Here are some of the newsletters I’ve written or edited for Hoptown Chronicle:
- What isn’t being said about COVID-19 will hurt this community
- Journalism is a process of verification and of problem-solving
- A country ham takes time
- Wading around in your own history
- Good communication flows in two directions
- Our connection with supporters
- Connecting tornado survivors with their belongings
Here’s a sampling of the WNA Weekly Briefing, a weekly member newsletter that I produce for members of the Wisconsin Newspaper Association:
- Wisconsin reporters debunk election misinformation
- Student runs hometown paper • Body cam study committee meets
- How to create a “stop-doing” list • Advice from a Pulitzer-winning team member
- UWO prof rallies support to oppose media restrictions • Katelyn Ferral reporting on Ukraine war
- Journalists called on to address COVID-19 misinformation
- Newspaper groups ask court to halt postal increases • WCIJ, Milwaukee NNS receive $1.4 million grant
- Local newspapers can help reduce polarization • Microsoft launches NEW News Lab
- Marsy’s Law remains in place • WNA, WBA host open government webinar
- Tips for covering protests • Leader-Telegram partners with New York Times
Previously, I published the Wisconsin Openness Report, which included coverage of open government issues facing Wisconsin newspapers:
- Lakeland Times sues DOJ over records • High school announces book decision
- DA finds county board agenda item insufficient • Secret deliberations questioned
- Judge: DNR violated state’s open meetings law • Marshfield school records ordered released
- New Richmond News settles records case • Lakeland Times files meeting complaint
- Electronic records ruling could pave the way for others