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New Voices

New Voices: 10 Citizen Media
Experiments to Launch

For Immediate Release
Apr. 28, 2005
Contact Jan Schaffer
(301) 985-4020 jans@j-lab.org

College Park, Md. – Ten New Voices award winners from across the United States will receive $12,000 grants to launch innovative local media ventures, J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism announced today.

The 10 were selected from 243 proposals seeking inaugural New Voices funding, said Jan Schaffer, director of J-Lab, which administers the program, funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

The winners, ranging from the Friends of the Deerfield Library in New Hampshire to the Mid-Columbia Centro Cultural in Hood River, Ore., demonstrated both the goal of applying the values of fact-based journalism in pursuit of news, and a realistic plan to find a way to keep the operation going after its launch.

Ten more ventures will be funded next year. The 2006 deadline will be next Feb. 8.

“From recent immigrants to long-time rural or urban residents, people feel left out of the news,” said New Voices Advisory Board member Peggy Kuhr, of the University of Kansas. “New Voices is meeting needs for intensely local information.”

“There was passion in what these community news ventures said they wanted to accomplish,” added board member Bruce Koon, of Knight Ridder.

Grant recipients for 2005 include:

“Reading the applications was like peering into the future of citizen journalism,“ said Donna Reed of Media General. “The ideas are stunning in their simplicity and yet huge in their impact on the future of journalism.”

“The 10 New Voices projects … should catalyze a significant movement,” said Peter Levine, of The Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) at the University of Maryland.

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

Grantees will be considered for $5,000 second-year grants if they successfully launch their projects and supply matching funding. Project updates will be posted at www.J-NewVoices.org.  Deadline for 2006 proposals will be February 8, 2006.

Later this spring, J-Lab will launch J-Learning.org, a how-to site that will provide beginner-friendly training on planning, building and promoting hyperlocal news sites. To subscribe to J-Lab’s newsletter, email 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.

J-Lab helps news organizations and citizens use new media technologies to create fresh ways for people to participate in public life and also administers the Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism.  It is a center of the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism.