From the Green Bay Press Gazette:
In the spirit of fairness I would quote/link an editorial or something supporting this decision -- except that I can't seem to find any such by Googling. (Well, whaddaya expect? If you mess with journalists-as-such, you won't get good press unless you buy it.) But here's some rich anti- editorials:
Chris Rickert: Guilt by association snares Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism.
From a prof at the UW-Madison's School of Journalism and Mass Communications:
Milwaukeemag.com: "The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism's Puzzling Rebuke: Why would Republican lawmakers turn on an organization dedicated to remaining nonpartisan?"
In the WCIJ's words:MADISON — A provision that would force the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism off the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus blindsided the center’s leader, who said Wednesday he’s still trying to understand why his group was specifically targeted.
The center, a nonpartisan investigative news organization that offers its stories free to mainstream media outlets, operates rent-free out of two offices in the university’s journalism school, said Andy Hall, the group’s executive director. Under an agreement signed in 2011, the school covers the cost of utilities and Internet access, and in exchange the center hires some of its students as paid interns and provides academic support.
Hall and the school, who agree the arrangement has been mutually beneficial, stopped short of interpreting the move as some sort of political payback. But the budget modification, proposed early Wednesday by two Republicans, left the center and the school scrambling for answers.
The proposal, one of several put forth by state Sen. Alberta Darling and state Rep. John Nygren, would do two things: Prohibit the Center for Investigative Journalism from occupying facilities on any UW property and prohibit UW employees from doing any work related to the news center.
On June 5, the Wisconsin Legislature’s budget-writing committee, with no public warning, approved a measure evicting the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism from its campus offices and forbidding university employees from working with the Center. The full Legislature and Gov. Scott Walker have the power to remove the measure before approving the budget, but only days remain. Many journalists, journalism educators and members of the public across the nation say the Center’s collaboration with the school must be saved because it’s an important experiment in a future model for investigative reporting and journalism education — one that already is producing high-impact stories that strengthen democracy, while training young journalists at no direct cost to taxpayers.
In the spirit of fairness I would quote/link an editorial or something supporting this decision -- except that I can't seem to find any such by Googling. (Well, whaddaya expect? If you mess with journalists-as-such, you won't get good press unless you buy it.) But here's some rich anti- editorials:
Chris Rickert: Guilt by association snares Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism.
Speaking at the Joint Committee on Finance Wednesday, Democratic Sen. Robert Wirch called it “shameful” to bar the center from working with UW-Madison staff or using UW-Madison facilities “at a time when newspapers are disappearing before our eyes” and “we have scandals in government.”
But Republican JCF co-chairman John Nygren suggested WCIJ was as biased in favor of liberal causes as media outlets MacIver Institute, Media Trackers and Fox News are toward conservative causes.
If this was about “providing state facilities, state support for one those (conservative) organizations, you might have a little different view on that,” Nygren told Wirch. “We’re just being consistent.”
They aren’t being consistent.
Fox is a business, not a donor-supported nonprofit like WCIJ. And while Media Trackers and MacIver are nonprofit, too, that’s where the similarity ends.
The MacIver Institute keeps its donors secret, and Media Trackers allows its donors to remain anonymous. Neither lists donors on their website. WCIJ lists its donors on its website along with the amounts of large donations.
The center also follows the Society of Professional Journalists’ code of ethics and bars donors from dictating news coverage. And while Media Trackers and MacIver didn’t respond to inquiries about whether they do the same, conservatives generally aren’t interested in such mainstream journalism standards because they think mainstream journalism is out to get them.
The belief that those who produce the news at mainstream media organizations lean Democratic only pours fuel on that particularly paranoid right-wing fire.
And therein lies the rub. It’s not just that the center has made the right look bad (because it’s made the left look bad, too). It’s that the people and organizations that produce its product include alleged liberals.
The Open Society Institute, for example — founded by liberal leviathan George Soros — has given the center $535,000 since 2009. The center’s money and politics project editor worked for 25 years at the left-leaning weekly Isthmus.
But it’s also received funding from the Ford Foundation, the McCormick Foundation, the Joyce Foundation and the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation. (And full disclosure: My employer and some of my co-workers have given, too.)
The Center’s getting hit with a favorite weapon of the nakedly partisan — selective guilt-by-association. Another recent example is the way Madison’s leftists jumped all over Urban League of Greater Madison CEO Kaleem Caire’s conservative-leaning associations to help do in his nonunion charter school proposal.
From a prof at the UW-Madison's School of Journalism and Mass Communications:
Under attack
So everyone associated with WCIJ was blindsided by an overnight move to expel the center from its offices within our journalism program. The school provides no funding to the center, which is supported entirely by outside grants. It receives free space through a facilities-use agreement, in return for guaranteed paid internships for students like Koran, as well as guest lectures, class visits and educational support.
The state’s legislative Joint Finance Committee on Wednesday added a budget measure barring UW from housing the center in its space. But even more critically –- and dangerously -– the measure purports to end any interaction between journalism faculty and staff and the center:
“In addition, prohibit UW employees from doing any work related to the Center for Investigative Journalism as part of their duties as a UW employee.” (See the full motion from Sen. Alberta Darling, R-River Hills, and Rep. John Nygren, R-Marinette)
This direct attack on our collaboration with WCIJ is an assault on our academic freedom, as well as on student learning. I had the privilege of meeting with Koran when he was just beginning his look at recidivism in the criminal justice system as a WCIJ intern. I told him I was astounded to learn of the proportion and cost of returning offenders to jail in the state and encouraged him to hunt for angles related to that. I did this in my capacity as a journalism professor, for which I am compensated by the university.
Threat to freedom and independence
To be clear: As written, the legislative budget measure would bar this conversation. Bar it. It would similarly prevent other things I have done with the center over the years -– reviewing intern applications, teasing out ideas from datasets, consulting on leads. And my association with the center pales in comparison with that provided by some of my colleagues.
Milwaukeemag.com: "The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism's Puzzling Rebuke: Why would Republican lawmakers turn on an organization dedicated to remaining nonpartisan?"
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