Awards

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The Society of Professional Journalists, Northern California chapter, will honor champions of the First Amendment at the 27th annual James Madison Awards Banquet on Thursday, March 15, 2012, at the City Club of San Francisco.

William Bennett Turner, who has spent his career defending the First Amendment and civil rights, as well as 25 years teaching new generations of journalists and attorneys, is to receive the Norwin Yoffie Award for Career Achievement from the Society of Professional Journalists, Northern California Chapter.

Turner heads a list of a dozen recipients of the James Madison Awards that SPJ NorCal presents annually to champions of the First Amendment and freedom of information. Read the rest of this entry »

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The James Madison Freedom of Information Awards recognize Northern California organizations and individuals who have made significant contributions to the advancement of freedom of information and expression in the spirit of James Madison, the creative force behind the First Amendment. The awards are presented by the Freedom of Information Committee of the Northern California Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. There is no fee for submitting an entry. An awards ceremony and dinner will be held in March, during National Freedom of Information Week, near the anniversary of Madison’s birth.

Eligible for nomination are Northern California journalists, citizens, media organizations, or community groups who, during 2011, have defended public access to meetings, public records, or court proceedings or otherwise promoted the public’s right to know, publish and speak freely about issues of public concern.

Award Categories (awards may not be given in every category): Professional Journalist, Nonprofit Organization, Source/Whistle Blower, Career Achievement, Citizen, Public Official, Educator, Cartoonist, Legal Counsel, Student Journalist, Electronic Access, News Media.

* The Professional Journalist and Student Journalist awards recognize journalists who have been involved in fights for access to records, meetings or court proceedings, who have made exceptional use of public records in their reporting or who have promoted education on FOI issues through stories, editorials or other advocacy.

* The Public Official award is given to a governmental official who has demonstrated extraordinary commitment to keeping public records or meetings public, or otherwise has taken exemplary leadership on FOI or First Amendment issues.

* The Beverly Kees Educator Award recognizes extraordinary efforts by educators to cultivate a devotion to the values of freedom of information.

The Norwin S. Yoffie Career Achievement Award is named in honor of a stalwart supporter of the chapter’s Freedom of Information Committee, who died in November 2000 after many years of distinguished service to SPJ and the cause of freedom of information.

Submit a nomination online. Entries must be submitted not later than Friday, January 6, 2012.

Questions: Please contact Geoff King or Rebecca Bowe at spjnorcalfoi@gmail.com. Please include “James Madison Awards Question” in the subject line.

The Society of Professional Journalists, Northern California Chapter, has named San Francisco Chronicle reporter Jaxon Van Derbeken as Journalist of the Year for his hard-hitting coverage of the Pacific Gas & Electric Co. natural-gas pipeline explosion that killed eight people and destroyed 38 homes in San Bruno, CA, in September 2010.

Van Derbeken spent hundreds of hours combing through tens of thousands of pages of documents to prove that the explosion could have been prevented and that PG&E has consistently failed to protect customers in San Bruno and elsewhere in California. In the process of turning out dozens of stories, Van Derbeken, the Chronicle’s longtime criminal justice reporter, was forced to learn a whole new field. This past August, the National Transportation Safety Board essentially rubberstamped his efforts, concluding that PG&E’s cozy relationship with state regulators and a culture of shoddy safety practices caused the deadly explosion.

“Judges were impressed by the depth of reporting and the variety of story presentation Northern California journalists provided their audiences this year,” said Liz Enochs, SPJ NorCal chapter president. “The work of this year’s winners shows Northern California journalists are setting the pace for using all manner of media tools to dig for hidden facts and tell the stories that best serve Northern California’s citizens.”

