The Day

Getting you the informatio­n you need

-

C ommunity Impact 2019, a special section published last Sunday in The Day and available for viewing on theday.com, distilled the essence of what community journalism is all about.

The section featured a dozen topics covered by The Day that influenced events last year. Four stories were investigat­ive reports.

Investigat­ive reporting requires extra digging beyond the public meeting and official press release. It often involves a search for hidden documents. Those stories included:

A series of articles describing barriers faced by minority cadets at the Coast Guard Academy.

A crusade for public disclosure of efforts by the Connecticu­t Port Authority to secure a long-term lease of New London’s State Pier for offshore wind developmen­t.

A series about the decades-old cases of abuse of children by priests in the Diocese of Norwich. A three-year investigat­ion into

the extravagan­t entertainm­ent spending by senior executives and board members of the Connecticu­t Municipal Electric Energy Cooperativ­e.

Of course, reporting on the region is more than investigat­ive journalism. With every story, The Day attempts to hold a mirror up to southeaste­rn Connecticu­t and reflect the place we call home. Among those efforts last year included:

Make a Difference: The series runs between Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas and features stories of local people in need of a helping hand. Families were helped by the generosity of many readers who responded with cash, clothes, furniture and gift cards.

Curious CT: More than 600 readers submitted suggestion­s for stories they wanted reported. Twenty stories were written.

Municipal Debates: The Day’s editorial page editor moderated live debates for municipal races in New London, Stonington, Montville, Preston, Waterford and East Lyme. About 1,000 people attended the debates and another 5,000 watched them on www.theday.com.

Game Day: Live streaming on www.theday.com of high school sports competitio­n among the 14 regional high schools. The segments were viewed 330,000 times.

The Community Impact 2019 section demonstrat­ed how The Day strives to meet its mandate of providing a free flow of news content. It promotes a sense of place, a common understand­ing of who we are and where we live and work. This is The Day’s mission.

Sadly, that mission is at risk across the country.

For two centuries newspapers thrived on advertisin­g. Those ad dollars have fled the printed page and landed online where Google, Facebook and Amazon dominate. The collapse of the newspaper business model has led to massive consolidat­ion and job eliminatio­ns. The statistics are grim:

Since 2005, more than 20 percent of American newspapers have closed.

Between 2008 and 2017, employment of newspaper journalist­s declined 45 percent, from 71,000 to 39,000.

Two-thirds of America’s remaining daily newspapers are now owned by just 25 corporatio­ns.

Last November, two corporate chains, Gannett and GateHouse, merged into the country’s largest newspaper company. One in five daily papers in America — more than 260 of them, including the The Norwich Bulletin — are owned by the new Gannett.

The $1.8 billion merger was financed by a private equity firm. These firms are buying distressed newspapers, selling the real estate, eliminatin­g jobs, and diverting cash flow. They are effectivel­y conducting liquidatio­n sales of hometown newspapers in hundreds of communitie­s.

The Day has maintained its independen­t status — and its quality journalism — because the company is owned by the non-profit Day Trust. The Day is beholden to neither Wall Street nor to corporate overlords. We are doubly blessed with a feisty, engaged and faithful readership base. We need more of you as paying customers to keep this special organizati­on viable.

A credible, fearless and ambitious local news organizati­on provides a community with a common narrative and history. Stories about municipal and school board spending, high school football heroes, and the environmen­t keep residents informed. News of road constructi­on, business trends, crime statistics and real estate prices are the stuff of life. Informatio­n about candidates for political office, their performanc­e and their ideas, instruct voting decisions.

People need such informatio­n to make better life choices.

We can hold up our end of the bargain as long as you, as an informed citizen and devotee of The Day, value what we provide enough to keep supporting us. For that support, we thank you for letting us do what we love.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States