Guest Post: Local news collaboration in the time of COVID-19

Zoom planning meeting among Colorado newsrooms for COVID diaries coverage. (Screen shot via Melissa Milios Davis)

The image is familiar, even mundane, to most of us now: a dozen or more faces peer out against various backgrounds – some real, some green-screened – talking and planning across many miles. Together, apart.

But it was an unprecedented group that first gathered on April 1 – in more ways than one. First, the faces were of journalists from newsrooms from across Colorado, who in previous years have been more accustomed to competition than collaboration. Second, the group was finding unity in a common purpose – how working together could help each of them reach more Coloradans with accurate, timely, potentially life-saving updates and rigorous reporting in the unprecedented time of COVID.

Since that first Zoom call less than a month ago, nearly 100 journalists representing over 40 newsrooms across the state have joined the Colorado News Collaborative – which now includes the state’s largest and smallest newspapers, radio and television stations, digital news outlets, and professional journalism associations. A major factor prompting each to join the COLab, as it’s called, is a common need to figure out how to do more with less.

Why? While online news traffic is surging due to reader demand for trustworthy local news and information, Colorado’s newsrooms themselves are running on fumes.

Some of this isn’t new: With Google and Facebook gobbling up more than 60 percent of local digital ad revenue annually, the number of journalists in Colorado has declined by 44% between 2010 and 2018, and nearly one in five Colorado newspapers has closed its doors since 2004.

Last fall, the Colorado Media Project reported that at least 30 Colorado counties — most of them rural — have been left with only a single source of original local journalism.

Now, with local advertising plummeting to historic lows, the COVID crisis is already further expanding Colorado’s news deserts, reshaping the local news landscape in ways it may never recover.

The formation of the Colorado News Collaborative is a bright spot in these dark days. Participating newsrooms are joining forces to coordinate coverage to avoid duplication and maximize resources; cover more stories about people and communities statewide that are currently going untold; collaborate across newsrooms on data-driven accountability journalism; and facilitate wider distribution of stories, in both English and other languages, in order to better serve the public.

Today and throughout the coming week, in front-page newspaper stories and broadcast features across Colorado, COLab partners are releasing their first major collaborative storytelling project: COVID Diaries Colorado.

On April 16, the deadliest day to date in the U.S. coronavirus pandemic, scores of reporters from across Colorado set out to find how people were coping. They found stories of grit, ingenuity and hope. You can find some of their stories in this publication, and all of them are online at http://colabnews.co

So now if you’re sufficiently inspired, and wondering: How can we support these dedicated local journalists — among the short list acknowledged as essential workers by Gov. Jared Polis — in this challenging time? 

Most subscription-based newsrooms have already taken down their paywalls to allow free, full access to their COVID-19 coverage. 

So for readers who have room in their budgets, now is the time to sign up for a subscription to your local newspaper, to show that you value the hard work that your local journalists — your neighbors — are putting in each day. Nonprofit and public-benefit newsrooms are also hoping that local readers and philanthropists will donate generously, to demonstrate they agree that independent reporting on local news is an essential service.

As Coloradans, many of us are rallying to support our local restaurants, retail outlets, and service workers — let’s add local newsrooms to our list of worthy causes.

 

Melissa Milios Davis is acting director of the Colorado Media Project and vice president for informed communities, Gates Family Foundation.

2 COMMENTS

  1. Could the Gates Foundation set up a common giving site, allowing people to give on-line once and direct donations to the Colorado News Collaborative or to specific members?

  2. I would look forward to reading guest items and postings if we could read some from past Colorado Officials who are still living in Colorado, from Military and Public Office. I still cherish and look back to those years when I had face to face meetings in their offices, homes, and town house meetings. We accomplished a lot for Colorado, to make it the attractive state with cities, that now has attracted so many from other states and cities to move here. They came to escape taxes and policies they could no longer live with, and now vote to cause same problems here, they ran from.
    ———–Know there are many conservatives still living here, who are pragmatic, and their thoughts on recent changes should be put forward to remind Colorado of who got I-25 widened, improved, to make it more accessible. Also improvements through the mountains by improving I-70 and also 286 from South to North. Folks who moved here in past 20 years, seem to think that has always been available. –
    ——–And I include or suggest, we should hear more from past city Mayors and be reminded of just how this all grew from what Colorado was like before it grew to this population. I am tired of MSM, giving only their views, with hatred and opposition of this Administration. Just as we changed in past 20 years, we had much more and better before that, without the road rage, frustration, anger, and the division within families, religion, gender, race, and other sub divisions.
    ——-WE USED TO LIVE AS NEIGHBORS, HELPING EACH OTHER, AND BEING FRIENDS. WE NEED TO BE REMINDED OF THAT. Too many of my friends and peers of those years, are deceased now, and are not remembered or even known by folks who moved here in last few years. .

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