Van Derbeken is the recipient of one of seven special awards chosen directly by the SPJ NorCal board of directors. Read the rest of this entry »

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Please join us on March 16, when we honor champions of the First Amendment at the 26th Annual James Madison Awards.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

No-host bar: 5:30 p.m.
Dinner/event: 6:30 p.m.

hosted by the

New Delhi Restaurant
160 Ellis Street
San Francisco, CA 94102
415.397.8470

Purchase Tickets

  • Payment Option 1: Buy Tickets Online via Paypal. Please note that there is a $2.50 or $3.50 convenience fee per ticket (depending on price) included in the e-pay option. If you wish to buy more than one ticket in a category (member, non-member) change the quantity on the PayPal page after hitting the Buy Now button.
  • Ticket for …
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  • Payment Option 2: Purchase Tickets by Mail. Please print this page and identify below the number of tickets that you wish to purchase:

___ ticket(s) at $50 each (SPJ members)

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Enclosed is my check for $______ payable to “SPJ-NorCal”

Please mail this form with your check (payable to “SPJ-NorCal”) to the following address not later than Friday, March 4, 2011:

SPJ – FOI Committee
c/o Mark Conrad
Munger, Tolles & Olson, LLP
560 Mission Street, 27th Floor
San Francisco, CA 94105

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, Feb. 11, 2011

NORCAL SPJ CHAPTER ANNOUNCES FIRST AMENDMENT AWARD WINNERS

On March 16, the Society of Professional Journalists Northern California chapter will honor champions of the First Amendment at the 26th Annual James Madison Awards.

For his tireless pursuit of public records, his perseverance in related legal battles, and the award-winning news coverage that he has provided through the information that he has set free, Tim Crews, the editor and publisher of the Sacramento Valley Mirror is to receive this year’s Norwin Yoffie Award for Career Achievement.  This award is named for one of the founders of SPJ NorCal’s Freedom of Information Committee, who as an editor and publisher of the then-family-owned San Rafael Independent-Journal was a vigorous advocate for transparency and accountability in the public-services sector. Other honorees are:

●    Steve O’Donoghue, a retired teacher in the Oakland School District and co-founder of the Media Academy, who will be honored with the Beverly Kees Educator Award, named for a former SPJ NorCal president who was an educator and nationally recognized journalist.
●     Attorney Duffy Carolan of Davis Wright Tremaine LLP, who will receive theLegal Counsel award for her 20 years of representing journalists and news organizations, defending defamation lawsuits, advocating for the release of public records, and protecting journalists against compelled disclosure of unpublished materials.
●     Investigative reporter Peter Byrne, whose multipart series on the websiteSpot.us outlined how several University of California (UC) Regents approved questionable UC investments in companies in which they had personal financial interests, will be honored with a Journalist award.
●    Ashli Briggs and Alicia Lewis, who recovered pages of Sarah Palin’s speaking contract with the California State University (CSU) from a campus dumpster in Stanislaus, will share a Citizen award.
●    The Associated Press Sacramento Bureau, which will receive a News Media award for a series of articles highlighting secrecy in the conduct of the Legislature.
●    Reporter Amy Standen of KQED, who will receive a Journalist award for her detailed inquiry into the integrity of the compromised scientific findings of California regulators who approved the pesticide methyl iodide.
●    Julia Prodis Sulek and Howard Mintz, of the San Jose Mercury News, who will share the Electronic Access award for their use of blogs and Twitter to provide compelling, real-time coverage of prominent court cases.
●    Lloyd Chapman of the American Small Business League, who wrested government documents from federal agencies to reveal that billions of dollars in federal contract money designated for small businesses had in fact been diverted to large corporations, is to receive an Organization award.

The banquet will be held at the New Delhi Restaurant, 160 Ellis St., in San Francisco, two blocks from the Powell Street BART/MUNI station. A no-host reception at 5:30 p.m. will be followed at 6:30 p.m. by the dinner and awards ceremony. Tickets are $50 for SPJ members and students, and $70 for other attendees. Tables and hosting opportunities are also available. Information about how to purchase tickets will be included in a separate announcement.

The James Madison Freedom of Information Awards is named for the creative force behind the First Amendment and honors local journalists, organizations, public officials and private citizens who have fought for public access to government meetings and records and promoted the public’s right to know and freedom of expression.

