The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Three ethnic publicatio­ns form alliance

Group includes Georgia Asian Times, Atlanta Voice, Mundo Hispánico.

- By Lautaro Grinspan lautaro.grinspan@ajc.com Lautaro Grinspan is a Report for America corps member covering metro Atlanta’s immigrant communitie­s.

Three publicatio­ns covering Georgia’s fast-growing Asian American, Black and Hispanic communitie­s have joined forces. That partnershi­p — a first of its kind in the state — aims to better inform the readers of the Georgia Asian Times, The Atlanta Voice and Mundo Hispánico; and shed light on the issues that most concern communitie­s of color.

Rene Alegria is the president and CEO of Mundo Hispánico, Georgia’s largest Spanish-language newspaper. He explains it made sense to pool the three newspapers’ influence and launch the new media alliance, dubbed the Ethnic Media Collaborat­ive, in the wake of the 2020 election, where highly mobilized voters of color helped cement Georgia’s place as battlegrou­nd state.

“I think that has exacerbate­d how quickly things are changing [in the state],” Alegria said. “And given we were open to working with each other … it just felt right.”

He added: “I do think that our communitie­s of color oftentimes work and live in silos and us crossing into each other’s silo collaborat­ively is something not done . ... We aim to change that.”

The Ethnic Media Collaborat­ive’s first initiative is a speaker series with political and business leaders, where issues that are topof-mind in communitie­s of color

will be raised.

At the launch of the speaker series last week in Gwinnett County, Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Stacey Abrams fielded questions about the growth of the Latino evangelica­l community, funding of the technical college system, the rise of anti-Asian violence and affordable housing, among others.

Invitation­s to participat­e in future events will be extended to political leaders across the political spectrum. Alegria hopes those interactio­ns and the coverage they will generate help ethnic media readers feel like they have a stake in the political process.

“We are setting a new standard for journalism in Georgia,” said Li Wong, CEO and publisher of the Georgia Asian Times, in a statement shared on his publicatio­n’s website.

“Our newspaper has been serving the Black and African American communitie­s in Georgia for over 50 years. We are proud to work together with other ethnic media groups to share our stories and news to better inform our people,” added Janis Ware, publisher of The Atlanta Voice.

 ?? COURTESY ?? Janis Ware (from left), publisher of The Atlanta Voice; Li Wong, CEO and publisher of Georgia Asian Times; and Rene Alegria, president and CEO of Mundo Hispánico, form a coalition to better inform and shed light on pivotal issues within communitie­s of color.
COURTESY Janis Ware (from left), publisher of The Atlanta Voice; Li Wong, CEO and publisher of Georgia Asian Times; and Rene Alegria, president and CEO of Mundo Hispánico, form a coalition to better inform and shed light on pivotal issues within communitie­s of color.

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