Nominations are being sought for 2013 inductees to the Maine Press Association Hall of Fame, with a new deadline of July 12.
Candidates must be Maine newspaper professionals who have made lasting career contributions to their craft, in or out of the state. Typically, some of each year’s Hall of Fame class is inducted posthumously.
The Hall of Fame Committee will meet in July to select this year’s inductees. Each nomination should be accompanied by supporting material that will help committee members as they make their decisions.
The 2013 induction ceremony will be held at the MPA Fall Conference on Oct. 26.
Nominations can be sent to the committee chair, Bob Caswell, at caswell@usm.maine.edu, or USM Public Affairs, P.O. Box 9300, Portland, ME 04014. If you have questions, please call 780-4200.
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Deadline close for contest entries
The MPA reminds member newspapers that the deadline for entries in this year’s Better Newspaper Contest is May 24. Photo entries will be judged in a digital format and must be submitted to http://mainepress.wordpress.com/2013-contest-page/. Illustrations and Graphics may be submitted the same way. Use the same URL for entries in all Online categories including Best Website. For other categories, send tearsheets or printouts to the MPA in packages postmarked by May 24. Complete entry information and instructions are in the packet that was emailed to each newspaper in April. Those forms are also online at http://mainepress.wordpress.com/2013-contest-page/
Lawmakers conceal public records
The Legislature has passed a bill to shield personal information on concealed-handgun permits from Maine’s Freedom of Access Act.
The MPA and other advocates of open government opposed L.D. 345, which was submitted by Rep. Corey Wilson, R-Augusta, arguing that the information is in the public interest and that the current debate over gun rights does not justify another exemption to the right-to-know law.
The Legislature’s Judiciary Committee had endorsed the amended version of the bill that the House and Senate passed in late April. The law, which took effect when Gov. Paul LePage signed it on April 26, makes only aggregate data on gun permits public. Information including each permit holder’s name, address and date of birth is now confidential, for the first time since 1981.
The Judiciary Committee’s House chair, Democrat Charles Priest of Brunswick, proposed an amendment to keep the identifying information public while allowing certain permit holders, such as victims of domestic violence, to seek exemptions.
Priest said, “There is no proven need for this. … “The policy of this bill will soon be extended to hunting licenses, I can tell you that, because they too indicate that you have possession of a gun. Passage of this will do untold harm to the right-to-know law.”
In two committee votes, only Priest, Rep. Kim Monaghan-Derrig, D-Cape Elizabeth, and Rep. Matthew Moonen, D-Portland, voted to keep the records open to the public. All three spoke against concealing the public records during debate in the House. The MPA thanks them for taking a stand for the public’s right to know.
See how each representative and senator voted on the bill.
Judges needed for New Hampshire contest
The MPA is seeking volunteers to judge this year’s New Hampshire Press Association Best Media Contest. Newspaper professionals from Maine are needed to pick winners in categories that cover writing, photography, design, advertising and new media.
New Hampshire’s entry deadline is June 14, so judges can expect to receive entries in early summer. Judging requires a modest time commitment, but it’s a good way to find out what – and how – other newspapers are doing.
The MPA’s Better Newspaper Contest will be judged this year by the press associations in New Hampshire and South Carolina. In return, South Carolina will need judges from Maine in early 2014.
Entry forms for the Better Newspaper Contest were sent to all MPA papers on April 12. The deadline for those entries is May 24.
Contact the MPA at mainepressmail@gmail.com if you’re interested in being a judge for New Hampshire, or if you’re not sure your newspaper has received its entry packet for Maine’s Better Newspaper Contest.
Auburn to be 2014 Fall Conference site
The MPA has chosen the Hilton Garden Inn Auburn Riverwatch as the venue for its Fall Conference in 2014. Next year’s conference will be held on the weekend of Oct. 17-18 at the hotel and conference center along the Androscoggin River in downtown Auburn.
The association’s directors approved the contract this month, confident that the Hilton Garden Inn Auburn Riverwatch will be an affordable and centrally located site with facilities well suited for the conference.