Award winners are selected by SPJ NorCal’s Freedom of Information Committee. Additional information is available from committee co-chairs Rebecca Bowe or Mark Conrad, spjnorcalfoi@gmail.com.

2010 JAMES MADISON HONOREES

CAREER ACHIEVEMENT
They say the pen is mightier than the sword, but Sacramento Valley Mirror editor and publisher Tim Crews has found the California Public Records Act to be a rather effective weapon, too. Crews has been involved in more than 20 cases stemming from sunshine requests or uncovering violations of the state’s open meetings law. He runs the Mirror out of Willows, a tiny town off Interstate 5 in Glenn County. The investigative journalist has clashed with local government in countless memorable episodes, including one instance where he spent five days in jail for refusing to reveal the identity of a source. His paper ran a series using education board records detailing how a local school official had used taxpayer dollars for vacations and financial deals with friends. Another series, “Who killed Bud?” utilized CPRA records to investigate the killing of a district attorney’s brother-in-law, prompting a rare coroner’s jury to be convened. Crews’ tireless challenges to government secrecy have landed him in hot water with the legal system. The Mirror is currently facing steep legal fees arising out of a court sanction issued after a judge who was a target of one of Crews’ exposes ruled a lawsuit he had filed against a public agency was “frivolous.” Undeterred, Crews continues fighting, and he has garnered accolades. In 2010, the California Press Association named Crews Newspaper Executive of the Year.

EDUCATOR
Steve O’Donoghue taught for 33 years in Oakland, primarily at Fremont High School. In 1985, he founded the Media Academy at Fremont, which ultimately became a small school unto itself. He has served as an advisor for student yearbook, newspaper and magazine projects, and has taught courses in photography, desktop publishing, and journalism. In 1998, he established the High School Newspaper Support Program for the Bay Area. O’Donoghue has been recognized by numerous awards for his role in sustaining and advancing scholastic journalism.

LEGAL COUNSEL
This year marks Duffy Carolan’s 20th year of representing journalists and news organizations, defending defamation lawsuits, advocating for the release of public records and access to court proceedings, protecting journalists against compelled disclosure of unpublished materials, and numerous other matters.  As an attorney first with Crosby, Heafy, Roach and May and since 1998 with Davis, Wright & Tremaine, Duffy has represented the Oakland Tribune, the Contra Costa Times, the Associated Press, the San Mateo County Times and many others. Since 2007, Duffy has served pro bono as the lead attorney for the Chauncey Bailey Project. She currently serves on both the Board of Directors and the Executive Committee of the First Amendment Coalition.

JOURNALIST
Journalist Peter Byrne’s multi-part investigative series, “Investor’s Club: How the Regents of the University of California Spin Public Funds into Private Profit,” employed an exhaustive and innovative use of the California Public Records Act during an eight-month long investigation that determined that the University of California (UC) had invested billions of dollars into risky private equity funds and companies in which regents in charge of making investment policy (including then-California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger) held significant financial interests. The story was reported from 12,000 pages of public records obtained from UC, the California Public Employees Retirement System, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, and the California Fair Political Practices Commission; one important transactions spreadsheet was made available only after high-level political intervention. Byrne’s reporting, alleging conflicts of interest, quickly led to the departure of Regent Richard Blum from the investment committee. The California Senate has ordered an audit of the regents’ financial practices. In addition, the regents have stated they intend to appoint a union member to sit on the investment advisory committee that oversees the university’s portfolio of more than $60 billion. The cost of Byrne’s $7,000, eight-month long investigation was covered by 144 people and a consortium of Northern California newsweeklies affiliated with the “crowd funding” journalism website, Spot.us.

