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New Voices

New Voices: 10 New
Citizen Media Ideas Are Funded

For immediate release
April 4, 2007
Contact Jan Schaffer
(301) 985-4020 jans@j-lab.org

COLLEGE PARK, Md. – Ten new ideas for amplifying community news will receive $12,000 New Voices grants to launch news sites for under-covered communities, embed TV reporters in neighborhoods, network regional radio programs, and map the local impact of climate change, J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism announced today.

“These award winners are embarking on new ways to harness the collective wisdom in their areas and diversify input on local and regional issues,“ said Jan Schaffer, director of J-Lab, which administers the grants.

With the 2007 awardees, a total of 30 community news start-ups have been selected to receive New Voices funding from among 533 applicants since 2005. This year J-Lab received 105 proposals.

“Citizens are increasingly using digital media to enrich community, enhance public discourse and enliven democracy, and the New Voices grantees are helping to pave the way,“ said Gary Kebbel, journalism program officer for the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, which funds the New Voices initiative.

“I am always struck by the ingenuity of these projects, which stems from an intense desire to create or protect a sense of community through communication,“ said New Voices Advisory Board member Donna Reed, vice president of news and multimedia strategy, Media General Publishing Division.

“We, in media, should draw from these ideas because they are all about the voiceless being heard.“

The grant winners will receive $12,000 to start up their projects. They will be eligible for $5,000 follow-up grants next year if they successfully launch and supply matching funding. The deadline for 2008 proposals is Feb. 20, 2008.

The 2007 New Voices grant recipients are:

“The winning grant applications show, once again, that communities aren’t waiting for mainstream media to do the job; they’re moving ahead with their own creative ideas,“ said Peggy Kuhr, a New Voices advisor from the University of Kansas.

Advisor Peter Levine sees the New Voices grantees contributing to an active civic renewal movement in the U.S. “Dissatisfied with formal institutions, citizens are working together on community problems, building new associations – and creating their own news media.“

Participating in the selection process were New Voices Advisory Board members:

Project updates will be posted at www.J-NewVoices.org. For more information, subscribe to J-Lab’s newsletter online or by e-mailing news@j-lab.org.

The John S. and James L. Knight Foundation promotes excellence in journalism worldwide and invests in the vitality of 26 U.S. communities where the Knight brothers owned newspapers. The Knight Foundation especially supports ideas and projects that create transformational change.

J-Lab, a center of the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland, helps news organizations and citizens use new media technologies to create fresh ways for people to participate in public life. It also administers the Knight-Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism and the J-Learning.org and Knight Citizen News Network [kcnn.org] web sites.

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