To Print this page, go to the File menu and choose PRINT.
Click here to return to the regular version of this page.

New Voices

New Voices: New Funding for
10 Innovative Citizen Media Projects

For immediate release
April 18, 2006
Contact Jan Schaffer
(301) 985-4020 jans@j-lab.org

COLLEGE PARK, Md.  – Environmental news in the Great Lakes, communities in rural Alaska and inner-city neighborhoods in Philadelphia will be covered in 10 innovative community news experiments to receive 2006 New Voices funding, J-Lab: The Institute for Interactive Journalism announced today.

This year’s award winners not only signaled a deep desire for better hyperlocal information, they also exhibited an appetite for using cutting-edge technologies, including wikis, datacasting and Skype Internet telephone service to cover their subjects.

“New Voices has found another batch of winners: scrappy, innovative, diverse citizen journalists who are inventing new ways to generate information and ideas for their communities,“ said New Voices Advisory Board member Peter Levine, director of CIRCLE at the University of Maryland. “The techniques and models they are creating will help to renew American democracy.“

This year’s winners, selected from 185 applicants, will each receive up to $17,000 for their projects. Overall, New Voices has received 428 proposals from around the United States in the program’s first 15 months, said Jan Schaffer, executive director of J-Lab, which administers the New Voices program.

New guidelines will be issued for next year. The 2007 deadline will be Feb. 12.

“I am most struck by the widespread feeling among these communities – whether they are geographic communities or interest communities – that they are being ignored by mainstream media,“ said Thomas Kunkel, dean of UMD’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism, where J-Lab is based. “I am equally struck by their determination to rectify that themselves, and the creative ways they are doing that. The great democratizing of media is under way, and there is no turning back.“

“We’re pleased to see people turning to journalism as a solution to their problems and a way to improve community ties,“ said Gary Kebbel, journalism initiatives program officer for the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, which funds the New Voices program.

The grant recipients will receive $12,000 in the first year to start up their projects. They will be eligible for $5,000 follow-up grants next year if they successfully launch their projects and supply matching funding.

Of particular note this year, Schaffer said, was the number of journalism schools that applied. Forty-six expressed interest in launching community news ventures — not only as laboratories for their students but also as training grounds for citizens.

“It was gratifying to see proposals that brought mainstream and student journalists and local communities together,“ said Advisory Board member Bruce Koon of Knight Ridder Digital.

The 2006 New Voices grant recipients are:

The winners demonstrated both the goal of doing fact-based journalism and a realistic plan to find a way to keep the operation going after its launch.

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

Project updates will be posted at www.J-NewVoices.org. For more information,  subscribe to J-Lab’s newsletter online or by emailing 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.

J-Lab 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 Web site.

#####