CITIZEN
When GOP icon Sarah Palin was invited to speak at California State University (CSU) in Stanislaus, questions arose about how much she would be paid in such a lean budget year marked by furloughs and layoffs. Then when first-amendment advocates filed public-records requests to get the terms of her contract, university administrators denied having any responsive documents. Thanks to the efforts of CSU Stanislaus students, several pages of Palin’s speaking contract were uncovered anyhow, through unconventional tactics. Alicia Lewis and Ashli Briggs were among the students who found the discarded documents amidst a pile of shredded paperwork by rummaging through a campus dumpster. Their actions drew national media attention, but also brought consequences. They came under pressure from the campus administration, and Palin herself singled them out for criticism during her speech. Nevertheless, the students say they have no regrets for taking action to ensure that information wasn’t kept hidden from the student body and the public.

NEWS MEDIA
The Associated Press, Sacramento Bureau and its four reporters in 2011 shined a bright light on the often secretive way the state legislature conducts business. Reporters Judy Lin, Don Thompson, Juliet Williams and Samantha Young pressed for records and open meetings on an array of state stories. The AP was the only news organization to demand entry into a private lunch called by former Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger for all 120 lawmakers to solicit ideas to get the state through troubled times. Despite being refused entry, The AP’s Lin and Williams kept up stories on the private meeting, eventually prompting the governor to pledge to open future meetings. Young pursued stories on a legislative sex scandal involving a lobbyist by requesting calendars of all 120 lawmakers. Despite being turned down, her efforts to shine a light on the Legislature’s ability to set its own rules for disclosure prompted political reporters to ask candidates if they would pledge to open records if elected. Thompson tracked lawmakers’ spending on themselves, including a $5 million perk, unique to California, of taxpayer-provided cars. Lin used the state Public Records Act to uncover the fact that one-third of state lawmakers failed to report gifts from lobbyists or stays at exclusive resorts.

JOURNALIST
Amy Standen of KQED Quest reported a series of stories on radio and print/online chronicling California’s scientific consideration of the use of methyl iodide. The central question was how California regulators had come to approve a pesticide that many scientists had cautioned was too dangerous for agricultural use. The trail led from the agency’s website to searches of public records—KQED filed a request under California’s Public Records Act—that revealed damning evidence about the process, including that state pesticide authorities had acted against the advice of their own staff scientists, as well as a pattern of violations concerning safety measures. Standen’s reporting, which required intense and careful scrutiny of scientific studies, led to coverage by other media and was included in testimony concerning the issue. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is reviewing the scientific dispute and also there is a pending lawsuit challenging the scientific basis behind the approval.

ELECTRONIC ACCESS
Julia Prodis Sulek and Howard Mintz of the San Jose Mercury News will share the Electronic Access Award for their use of blogs and Twitter to provide compelling, minute-by-minute coverage of the historic same-sex marriage case and a Los Gatos murder-for-hire trial. Mintz, a longtime legal affairs reporter, kicked off the online effort by launching a daily trial blog of the federal challenge to Proposition 8, which banned same-sex marriage in California. His posts quickly became the go-to source for people following the testimony and arguments in real time, drawing 400,000 page views during the trial. The Mercury News created a special web section that collected news stories, blog posts and trial documents, along with photos. Sulek, a veteran crime reporter, delivered more outstanding online coverage when she won consent from the judge to blog a love-triangle, murder-for-hire case. Using a touch-screen iPad to avoid the distraction of clicking computer keys in the courtroom, she updated testimony as much as 50 times a day during the two-month trial. The coverage included a mix of rapid-fire tweets and Facebook pages about the case. In the end, Sulek and Mintz participated in a panel discussion with the local bench to enhance judicial understanding of real-time media coverage and promote public access to the courts.

ORGANIZATION
Lloyd Chapman, president of the American Small Business League, will be recognized for unflagging work to wrest government documents from federal agencies to expose the diversion of billions of dollars in federal contract money to large corporations at the expense of small businesses. A passionate advocate for the small business community for 20 years, Chapman is founder of the American Small Business League. In 2010, he filed eight lawsuits under the Freedom of Information Act against a wide variety of agencies. So far, three have resulted in the release of documents previously withheld from the public. Over the years, Chapman and ASBL have forced the federal government to remove as many as 600 large businesses from a government database, thus opening more federal dollars to true small business owners.

