Local newspapers keep a watch for you
This February, Denver's
Rocky Mountain News died. In March, The Tucson Citizen followed. Meanwhile hundreds of other American newspapers reduced staff and declared themselves in significant economic trouble.
Few commentators have mentioned one of the biggest potential losers in the demise of print publishing: our local environment — the clean air, water, land, forests, beaches, wetlands, and wildlife that enrich our communities.
Since the days of muckraking reporter Upton Sinclair and his establishment- shaking revelations about a corrupt Chicago meat packing industry, responsible local investigative journalists have shone a withering light on corporate polluters, unscrupulous developers, dishonest officials, and incompetent environmental regulators - thereby making our hometowns better, safer, more enjoyable places to live.
Likewise, local activists have relied on community newspapers for accurate unbiased reporting. With little or no money to buy publicity, environmental activists, like Love Canal's Lois Gibbs, scribbled outraged but informed Letters to the editor or sponsored public meetings and protests that were sure to attract a reporter from the local paper.
In Anniston, Alabama, it was a neighborhood group called the Community Against Pollution (CAP) that in the late 1990s spoke up for West Anniston, "a part of town that is largely poor, largely black, largely forgotten, and largely polluted," according to John Fleming, then The Anniston Star's editorial
page editor. CAP led the charge against a grossly negligent Monsanto Corporation that let toxic PCBs leach into soils, and an equally negligent Alabama Department of Environmental Management, "more of a permit facilitator for industry than a protector of the environment," said Fleming.
But it was The Anniston
Star's reporting about CAP, including the filing of a lawsuit, that helped bring the issue to the attention of the rest of the city and the state, and moved the US Environmental Protection Agency to act.
One of the most instructive recent examples I can think of is that of the New Orleans
Times- Picayune, which reported the likelihood of Mississippi River levee failures a year before Hurricane Katrina, along with an obvious reason for those failings: the diversion of federal funds away from levee construction to the Iraq War by the Bush administration.
Without the small newspaper in my hometown of Vernon, New Jersey, activists couldn't have defeated a cell phone tower slated for construction within eyeshot of the Appalachian National Scenic Trail or the illegal trading of a state wildlife management area for a proposed 165- unit condo complex or the demolition of a Revolutionary War- era tavern for a Burger King. Those battles
played out on the pages of The
Vernon News, with both sides vying for the people's hearts and minds. This is democracy at work, even if it is democracy writ small, not large.
Don't go first to CNN or Google News. Rather look for those stories percolating upwards from the pages of your community newspaper.
In a 2008 editorial, John
Fleming of The Anniston Star
summed up the greatest worry of many involved in community journalism: "If local media no longer is local, how does it fulfill one of its most essential roles: informing the community in times of peril?"
As our economy implodes, and deregulated corporate shenanigans reach unbelievable heights, it would be foolish for us to imagine that no company out there is quietly trying to dispose of toxic waste in somebody's backyard, or that state or federal regulators might not be asleep at the switch as that waste gets dumped.
The best thing you can do to defend against such possibilities in your community? Support your local newspaper. Buy a subscription. Read every edition.
Glenn Scherer is co- editor
of Blue Ridge Press.










