V IRGINIA

QUARTERLY MAGAZINE

Dawn Adams Lee Carter

Kelly Convirs-Fowler Elizabeth Guzman Chris Hurst

Schuyler VanValkenburg

Cheryl Turpin John McGuire

Kathy Tran Bob Thomas Debra Rodman David Reid INSIDE • Delegate Watts–page 4 • Making History–page 5 • Delegate Ware–page 6 • Good Elections–page 7 Winter 2018 College Journalists Cover the Capitol By Jeff South, Associate professor, Virginia Commonwealth University The 19th-century Prussian statesman Otto von Bismarck famously said, “Laws are like sausages; it is better not to see them being made.” But the messiest sausage factories may be the newsrooms whose journalists report on the legislative process. When you pick up The Washington Post, launch the Richmond Times-Dispatch Tazewell County is working hard app on your cellphone or visit the home to help diversity and attract hi- page of The Virginian-Pilot, the stories tech companies to our region. look so solid and stolid: 500-600 words of We are now, more than ever, crisp prose summarizing and analyzing a “Open for Business.” complex issue or bill. Little does the reader know that the journalist spent hours seeking comments from recalcitrant sources, reconciling contradictory information, anguishing over every sentence and word, and struggling to present the news as important and interesting. I’m describing the plight of professional journalists — reporters who’ve been in the “news biz” for years and know the players, the process and the context of public policies as well as any legislator. Now consider the newbies: reporters who haven’t set foot in the statehouse yet, who might not know “capital” from “Capitol,” who may confuse “pass” and “passed by indefinitely.” Where I teach the newbies. Technology I direct the Capital News Service program at Virginia exists with Nature Commonwealth University’s Richard T. Robertson School of Media and Culture. Students in the class cover the General Assembly and other news in state government and around the commonwealth. Assistant Professor Karen McIntyre, Adjunct Professor Tom Kapsidelis and I supervise the students and edit their copy. We send the stories to more than 90 news organizations that • Aggressive Business subscribe to our feed: daily and weekly papers, TV and radio stations, Assistance and web-only publications. In addition, The picks • Pro-Business Environment up some of our stories and distributes them to news outlets across the • Enterprise Zone country and around the world. • Workforce Training It’s a big responsibility. When we send out stories — usually • Competitive Utility Rates three to five a day — they must be fair, balanced and accurate. There • Abundant Natural Resources is little margin for error. • Affordable Land It’s also incredibly rewarding. When students see their stories in a • Safe and Economical Place community newspaper or on a local website, they are happy knowing to Live they may have made a difference. And when a college journalist’s story has been published by The Washington Post or other national • Excellent Quality of Life news outlet, the student is ecstatic. CNS students get a sense that they can compete with The Post, The Pilot and the Times-Dispatch. VCU started CNS in 1994 primarily to serve weekly newspapers that did not have a presence in Richmond. In the years since, newspapers have been buffeted by technological disruption and financial challenges; many have laid off reporters, closed or cut their Capitol bureaus, and reduced state-government coverage. Many of those news outlets have turned to CNS to help fill the www.YesTazewellCounty.org gap. It’s a win-win-win situation: News organizations get carefully www.TheBluestone.org crafted stories for free; students get bylines for their portfolios; and readers get news and information on which democracy depends. www.VisitTazewellCounty.org1 This semester, we have 28 students in CNS — our largest enrollment ever. The students reported for duty Jan. 8 (before regular classes started at VCU), and they’ll be working through spring break Jeff South is an associate professor and director of undergraduate (because sine die isn’t until March 10). After the legislative session, studies in the Robertson School of Media and Culture at Virginia the CNS staff will dial back on daily stories and focus more on long- Commonwealth University, where he joined the faculty in 1997 form enterprise articles. under the mistaken impression he’d have summers off. Before For students, their hard work in CNS pays off. The program moving into academia, he was a newspaper reporter and editor for boosts their job prospects — many go to work for CNS clients. And 20 years in Texas, Arizona and Virginia. Over the years, South’s we usually end the semester with a celebratory barbecue: grilled students have won more than 30 awards for political reporting and sausages. other coverage.V

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