Santa Fe New Mexican

When the student newspaper is only daily paper in town

- By Dan Levin

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Municipal committee meetings — the tedious minutiae of Ann Arbor’s local governance — do not tend to draw a crowd. On a recent afternoon, Katherina Sourine was among only a few in attendance.

But Sourine, a University of Michigan senior, was there because she had to be. As one of four city and government reporters for Ann Arbor’s sole daily newspaper, she had biked through a steady rain between classes to take notes on the city’s plans for developing a new park.

“If we weren’t covering it, no one would know what’s going on,” said Sourine, 21, who also plays rugby and is taking a full schedule of classes this semester. “It’s really hard to take time out of my day, especially when breaking news hits. But a lot of people rely on us to stay informed — not only students, but the people of Ann Arbor.”

For more than a decade, the Michigan Daily, the university’s student newspaper, has been the only daily paper in town.

After the Ann Arbor News shuttered its daily print edition in 2009 — and eventually its website, too — a staff of about 300 student journalist­s has worked hard to provide incisive coverage about the city’s police, power brokers and policymake­rs, all while keeping up with school.

Student journalist­s across the country have stepped in to help fill a void after more than 2,000 newspapers have closed or merged, leaving more than 1,300 communitie­s without any local news coverage.

And several young reporters have broken consequent­ial stories that have prodded powerful institutio­ns into changing policies.

A high school newspaper in Pittsburg, Kan., forced the resignatio­n of the principal after discoverin­g discrepanc­ies in her résumé. After writing an article about a school employee’s unprofessi­onal conduct charges, high school editors in Burlington, Vt., won a censorship battle against their principal.

And when the State Department’s

special envoy for Ukraine resigned abruptly last month, a 20-year-old junior at Arizona State University broke the news in the school’s student newspaper, a scoop that gained internatio­nal attention.

The university’s Cronkite News Service has offices in Phoenix and Los Angeles, as well as in Washington, where this semester 10 student journalist­s are contributi­ng to more than 30 profession­al news outlets in Arizona.

“We’re the largest Arizonabas­ed newsgather­ing operation in Washington because we’re the only Arizona-based newsgather­ing operation in Washington,” said Steve Crane, director of Washington operations at Arizona State’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communicat­ion.

Despite little training and no university journalism program, the staff of the Michigan Daily has embraced its vital role. Last year, in the wake of the #MeToo movement, it published a lengthy investigat­ion that detailed sexual misconduct allegation­s against a professor, leading to his early retirement. In 2014, the paper published a major scoop about a sexual assault that the university concealed to protect a football player.

And on the first day of classes this semester, the Daily reported that the university had quietly stopped offering free testing for sexually transmitte­d diseases, prompting protests that forced the school’s administra­tion to reinstate the program.

The Daily also covers issues that matter to Ann Arbor’s 121,000 residents, such as the inner workings of the municipal government, cuts to the county’s mental health budget, and a police oversight commission that was created last year in response to the shooting death of a black woman and the violent arrest of a black teenager.

Ann Arbor became the first city of any size to lose its only daily newspaper when the Ann Arbor News ceased daily print publicatio­n after 174 years and many rounds of staff cuts. The Ann Arbor Chronicle, an online news publicatio­n that focused on city government, folded in 2014 after six years.

 ?? CHLOE AFTEL/NEW YORK TIMES ?? Student journalist­s sit in the newsroom of the Michigan Daily, a student-run newspaper with a staff of about 300, in October in Ann Arbor, Mich. In the decade since the closure of the Ann Arbor News, journalist­s at the Michigan Daily have scrutinize­d the city’s police, power brokers and policymake­rs as the only paper in town.
CHLOE AFTEL/NEW YORK TIMES Student journalist­s sit in the newsroom of the Michigan Daily, a student-run newspaper with a staff of about 300, in October in Ann Arbor, Mich. In the decade since the closure of the Ann Arbor News, journalist­s at the Michigan Daily have scrutinize­d the city’s police, power brokers and policymake­rs as the only paper in town.

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