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***DEADLINE EXTENDED TO JAN. 14***

CALL FOR NOMINATIONS
Society of Professional Journalists Northern California Chapter
presents the 26th Annual James Madison Freedom of Information Awards

The James Madison Freedom of Information Awards recognize Northern California organizations and individuals who have made significant contributions to the advancement of freedom of information and expression in the spirit of James Madison, the creative force behind the First Amendment. The awards are presented at a ceremony in March during National Freedom of Information Week near the anniversary of Madison’s birth.

Eligible for nomination are Northern California journalists, citizens, media organizations, or community groups who, during 2010, have defended public access to meetings, public records, meetings or court proceedings or otherwise promoted the public’s right to know, publish and speak freely about issues of public concern.

Award Categories (awards may not be given in every category):
Professional Journalist
Nonprofit Organization
Source/Whistle Blower
Career Achievement
Citizen
Public Official
Educator
Cartoonist
Legal Counsel
Student Journalist
Electronic Access
News Media

· The Professional Journalist and Student Journalist awards recognize journalists who have been involved in fights for access to records, meetings or court proceedings, who have made exceptional use of public records in their reporting or who have promoted education on FOI issues through stories, editorials or other advocacy.

· The Public Official award is given to a governmental official who has demonstrated extraordinary commitment to keeping public records or meetings public, or otherwise has taken exemplary leadership on FOI or First Amendment issues.

· The Beverly Kees Educator Award recognizes extraordinary efforts by educators to cultivate a devotion to the values of freedom of information.

· The Norwin S. Yoffie Career Achievement Award is named in honor of a stalwart supporter of the chapter’s Freedom of Information Committee, who died in November 2000 after many years of distinguished service to SPJ and the cause of freedom of information.

To see past award recipients, click here.

To Apply

All entries should be submitted no later than Friday, January 14. Please submit entries via email and online, using this form:

Instructions: For each entry, please submit the following:
A. Using the online form, please provide the award category, the nominee’s name and contact information, and the nominator’s name and contact information.
B. Using the online form, please submit a cover letter with the following information:
(i)A summary of the story, stories or action taken;
(ii) A description of the freedom of information aspect of the story or action, specifically explaining how freedom of information laws and tools were employed and/or how the story or actions shed light on governmental activities;
(iii)A discussion of major findings, achievements and subsequent results, i.e., whether the story received attention from other media outlets or effected new legislation, a regulatory change, or other public response; and
(iv)An account of the difficulty or uniqueness of effort in obtaining the story or pursuing the action;
(v)Any corrections, clarifications or retractions made after initial publication or broadcast of stories must be submitted as part of the entry; any challenges to the story’s accuracy,including but not limited to letters; and requests for corrections or retractions, as well as responses by the newspaper.
C. Supporting documents, including published stories and any other supporting material, that demonstrate the merit of nomination. Please email these materials to spjnorcalfoi@gmail.com.

Judges: Judges are the members of the Freedom of Information Committee of the Society
of Professional Journalists, Northern California Chapter.

Submission: Please send entries via the online entry form, plus any additional materials via email to spjnorcalfoi@gmail.com. Please include “James Madison Nomination” in the subject line.

Questions: Please contact Mark Conrad or Rebecca Bowe at spjnorcalfoi@gmail.com. Please include “James Madison Awards Question” in the subject line.

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October 15, 2010
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Liz Enochs, chapter president
415-323-0220

SPJ ANNOUNCES 2010 EXCELLENCE IN JOURNALISM AWARD WINNERS
SAN FRANCISCO— In its 2010 Excellence in Journalism Awards, the Northern California Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists has named as Journalists of the Year the staff of California Watch, a new statewide reporting initiative that partners with local news organizations to cover education, public safety, health care, the environment and other critically important issues.