This year’s Fall Conference is scheduled for the weekend of Oct. 25-26 at the Atlantic Oceanside Hotel and Conference Center in Bar Harbor. The MPA is working now to put together the 2013 conference program and welcomes members’ ideas for Saturday morning seminars. You can send your suggestions to mainepressmail@gmail.com.
MPA calls for Hall of Fame nominations
Nominations are being taken for 2013 inductees to the Maine Press Association Hall of Fame. The deadline for nominations is June 7.
Candidates must be Maine newspaper professionals who have made lasting career contributions to their craft, in or out of the state. Typically, some of each year’s Hall of Fame class is inducted posthumously. A total of 57 journalists have been inducted since the Hall of Fame was established in 1998.
The MPA’s Hall of Fame Committee asks that names be submitted as soon as possible so they can be circulated among the committee members who will select the inductees. Each nomination should be accompanied by supporting material that will help committee members as they make their decisions.
This year’s inductees will be announced in July. The 2013 induction ceremony will be held at the MPA Fall Conference in October.
Nominations can be sent to the committee chair, Bob Caswell, at caswell@usm.maine.edu, or USM Public Affairs, P.O. Box 9300, Portland, ME 04014. If you have questions, please call 780-4200.
MPA fighting secrecy bill, sales tax
The Maine Press Association is opposing a high-profile bill in the Legislature that would take the information in concealed-weapons permits out of the public realm, and a proposal in the governor’s budget to end the longstanding sales-tax exemption for newspapers.
The MPA offered testimony against the concealed-weapons bill before the Judiciary Committee on March 12. It testified against the sales-tax proposal in a hearing of the Taxation and Appropriations committees on March 13.
Concealed weapons
The hearing on L.D. 345 drew a crowd of gun-rights supporters, who expressed concern to the Judiciary Committee that personal information contained in concealed-weapons permits makes permit holders vulnerable when it is accessible to the public, including newspapers.
The MPA, represented at the hearing by Mike Mahoney of Federle Mahoney, argued in oral and written testimony that the information has been public since 1981, without incident, that the information is in the public interest and that the Judiciary Committee should base its consideration of the proposed exception to the Freedom of Access Act on criteria in the law, not the emotion of today’s gun-rights debate.
The Maine Freedom of Access Coalition and the American Civil Liberties Union of Maine joined the MPA in opposing the bill, noting that public access to the information helps to ensure that law enforcement screens permit applicants adequately.
The Judiciary Committee, which will make a recommendation to the Legislature, has a work session on the bill scheduled for 1 p.m. April 3 in Room 438 of the State House. MPA members are encouraged to get involved.
Sales tax
Testifying for the MPA, Mahoney told the Taxation and Appropriations committees that a new 5 percent sales tax on newspapers would be discriminatory by singling out publications, and suggested a comprehensive review of Maine’s 94 current tax exemptions. He also noted the logistical problems posed by collecting the tax – including through honor boxes and independent contractors – the fact that it would be a tax on information, and its impact on elderly, low-income and rural residents who lack Internet access.
Also testifying against the tax was Kevin Webb, publisher of Uncle Henry’s, who emphasized the economic impact of making his publication more expensive, discouraging buyers and in turn cutting into revenue and threatening the jobs he provides.
The next step will be a work session by the Taxation Committee, which ultimately will recommend to the Appropriations Committee whether to leave the proposal in the budget.
Maine papers win 65 awards in regional contest
The Ellsworth American, the Mount Desert Islander and the Lewiston Sun Journal won General Excellence awards in the 2012 New England Better Newspaper Competition this month, as Maine newspapers took a total of 65 awards in the regional contest.
The Ellsworth American, which led all Maine papers with 29 awards, took first place for Advertising General Excellence among weekly newspapers with circulation over 6,000. The Mount Desert Islander took first place in Advertising General Excellence for smaller weeklies.
The Sun Journal got a second-place award for General Excellence among dailies with circulation of 30,000 or less. The Mount Desert Islander was second in General Excellence for smaller weeklies, and The Ellsworth American was third among the larger weeklies.
