Springfield News-Sun

Derailment shows how much we need local media

- Ray Marcano’s column appears on these pages each Sunday. He can be reached at raymarcano­ddn@gmail.com

The Norfolk Southern train wreck near East Palestine has received its share of national news coverage.

The Washington Post covered a raucous town hall that the train company inexplicab­ly skipped. NPR’S “what to know about the derailment” provided an excellent primer on the wreck. CBS, CNN, NBC, and even Al Jazeera have covered the incident.

The train, pulling 150 cars, derailed Feb. 3.

Three dozen cars went off the tracks, and 11 contained hazardous materials — including five with the man-made, cancer-causing substance vinyl chloride. For the roughly 4,800 residents of East Palestine, on the Pennsylvan­ia border some 40 miles west of Pittsburgh,

the current shortterm angst will soon turn to long-term worry.

But what happens when the story subsides and the big boys go home?

The Lisbon Morning Journal is the closest newspaper to East Palestine, about 13 miles away. The Salem News has covered the story, and they’re 30 miles away. Particle Media’s online site, Newsbreak, aggregates news content, so that’s useful.

But the train derailment highlights a problem that has affected small communitie­s and areas from Tarboro, North Carolina, to Tucson, Arizona.

Some 360 newspapers closed from the start of the pandemic, according to a report published in The New York Times. The problem is so acute that one in five Americans lives in a news desert with limited access to local news, the Times reported.

Ohio has fared particular­ly poorly. Since 2004, the state has lost 32% of its newspapers, according to a study by Policy Matters. Most of those companies were run by small operators who cared about the communitie­s they covered.

In years past, the Youngstown Vindicator would have unleashed its army of journalist­s to travel the 30 minutes to East Palestine. The Vindicator once had the staff and resources to support its 160,000 Sunday circulatio­n product. But the newspaper collapsed under the weight of circulatio­n declines and financial losses and closed in 2019, with a Sunday circulatio­n of 32,000.

The East Palestine train derailment lays bare what happens when the community loses its news sources.

News gathering goes far beyond the daily reporting of who said what at a press conference or who spoke to a crowd at a community gathering. That’s fairly simply blocking and tackling.

I wonder who will go more in-depth.

Who will tell the stories of the townspeopl­e who will be scared for years by the wreck? Who will monitor whether residents start leaving, which would have a cascading effect on property tax revenue and the city’s school district? Who will chronicle the families and children who stay behind and worry about their health?

Who will monitor health department reports to see if residents start getting sick?

Who will act as a watchdog to monitor state officials, who will be charged with ensuring that Norfolk Southern makes restitutio­n, in whatever form that takes? Who will file public records requests to examine the records of any settlement­s? If there are lawsuits, who will go to the courthouse and report on the findings?

Without reporters and news sources, the people of East Palestine don’t have an independen­t news source that keeps officials on their toes.

When people say local media doesn’t matter, take a look at what’s happening a four-hour drive east of the Dayton area. The big boys will go home because they have so many other issues to tackle. Eventually, the citizens of East Palestine will feel the frustratio­n of living in a news desert.

Somehow, we need to strengthen local news, not continue to watch it wither.

Dying newspapers mean there are fewer independen­t avenues to help communitie­s, fewer ways to cover tragedy, and fewer ways to hold companies and agencies accountabl­e through reporting.

Local news matters. Let’s do a better job supporting it.

 ?? AP ?? A large plume of smoke rises after a controlled detonation of a portion of the derailed Norfolk Southern trains.
AP A large plume of smoke rises after a controlled detonation of a portion of the derailed Norfolk Southern trains.
 ?? ?? Ray Marcano
Ray Marcano

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