Since its launch in 2009, the site, a project of the Berkeley-based Center for Investigative Reporting, has helped fill a widening void in watchdog reporting. Under the guidance of California Watch’s founder, Louis Freedberg, its editoral director, Mark Katches, and CIR’s executive director, Robert Rosenthal, the site has produced a stream of high-impact investigative and explanatory stories on topics ranging from Meg Whitman’s ties to Goldman Sachs to high infection rates at a Southern California hospital chain.

This year, the 25th anniversary of the Excellence in Journalism awards, marks a turning point in Northern California journalism. The society is honoring a number of the winners for meeting the challenges of the online era through innovative newsgathering organizations and collaborations.

Neil Henry, Dean of the UC- Berkeley School of Journalism, receives the Board of Directors’ Distinguished Service award for his contributions to several important online news ventures over the past year, including his pivotal role in creating the Bay Citizen, a nonprofit news site serving the Bay Area, and the creation and funding of student-staffed news sites serving North Oakland, San Francisco’s Mission District and the city of Richmond. The student sites have filled major gaps in local coverage created by newspaper closures and layoffs. At the same time they have provided real-world training for a new generation of multitasking journalists and a laboratory for collaborative experiments.

The late Franz Schurmann and his partner of 42 years, Sandy Close, receive the Silver Heart award, established in 2009 to honor those whose careers reflect an extraordinary dedication to giving voice to the voiceless. Schurmann, a historian and sociologist who died in August, co-founded Pacific News Service, the groundbreaking alternative news source that celebrates its 40th anniversary this year. Close has overseen PNS’s evolution into New America Media, the country’s first and largest umbrella organization of ethnic news media, with more than 2,000 partners and collaborations around the world. She has also pioneered a new financial model at a time when media organizations are struggling to figure out how to remain economically viable.

The SPJ NorCal Board of Directors also honors three journalists from traditional media for their many years of outstanding work at Northern California news organizations. The San Francisco Chronicle’s Bob Egelko, one of California’s leading reporters on legal and criminal justice issues for nearly four decades, including many years at the Associated Press, receives the Career Achievement award for print journalism. KCBS Radio’s Bob Melrose, whose instantly recognizable voice and succinct news reports have made him a Bay Area institution, receives the Career Achievement award for broadcast journalism. And Trapper Byrne, the Chronicle’s deputy metro editor, receives the Unsung Hero award for his nearly two decades of skillful behind-the-scenes work in shaping coverage of virtually every important breaking news story in the Bay Area, from the shooting of an unarmed black man by BART police to the San Francisco police lab scandal.
The Bay Citizen, an independent news site that has collaborated frequently with the New York Times and other news outlets since its launch in May 2010, is recognized in the Explanatory Journalism category for a story by Elizabeth Lesly Stevens examining the property-tax imbalances that have arisen in San Francisco’s wealthiest neighborhoods in the three decades since passage of Proposition 13.

The Bay Citizen is honored in two other reporting categories as well. Stevens is recognized in the Feature Storytelling category for a series about a con man operating in San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood. And the Bay Citizen takes home the prize in a new special category, The Environment, for three pieces on efforts by oil refineries, Pacific Gas & Electric, and the Cargill Corp. to influence environmental and development issues around the Bay.

The San Francisco Public Press is honored in the Explanatory Journalism category for a series of pieces, published online and in print, about plans to develop San Francisco’s Treasure Island. The exhaustively reported package—which exposed the seemingly pipe-dream quality of the project, the political cronyism behind it and the widespread uprooting that the redevelopment will cause—was done on a shoestring budget with funding from Shareable.net and micro-donations via Spot.Us.

In the Community Journalism category, judges reward Newswire21.org’s highly collaborative Ingleside Project, for more than two dozen stories on education, aging, and other important issues in San Francisco’s often overlooked Ingleside neighborhood.

