Cape Breton Post

Sens salvo

Ottawa Citizen says NHL team refused to let reporter on plane

- BY GREGORY STRONG

The Ottawa Citizen said Friday that hockey reporter Ken Warren was denied access to the Ottawa Senators’ team charter to Tampa Bay for a weekend game against the Lightning.

The developmen­t came two days after the newspaper said it would not take down a secretly recorded video of several Senators players from an Uber vehicle in Arizona despite a legal notice from the NHL team insisting that leaving it online violates provincial privacy laws.

Warren, a Senators’ beat writer, had been given a travel itinerary but was told at the airport that he could not board the flight, Ottawa Citizen editor-inchief Michelle Richardson said.

“I can confirm it happened this morning,” Richardson said. “For us, it doesn’t really change our fundamenta­ls. We’re still committed to covering the Senators, both the good and the bad. Our coverage is important to our readers and to their fans and that’s not going to change.”

Depending on the market, reporters, broadcaste­rs, photojourn­alists and other travelling media members sometimes fly on team charters, which can be more timely and convenient than commercial flights. The Citizen, like most outlets, pays employee transporta­tion costs when charters are used.

In an email, a team spokesman said the Senators were not available for comment. Warren declined comment Friday afternoon, referring questions to Richardson.

“He’s still going to make it for the game,” Richardson said from Ottawa. “Just a little bit of a delay.”

Earlier this week, the newspaper flatly rejected a legal notice from the NHL team, saying a video shot surreptiti­ously by an Uber driver was circulatin­g on social media when the paper decided to report on it.

In the video, seven players can be seen ridiculing Senators assistant coach Martin Raymond and scornfully discussing the team’s penalty-killing performanc­e. The video was shot without the players’ knowledge by the driver of the Uber vehicle they were riding in while on the road in Phoenix.

The players later apologized for their remarks.

The video shared by the Citizen also appeared on websites of other publicatio­ns owned by Postmedia Network Inc., the paper’s parent company.

“We’re committed to being fair and accurate,” Richardson said. “We’re committed to giving everybody a chance to respond and to being really impartial in our coverage. Our duty is to report on the facts as we know them and that doesn’t change.”

NHL commission­er Gary Bettman weighed in on the Senators’ Uber story on Friday.

“It makes me concerned about what you say in an Uber,” Bettman said with a chuckle before adding: “Uber’s a great company, but when things like this happen, I think it’s unfortunat­e. My guess is anybody in this room, including (the media), have conversati­ons that were not meant for the light of day.

“It’s unfortunat­e if your privacy is being violated.”

“We’re committed to being fair and accurate. We’re committed to giving everybody a chance to respond and to being really impartial in our coverage. Our duty is to report on the facts as we know them and that doesn’t change.”

Ottawa Citizen editor-in-chief Michelle Richardson

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