Former
Beacon Journal reporter Pete Geiger, who retired to Penney Farms, Florida, has
nominated Florida Times Union reporters Kate Howard
Perry and Adam Kealoha
Causey for a Pulitzer Prize, journalism’s highest honor.
Anyone can submit a nomination by collecting
the stories, writing the recommendation and paying the $50 nominating fee. Kent
State’s School of Journalism, for example, often nominated BJ reporters for a
Pulitzer. KSU-J nominated Pete for his coverage of New York Yankees catcher
Thurman Munson’s fatal private jet crash at Akron-Canton Regional Airport in
August 1979. Munson was from Canton.
Pete explains: “I beat
the reporting team that the New York Times sent in simply because I could talk
to the FAA investigators in their aviation language, so I could write how the
crash happened. NYT pulled their team home and used our BJ copy.
“Ahh, but that’s back
when our old State Desk was turning out real reporting” under the late, great
Tasmanian devil of an editor Pat Englehart.
As for the Pulitzer
nomination for the Times Union reporters, when the Times Union didn’t nominate
itself, Pete says, “They did good work, so I just stepped in.”
The “good work” involved
uncovering suspect and costly practices at Florida
State College in Jacksonville, not to be confused with Florida State University
in Tallahassee, by president’s executive staff member Donald Green, who had
the same position at New Jersey's Essex
County College.
That wasn’t all.
A Florida State College associate vice
president was suspended after penning a letter to the governor and to state
education officials about coverups and wasteful spending at the college.
Unqualified students got Pell grants and the
federal government imposed a $515,000 finding on the college.
The college president charged more than
$187,000 over two years to the college for telephone, Internet and a leased
Cadillac.
The president also gave $16,000 of college
money to local charities but in his name, which provided a tax benefit to him.
The president asked the board of trustees for
$1.2 million in retirement, accumulated leave and on-going “consulting” fees,
the title of “president emeritus” and an off-campus office. The board agreed,
but later reduced the package to $1 million.
Further audits revealed additional mistakes
that could cost the college $25 million.
One of the trustees resigned.
The vice president who also had held the New
Jersey job was fired in Florida and sued the college for wrongful termination.
The board vowed to resist a federal review
over alleged student record changes.
Says Pete: “The story is on-going and
reporters Perry and Causey continue to follow it. Common wisdom in our
profession, John, is that, for a Pulitzer Prize to happen, a significant event
must occur in a newspaper’s purview and the newspaper must field the talent and
bear the expense to cover it excellently. In my view, Perry and Causey have
cleared the first two hurdles in the process. I wish them well.
“Meanwhile, we can hoist another brew to the
memory of newspapering in Ohio that won a passel of Pulitzers" -- 4 for the BJ.
Pete and wife Sandy moved from Mongolia,
after 13 years of teaching English in the Asian country beginning in 1994, to Penney Farms, a
Christian retirement community 38 miles west of St. Augustine. They have been
married 51 years.
Pete often had inside knowledge of powerful religion leaders
in the Akron area, which made his reporting far beyond the usual religion
writer.
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