Washington State College could halve and even cancel the state’s fledgling journalism fellowship program as a result of the Legislature slashed its funding.
I hope they don’t surrender and discover completely different choices first.
The state of affairs presents a possibility to collaborate with native information shops on methods to enhance and lengthen the fellowship program. Making it extra impartial, and fewer tethered to WSU, is price exploring.
There’s a brief menu of ways in which states will help maintain native information protection that’s a public good and important to democracy.
Fellowships are maybe the best of those choices. They bolster the native information trade and supply job coaching to latest faculty graduates.
Washington’s fellowship program was envisioned as a option to restore civic information protection that voters and residents want. It’s modeled on a bigger program in California that’s also facing finances uncertainty.
Beginning in early 2024, WSU placed 16 early profession journalists at native information shops across the state for two-year phrases. It additionally positioned two legislative correspondents in Olympia this yr.
The state initially supplied $2.4 million. That included $800,000 to ramp up in yr one and $1.6 million in yr two for ongoing operations. It sought $3 million for the following two years.
Final month Democratic finances writers minimize the annual funding by half as they scrounged for cash to continue to grow state authorities. A Republican finances proposal continued the funding however was rejected.
I requested Home Appropriations Chair Timm Ormsby, a Spokane Democrat, to remark however he didn’t reply earlier than my deadline.
Remaining funding of $1.5 million will run out in a few yr so there’s not sufficient to rent the following cohort of eight Murrow Fellows, Ben Shors, journalism chair at WSU’s Murrow College, informed me final Thursday.
WSU will search extra funding within the supplemental finances drafted within the subsequent legislative session “or look arduous at closing this system at that time,” Shors mentioned.
This week Shors was much less dire. He mentioned the college needs to proceed this system, with fewer fellows if needed with a smaller finances.
“If we get the funding we wish to run this system however should make adjustments,” he mentioned Wednesday.
Shors mentioned this system is trimming ancillary spending, together with funding for analysis into Washington’s information ecosystem.
Altogether program prices had been going to be roughly $1.5 million in its second yr, together with analysis, a program director, fellow salaries and bills.
“Now that’s what we’ve been allotted for 2 years. That shall be basically gone in just a little over a yr,” he mentioned.
I requested Gov. Bob Ferguson on Tuesday, throughout a gathering with The Seattle Occasions editorial board, about restoring the fellowship’s funding. He mentioned it might be restored subsequent yr relying on “the place our financial system goes.”
“We’ve spoken earlier than about journalism, the way forward for journalism, so I’m clearly fairly supportive,” he mentioned. “And that’s what supplementals are for, is to reevaluate and have a look and see what acquired unnoticed or what must be restored, or what would possibly should be minimize once more.”
Former state Sen. Karen Keiser, a Des Moines Democrat who secured the fellowship’s preliminary funding in 2023, is speaking to local-journalism advocates about the way to make this system entire.
“A letter has gone in to the governor asking him to veto that individual minimize,” she mentioned. “It’s such a modest amount of cash, it truly is finances mud within the literal sense.”
If funding isn’t restored, the college ought to work with information publishers on methods to take advantage of what stays, fairly than kill the fellowship.
Some shops might be able to share the price of using fellows. Personal funders might also have the ability to assist cowl prices. That may in all probability require extra flexibility than the present method, during which fellows are employed as state staff with fastened salaries ($55,000) administered by Pullman.
Ferguson mentioned he additionally helps one other journalism proposal, to tax giant tech firms that profit from information content material and distribute proceeds to native information shops. The car to do this, Senate Bill 5400, died late within the session however Ferguson favors making an attempt once more subsequent yr.
“There appears to be the curiosity in it for positive, so, and, that’s one I’m comfortable to kind of interact in and see if we might be useful on as properly,” he mentioned.
The governor was extra imprecise about what he’ll do with Senate Invoice 5814, a hodgepodge of last-minute taxes the Legislature imposed final month. It features a tax on promoting that not directly impacts information shops and is likely to end up in court. It additionally considerably will increase taxes on tech firms, making it far tougher to move a journalism invoice like 5400 subsequent yr.
“There could also be a bit of it I’ll not like however I’m not capable of go take out the entire part, if that is smart,” Ferguson mentioned, including that it’s “too quickly to say” what he’ll do with 5814.
In the meantime, Murrow Fellows proceed churning out native information tales for 22 information shops. They produced 1,328 tales in this system’s first yr, in response to WSU’s tally.
“It’s been so nice,” Questen Inghram, a fellow overlaying Decrease Yakima Valley communities for the Yakima Herald-Republic, informed me. “I’m like 5 years out of faculty and I’d been determined to get one thing like this and it feels nice to be hitting the pavement.”
Take pleasure in it, and the native information reporting, whereas it lasts.