Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Newspapers scour landscape for infant, cheaper news outlets


How are newspapers coping with dwindling revenue that forced drastic newsroom personnel cutbacks?

By accepting stories from newly created sources, which may or not be accurate, judging by a look at Colorado newspapers after the Rocky Mountain News folded in 2009 despite being awarded four Pulitzer Prizes in the previous decade.

Ann Imse,  former Rocky Mountain News investigative reporter, created Colorado Public News with Colorado Public TV in 2009. 

Another former Rocky Mountain News investigative reporter, Laura Frank, created the Rocky Mountain Investigative News Network, or I-News. 

CU News Corps, manned by students in the University of Colorado Boulder’s Journalism and Mass Communication Program, also provides stories used by Colorado newspapers and TV and radio stations.

Colorado Public News distributes content free to 44 news organizations in the state. Foundations and grants keep the staff of six in business. 

I-News partners with Colorado PBS and public radio stations.

Colorado newspapers also rely on the Associated Press, which lost one-fourth its staff since 2008.



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