Regina Leader-Post

WEWANT YOUR VIEWS

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In Saskatchew­an, we are fortunate to have a strong community of letter-to-the-editor writers. We want to keep this tradition strong and vibrant. It is in this spirit that we run this editorial from our sister paper at the Vancouver Sun.

A number of readers have lamented in letters to the editor they have sent to The Vancouver Sun that there are fewer letters to the editor published than there were in the past.

Their sorrow is ours as well. After all, letters to the editor have been a feature of North American newspapers for more than two centuries. Indeed, by the mid-1800s, letters had not only become the main carrier of news reports and commentari­es but were the dominant vehicle of public discourse.

Freedom of expression is fundamenta­l to democracie­s and letters to the editor have always embodied that freedom.

Perhaps Canada’s most prolific letter-to-theeditor writer was senator and constituti­onal expert Eugene Forsey, who had more than 800 of his letters to the press published over six decades, according to J.E. Hodgetts in his book The Sound of One Voice: Eugene Forsey and his Letters to the Press. The eloquence and lucidity Forsey brought to the art of letter-writing is sadly lacking in the digital age. Often, letters arrive in the inbox with the appended suffix “Sent from my iphone.” They sometimes are comprising a single line of insult, often with an expletive, occasional­ly accompanie­d by an emoticon, almost always with an exclamatio­n mark.

While the press is an ardent defender of participat­ory democracy, there are limits on what may be published. A publicatio­n is legally responsibl­e for all content that it presents to readers. Letters will not be published if they contain factual errors, engage in ad hominem attacks or can be construed as defamatory. The Sun also avoids publishing letters that are part of an orchestrat­ed letter-writing campaign.

Media has borne the brunt of disruption caused by technologi­cal change. News is now available everywhere at any time and consumers of it no longer need to write a letter. They can comment directly on an article on a newspaper’s website and share a link to a story along with their criticism of it on social media.

But our readers tell us they like letters to the editor, and so do we. They want more of them and we’d love to be able to oblige. When we have them, we’ll publish them.

Keep letters to a maximum of 250 words for the best chance of publicatio­n, recognize our legal liability for libel and defamation, and follow the etiquette of civil public discourse.

Send your letters to letters@leaderpost.com. We look forward to hearing from you.

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