Being a guardian of the public’s trust
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TONY DODERO
Readers may soon learn that Newport Beach Mayor Steve Bromberg has
severed his relationship with the Daily Pilot, refusing to give our
reporters comments for stories about city government.
I’m not going to get into the reasons why, nor am I going to
discuss the details over who is right or wrong in the disagreement.
But I thought the readers may want to know in the future why we
weren’t quoting the mayor on big stories, since the protocol has
always been to do exactly that.
Government officials refusing to talk to reporters or the media is
nothing new. In Orange County, District Attorney Tony Rackauckas
engaged in a fairly public spat with reporters from our parent
newspaper, the Los Angeles Times, refusing to grant interviews to
staffers there.
That feud went on for some time, though I hear things are just
fine now.
In Baltimore, the Sun, a paper owned by our parent’s parent, the
Tribune Co., filed suit late last year against Maryland Gov. Robert
Ehrlich, who issued a ban prohibiting state officials there from
talking with reporters from that paper.
The suit challenged Ehrlich’s ban on the grounds it was violating
the newspaper’s 1st Amendment rights.
And I really doubt that Richard Nixon, who famously spoke ill of
the press, had a good relationship with the Washington Post after
that paper broke the Watergate scandal.
Over the years, the Daily Pilot has had good and bad relationships
with mayors in either Costa Mesa or Newport Beach.
Through it all, though, we just stick to our mission to provide
our readers with what we hope will be thorough reporting on the
decisions made and actions taken by their government officials.
The Daily Pilot is so much more than that, though. Readers look to
us for reporting on their schools, their churches, their sports teams
and their businesses.
We provide a forum for readers to air their grievances, and every
day we send our reporters out to find the best stories in the
Newport-Mesa community and tell them to our readers.
We may miss things here and there and be guilty of not looking at
the whole picture. But that’s why newspapers are often called the
rough drafts of history. We have time to come back and make the final
draft better the next day.
This week, I was discussing the role of the media in the
journalism class I teach at Orange Coast College.
One of the students asked me why we print certain controversial
things. At one point, he said he understands we do things to sell
newspapers.
I told him that’s not necessarily the case.
The truth is, reporters are reluctant to print information that
will create conflict with their sources, people who they are in
contact with sometimes on a daily basis.
While the story may get them top billing, the first instinct is to
keep everyone happy and avoid the angry phone calls or e-mails in the
morning. I remember as a young reporter, one of my mentors sensed I
was getting too close to a certain school district official.
It was during a time, like today, of deep school budget cutting
and my mentor suggested I do a story on school superintendent
salaries.
To begin, he suggested, I should call my close superintendent
friend and ask him how much he got paid.
Imagine how uncomfortable that phone call was.
Editors aren’t much different. When a reporter is too gung ho, we
sometimes need to rein him or her in. We don’t want to get the angry
call either, especially if our reporter has been unfair.
At the end of the day, though, we have to ask ourselves what is
most important, befriending the powerful or being a guardian of the
public’s trust.
It’s an easy call.
Is it unfortunate when sources get angry with us and refuse to
talk? Sure it is.
But as reporters and editors have learned and continue to learn,
the business of the 1st Amendment and freedom of the press can be
hard to undertake sometimes.
As someone reminded me earlier this week, the Daily Pilot has been
a part of this community for a long, long time and will continue to
be a part of this community long after this latest feud with the
mayor has ended.
As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts.
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He welcomes your comments on news
coverage, photography or other newspaper-related issues. If you have
a message or a letter to the editor, call his direct line at (714)
966-4608 or the Readers Hotline (714) 966-4664, send it by e-mail to
[email protected] or [email protected], or send it by mail
to 1375 Sunflower Ave., Costa Mesa, CA 92626.
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