Dart Center at 2013 PRNDI conference
Dart Center at 2013 IRE conference
Human Rights Watch Film Festival: Camp 14 - Total Control Zone
Screening and Discussion: RISC Training Group Show
Tips for managing those who cover traumatic events:
1. Remember:
2. Appoint a person to monitor the staff's well-being who can make recommendations to you about it. After September 11, 2001, two "internal staff ombudsmen" were appointed at New Jersey's Asbury Park Press. Elaine Silvestrini, a reporter and one of the ombudsmen, wrote that she and Carol Gorga Williams advocated for sensitive coverage and attention to the staff's personal needs. "We attended news meetings, helped get answers to questions, kept an eye out for people who were overloaded and arranged for others to be rotated in to relieve them. We also talked to people when others alerted us they might be having problems."
3. Offer individual counseling. Also, plan group meetings to explain available resources, tone of coverage, what staff members can do to help themselves and each other, and possible outlets, such as peer support. Do not expect staff members to reveal intimate details about themselves during these gatherings.
4. Provide e-mails or memos that offer: encouragement; acknowledgment that their work is having an impact on the community; reminders; what day and date it is; tips to alleviate stress, and positive letters and notes from readers about their coverage. Examples after September 11, 2001, include memos from William E. Schmidt, associate managing editor of The New York Times, and the following excerpt from a memo by Henry Freeman, editor of The Journal News in White Plains, N.Y.:
"We will cover the news, and we will continue to perform at the highest journalist levels. Our readers need us now more than ever. What we do every day - especially now - is important.
"But, it is also important that you take care of yourself. And that we take care of each other.
"Thank you for the privilege and honor of being your editor."
5. Encourage staffers to do things to help themselves. Post tips on bulletin boards and include in memos and e-mails.
Dart Center at 2013 PRNDI conference
Dart Center at 2013 IRE conference
Human Rights Watch Film Festival: Camp 14 - Total Control Zone
Screening and Discussion: RISC Training Group Show
Dart Center at 2013 PRNDI conference
Dart Center at 2013 IRE conference
Human Rights Watch Film Festival: Camp 14 - Total Control Zone
Screening and Discussion: RISC Training Group Show
Panel: Emotional and Trauma Literacy in Journalism’s Digital Age
Joe Hight, editor in chief of the Colorado Springs Gazette, was president of the Dart Center for Journalism & Trauma’s Executive Committee. Previously, he was the director of information and development for the Oklahoman/NewsOK.com. In 1995, he led the team of reporters and editors who covered victims of the Oklahoma City bombing. The Oklahoman’s coverage won several national awards, including The Dart Award for Excellence in Reporting on Victims of Violence.
Frank Smyth is a free-lance journalist and a contributor to Crimes of War: What the Public Should Know, edited by Roy Gutman and David Rieff. He also is the Washington representative of the New York-based Committee to Protect Journalists.
A 40-page guide to help journalists, photojournalists and editors report on violence while protecting both victims and themselves.
Recommendations for meeting the emotional challenges of covering war, from a group of seasoned veterans.
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