000 American adults found that the most common reason people are
unemployed is because of job availability. Twenty-eight percent of
survey respondents said that there were no jobs that were good fits in
terms of geography, wages, or hours of employment."
For example, East Carroll Parish, Louisiana, "is a rural LSA in the Mississippi Delta. In 2021, 30% of households were receiving SNAP benefits, compared to only 14% of the total rural population, according to recent estimates. . . . Mississippi prohibits work requirements waivers based on job availability. Twenty-four percent of Mississippi households in a county with an LSA received SNAP benefits in 2021. Over 160,000 people live in an LSA in Mississippi, but if they are of working age and without dependents, they still have to meet work requirements to continue getting benefits." Vollinger told Melotte: "It's a really harsh and arbitrary provision."
News-media roundup: E&P publisher says people with good ideas about preserving journalism need to work together
Mike Blinder cites Benjamin Franklin's 1754 political cartoon. |
Lee Enterprises has sold three newspapers south of St. Louis to Greg Hoskins’ Better Newspapers: the Park Hills Daily Journal, the Fredericktown Democrat News and the Farmington Press and Advantage. Hoskins said he would return local autonomy to each paper and build a printing plant in Park Hills. Hoskins' company, based in Mascoutah, Ill., has 39 publications in Illinois and Missouri, six radio stations and a printing plant in Altamont, Ill.
Natalie Perkins (right), editor and publisher of the Deer Creek Pilot in Rolling Fork, Miss., receives the President's Award from Mississippi Press Association President Stephanie Patton at the group's recent convention. Perkins, who also serves as assistant manager of the Sharkey County Emergency Management Agency, was feted for her work following an EF-4 tornado that devastated the community. The Pilot kept publishing on schedule.
Sunday, July 02, 2023
CBS spotlights Charleston newspaper's award-winning collaborations with smaller papers in South Carolina
Owner Pierre Manigault talks with Ted Koppel. (CBS image) |
Travis Jenkins speaks with Ted Koppel. (CBS image) |
Barbara Ball edits and delivers her newspaper. (CBS image) |