In the category of Journalism Innovation, Alameda-based nonprofit Global Press Institute is recognized for its unique mission: bringing responsible, investigative news from the developing world to communities throughout the globe by training women from underprivileged, underrepresented communities to become powerful, conscientious journalists. Since 2006, The Press Institute has trained more than 100 women journalists in 23 countries.

In addition to its Journalists of the Year award, California Watch is honored in the Investigative Reporting category for G.W. Schulz’s reporting on massive waste in the handling of U.S. homeland security funds.

Other multiple winners for 2010 include KQED-TV’s “Quest” series in the Feature Storytelling and Multiplatform Journalism categories and KQED radio’s “California Report” program for Investigative Journalism and Breaking News. Mother Jones is recognized for its online breaking news coverage of the BP oil spill, which included more than 300 articles, blog posts and maps, and also in the Photojournalism category for coverage of the gold trade in Congo. Mac McClelland, a Mother Jones writer who combines a gonzo sensibility with a novelist’s flair for description and dialogue, is recognized as the 2010 Outstanding Emerging Journalist.

In the Commentary category, Daniel Borenstein, of the Contra Costa Times, is recognized for a series of hard-hitting columns on astronomical county pensions. Borenstein spent countless hours poring over retirement records of county officials. His discoveries led several East Bay public agencies to initiate pension-system reforms.

The Sacramento Bee’s Marjie Lundstrom is recognized in the Public Interest category for her series on the death of a foster child in Sacramento.

In the Feature Storytelling category, Matthew Heller is honored for a reverse David-and-Goliath tale in California Lawyer magazine about Dole Foods that upended conventional notions about corporate malfeasance.

The San Jose Mercury News is recognized in the Breaking News category for its coverage of a deadly plane crash in East Palo Alto and in the Investigative News category for a series by reporter Sean Webby on the use of force by San Jose police that led to the resignation of the police chief.

SF Weekly also receives two awards. Reporter Matt Smith is honored in the special Economy category for his investigative piece on how private trade schools, funded by stimulus money, leave students deeply in debt without providing them the skills they need to compete in a rapidly changing global economy. John Birdsall is honored for his online reporting about the Bay Area’s food scene.

Andrew Stelzer, of National Radio Project’s “Making Contact,” shares the award for broadcast Explanatory Journalism for his piece on citizen efforts to hold police accountable. The Chronicle’s Peter Hartlaub is recognized in the Arts & Culture Criticism category.

COMPLETE LIST OF AWARDS

JOURNALISTS OF THE YEAR: Staff of California Watch

DISTINGUISHED SERVICE AWARD: Neil Henry, dean, UC-Berkeley School of Journalism

CAREER ACHIEVEMENT AWARD: reporters Bob Egelko of the San Francisco Chronicle (print) and Bob Melrose of KCBS radio (broadcast)

SILVER HEART AWARD: Franz Schurmann and Sandy Close, of Pacific News Service/New America Media

UNSUNG HERO AWARD: Trapper Byrne, deputy metro editor, San Francisco Chronicle

BREAKING NEWS

PRINT: San Jose Mercury News for coverage of an East Palo Alto plane crash that killed three people and
destroyed several homes.

ONLINE: MotherJones.com for its exemplary coverage of the BP oil spill.

BROADCAST: John Myers, KQED’s “California Report,” for an overview of the state’s ongoing budget crisis and Sacramento’s inability to solve it.

SPECIAL CATEGORY: THE ECONOMY

Matt Smith, SF Weekly, for an examination of the failings of private trade-school education.

SPECIAL CATEGORY: THE ENVIRONMENT

Bay Citizen for pieces by Katherine Mieszkowski and Zusha Elinson on the impact of corporate interests on environmental issues in the Bay Area.

EXPLANATORY JOURNALISM

PRINT: SF Public Press, for  a series of articles and photographs on a proposed $6 billion residential and commercial redevelopment project on Treasure Island.

ONLINE: Elizabeth Lesly Stevens, Bay Citizen, for an examination of property-tax imbalances that have arisen in San Francisco since passage of Proposition 13.

