Introducing VermontNewsGuy Blog

By Jon Margolis

Hello, and welcome to the birth of Vermont Newsguy.com, which aspires to fill a hole: the dearth of journalism in Vermont

Oh, there are good reporters here. They work for the Free Press and the Times-Argus, for the Associated Press and VPR, for 7 Days, and, yeah, even for the TV stations.

But for good journalism, good reporters are merely necessary ; they are not sufficient. With few exceptions, news coverage in Vermont is superficial. It barely informs; worse, by its shallowness, it effectively misinforms.

Meaning that it injures the public it is supposed to serve.

The newspapers have smaller staffs and less space. Radio and television news are, as they have always been, little more than headline services. OK, VPR is a headline service plus insight. But it doesn’t devote much time to state and local news.

Then there’s the excess of prudence that leads to timidity and transforms reporting into stenography. So if the reporter accurately quotes Sen. Smith saying that the world is flat, and then Sen. Jones arguing that it is round, the job has been done.

In mid-November, for instance, on the release of a report contending that closing the Vermont Yankee power plant in 2012 would mean the end of life as we know it, journalists dutifully recounted the report’s conclusions, and the challenges to them by the usual suspects. But no one actually read the report and checked its assumptions and conclusions with experts who don’t have a dog in this fight.

Similarly, every year the state spends huge gobs of money. State officials and legislators are quoted on the wisdom or necessity of these outlays, but rarely does a reporter examine the documents showing just how much is being spent for what.

So I will. Not only check how much is being spent for what, but on who is benefitting from the spending, and how much those beneficiaries contributed to the office-holders dolling out the dough.

Not everything all by myself, of course. As the product of a one-man band, this site will be selective rather than comprehensive. Nothing about auto accidents and crime (unless it becomes a political/legislative issue, a la pedophilia). Probably not much about raunchy pictures on snowboards.

No opinion, either. Note the name: Vermont Newsguy. You will read here news—substantive information about Vermont’s government, politics, economics, society, and culture. No crusades. I am out to describe the world, not change it. The perspective will be neither liberal nor conservative. Nor centrist, for that matter. Ideology, in the words of a veteran newspaper columnist (me, actually) is an impediment to clear thinking. Clear thinking will be one goal.

Liveliness will be another. There is no law of man, woman, or nature that requires “serious” journalism to be dull. I want to inform you, not bore you. Anything—yes even stories about electric utility rates or tax assessments—can be written well.

No opinion on this end doesn’t mean none on yours. Comments are welcome. So are comments on the comments. (You’ll have to register, but that’s free). This site will be mostly “old media” in that one experienced reporter will be responsible for the content. But let’s include a touch of participatory, inter-active “new media.” If you have ideas, complaints, insights, by all means voice them. Maybe we can get a conversation going.

No opinion doesn’t mean no assessment, or no analysis, especially about politics. Nor does it mean not calling nonsense nonsense. In the example above, Sen. Smith is wrong; the world is round and a reporter should say so. Just as he should say that lower taxes do not always lead to faster economic growth nor smaller classes to better schools. But the same standard will be applied equally to all parties, factions, and persons.

And to the state’s establishment news outlets. The media, no less than the politicians, will be examined. Where warranted, bad journalism will be so described. Who knows? Maybe this will be a spur to make some of it better.

The schedule will be semi-daily, meaning a posting most weekdays, usually brief (usually shorter than this introduction), sometimes breezy. But in-depth reporting requires occasional absence from the daily routine. So if nothing much happens on a particular day, and if I am immersed in documents or interviews or a legislative hearing, there won’t be a posting . Not to mention that now and then a fellow needs a few days off.

I recognize that there is a certain lack of modesty in putting oneself forward as the person who can do something better than it is being done. But it isn’t that no one else has the ability to do this; it’s just that the current system does not give them the chance to do it.

Still, I do confess to a certain immodesty when it comes to covering the news, and to writing about it well. It’s pretty much all I’m good at (though I am a fair dry fly angler and death on the badminton court ). I have a 35-mile-an-hour fastball, no jump shot to speak of, and can neither sing, dance, draw pictures, nor play the piano (which I sometimes do; you don’t want to hear it). But I can write the news, and have been doing so for 40 years. For details, click on the accompanying “About Me” button.

As it happens, this is not a unique enterprise. All over the country, from Connecticut to San Diego, as standard news organizations falter, journalists are starting on-line newspapers, though without the paper. Like this one, a few of them are one-person operations. Most are non-profit

Which does not mean they cost nothing to produce. I don’t expect to get rich from this exercise. I would like to recoup my start-up costs, with perhaps a little left over for my time and trouble. This site will be free, and, for now, free of advertisements. Donations of any amount will be appreciated. Here’s a suggestion: How about $24 a year, all at once or in installments? That’s two bucks a month, less than 50 cents a week, less than one day’s Free Press, Times-Argus, or Rutland Herald. Such a bargain.

###

Tags:

2 Responses to “Introducing VermontNewsGuy Blog”

  1. Curtis Hier Says:

    I would like to make what could be an historic first-ever posted comment! Good luck, Jon. Obviously there is a niche for just such a site as yours. And I hope people will drift over here right after reading Vermont Tiger! If I may be permitted some gratuitous advice: Be patient. These things can start off slow. But the readers and commenters will come.

  2. Anonymous Says:

    stenography…

    Intriguing idea, but I don’t know if I believe you one hundred percent….

Make a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.