The killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis last year reignited America’s racial reckoning with a momentum unseen since the embattled days of the Civil Rights Movement. As hundreds of thousands of protestors took to the streets nationwide, issues like police reform and the disproportionate impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on communities of color were brought to the forefront. Throughout this turbulence, the value of representation—from the halls of power to classrooms to the press—was plainly visible thanks to on the ground reporting in communities across the nation.
This Black History Month, we continue to trace and measure it.
Since its inception, Report for America has sought to multiply the impact of local reporters on under-covered communities, from Sam Bojarski’s reporting on Haitians in Brooklyn to the work of Hibah Ansari’s immigration policy coverage for the Sahan Journal. A recent string of stories by MLK50’s Carrington Tatum, tracking South Memphis’ response to a proposed oil pipeline that threatens to displace a historic community, is a powerful example of what local reporting can do to increase accountability and mobilize communities to action.
Our corps members are among thousands of reporters filling the gaps between the people and their leadership. Through their work, they sustain the intent not only of the First Amendment, but the establishing tenet of the Constitution itself to form “a more perfect union.” This Black History Month, we’re reminded of that solemn effort as Report for America’s journalists coast to coast report on ever-shifting communities and the oft-ignored issues defining their daily lives.
Here are some impactful stories about and by the Black community nationwide:
-
BALTIMORE – ‘Baltimore city government and PCs for People are teaming to recycle laptops for digital inclusion‘ Donte Kirby, Technic.ly
-
ST. PAUL – ‘Amid COVID-19, more Black Minnesotans are going hungry‘ Kyeland Jackson, Twin Cities PBS
-
BALTIMORE – ‘Amid the pandemic, Baltimore-area activists push to turn out crucial voting bloc: Black women‘ Tatyana Turner, The Baltimore Sun
-
DALLAS – ‘Southern Dallas shop took a hit from the pandemic. A renewed interest in Black-owned businesses changed that.‘ Brooklynn Cooper, The Dallas Morning News
In addition to Report for America’s dedicated Afro-American beat coverage, from Memphis and Henrico County, Virginia, to Indianapolis and Charlotte, we celebrate the Black-owned and operated news organizations making a mark on communities nationwide. Among the new year’s growing slate of Report for America’s partner newsrooms are some newly established and historic members of the Black Press, all working to sustain representative news and serve under-covered communities.
Learn more about these publishers in this interactive story map:
About Report for America
Report for America is a national service program that places talented emerging journalists in local newsrooms to report on under-covered topics and communities. Launched in 2017 and donor-financed, Report for America is creating a new, sustainable system that provides Americans with the information they need to improve their communities, hold powerful institutions accountable, and rebuild trust in the media. Report for America is an initiative of The GroundTruth Project, an award-winning nonprofit media organization with an established track record of training and supporting teams of emerging journalists around the world and in the US. Report for America is a MacArthur Foundation 100&Change finalist, a global competition for a single $100 million grant.