BROADCAST: TIE: Andrew Stelzer, of National Radio Project’s “Making Contact,” for a look at policing issues in the Bay Area.
AND KQED-TV’s “Quest” for a feature on California’s energy future.

INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM

PRINT: Sean Webby, San Jose Mercury News, for a series on the use of force by San Jose police.

ONLINE: G.W. Schulz, Calfornia Watch, for detailing waste of federal homeland security funds.

BROADCAST: Sasha Khokha, KQED’s “California Report,” for a series looking at the national problem of water quality through the eyes of California families.

PUBLIC SERVICE

Marjie Lundstrom, Sacramento Bee, for an investigative series on the burning death of a 4-year-old foster child at her Sacramento home.

FEATURE STORYTELLING

PRINT: Matthew Heller, California Lawyer, for the story of how Dole Foods discovered fraud in a case that drew international headlines.

ONLINE: Elizabeth Lesly Stevens, Bay Citizen, for a three-part story on the  mysterious man who allegedly bilked millions of dollars from ordinary citizens.

BROADCAST: KQED-TV staff for a report on algae as a future biofuel.

COMMENTARY

Daniel Borenstein, Contra Costa Times, for a series of columns exposing astronomical pensions for Contra Costa County public employees.

ARTS & CULTURE CRITICISM

PRINT: Peter Hartlaub, San Francisco Chronicle, for three pieces on a variety of topics that demonstrating his eye for the cultural moment and knack for matching tone to subject matter.

ONLINE: John Birdsall, SFWeekly.com, for reports on the Bay Area’s food scene.

COMMUNITY JOURNALISM

The Ingleside Project, by Newswire21.org, for more than two dozen stories exploring important issues in an often-overlooked San Francisco neighborhood.

JOURNALISM INNOVATION

Alameda-based nonprofit Global Press Institute for training local women across the globe to be reporters and providing an outlet to people who don’t normally have a voice in their societies.

MULTIPLATFORM JOURNALISM
KQED’s QUEST TV for a package on the Farallon Islands that included radio, video and online
components.

PHOTOJOURNALISM
Marcus Bleasdale, MotherJones.com, for his photo essay revealing the human cost of gold mining in Congo.

OUTSTANDING EMERGING JOURNALIST
Mac McClelland, Mother Jones, who traveled to Thailand to teach English to a group of Burmese refugees and provided a window onto a little-noticed geopolitical hotspot.

STUDENT SPECIAL PROJECT
TIE: Emma Cott, U.C. Berkeley School of Journalism, for exploring the environmental, economic and social costs of a proposed wind farm in Mexico. Her news video aired on PBS TV’s “NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.”
AND Sandhya Dirks and Sarah Gonzalez, Mills College, for their KALW news reporting project “Fault Lines” exploring the root causes of and potential solutions to violence in Oakland.

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ENTRIES ARE NOW CLOSED for SPJ Norcal’s 25th Annual Excellence in Journalism Awards competition.

Know a deserving journalist who soldiers on through cutbacks to tell the truth?  To get the story, photo or video? Whose dedication to our craft is second to none? Or is that journalist you?

For the past 25 years, the Northern California Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists has selected from among the Bay Area’s best of the best for its acclaimed Excellence in Journalism Awards. This year, in honor of our 25th awards anniversary, we’ve tweaked the format and revamped some of the categories to capture the breadth of our industry and make for a truly compelling awards ceremony. We’ve kept our special “Economy” category and added two more special categories: “Health Care” and “Environment.”

These awards honor the journalists whose work best reflects the SPJ ideals of initiative, integrity, talent and compassion. We also are seeking nominees for six special Board of Directors Awards: Journalist of the Year, Career Achievement, Distinguished Service, Unsung Hero, Meritorious SPJ Service and the Silver Heart. More details can be found in our online and pdf entry forms. For online entries, click here. Or download the PDF. Entry deadline: Sept. 7. Best of luck!

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