Maine newspapers won 27 first-place awards in the contest, including 12 for The Ellsworth American, eight for the Mount Desert Islander and three for the Bangor Daily News. Jesse Groening of The Ellsworth American won three individual first-place awards, while Dick Broom and Earl Brechlin of the Mount Desert Islander each won two. Other winners from Maine were The York Weekly, which took seven awards, the Boothbay Register, which won six, and the Advertiser Democrat and the Wiscasset Newspaper, which each took one.
The competition drew nearly 3,000 entries. The awards were presented Feb. 9 during the New England Newspaper and Press Association’s winter convention at the Boston Park Plaza Hotel. The full list of winners is at: http://www.nenpa.com/story/contest-better-newspaper. Here are the winners from Maine:
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT REPORTING WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Earl Brechlin, Mount Desert Islander
EDUCATION REPORTING WEEKLY CLASS 1
Third Place: Susan Morse, The York Weekly
GENERAL NEWS STORY WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Dick Broom, Mount Desert Islander
Second Place: Susan Morse, The York Weekly
HEADLINE WRITING WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: Earl Brechlin, Mount Desert Islander
HEALTH REPORTING WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: Robert Levin, The Ellsworth American
HISTORY REPORTING WEEKLY CLASS 1
Second Place: Earl Brechlin, Mount Desert Islander
HISTORY REPORTING WEEKLY CLASS 2
Third Place: Stephen Fay, The Ellsworth American
INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Dick Broom, Mount Desert Islander
INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING WEEKLY CLASS 2
Third Place: Cyndi Wood, The Ellsworth American
RIGHT-TO-KNOW WEEKLY CLASS 1
Second Place: Kelly Morgan, The York Weekly
SPORTS STORY WEEKLY CLASS 1
Third Place: Terrill Covey, The York Weekly
TRANSPORTATION REPORTING WEEKLY CLASS 1
Third Place: Charlotte Boynton, Wiscasset Newspaper
ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT SECTION WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: Staff, The Ellsworth American
EDITORIAL/COMMENTARY PAGE WEEKLY CLASS 1
Second Place: Staff, Mount Desert Islander
EDITORIAL/COMMENTARY PAGE WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: Staff, The Ellsworth American
FRONT PAGE WEEKLY CLASS 1
Third Place: Staff, Mount Desert Islander
FRONT PAGE WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: Staff, The Ellsworth American
LIVING PAGE OR SECTION WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Laura Snyder Smith, The York Weekly
Second Place: Suzi Thayer, Boothbay Register
SPORTS PAGE OR SECTION WEEKLY CLASS 2
First Place: Hugh Bowden, The Ellsworth American
EDITORIAL WRITING WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: A.M. Sheehan, Advertiser Democrat
Third Place: Kelly Morgan, The York Weekly
EDITORIAL CARTOON WEEKLY CLASS 1
Second Place: Joe Marshall, Mount Desert Islander
SERIOUS COLUMNIST WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: Marvin Ott, The Ellsworth American
OVERALL DESIGN AND PRESENTATION WEEKLY CLASS 1
Second Place: Staff, The York Weekly
ENTERTAINMENT VIDEO WEEKLY CLASS
Second Place: Jesse Groening, The Ellsworth American
FEATURE VIDEO WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: Jesse Groening, The Ellsworth American
NEWS VIDEO WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: Jesse Groening, The Ellsworth American
OVERALL WEBSITE WEEKLY CLASS 1
Second Place: Boothbay Register
OVERALL WEBSITE WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: Staff, The Ellsworth American
SPOT NEWS VIDEO WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: Jesse Groening, The Ellsworth American
SPORTS VIDEO WEEKLY CLASS
Second Place: Jesse Groening, The Ellsworth American
WEBSITE DESIGN WEEKLY CLASS
Third Place: Staff, The Ellsworth American
ADVERTISER CAMPAIGN DAILY CLASS
First Place: Bangor Daily News
LOCAL ADVERTISEMENT (BLACK & WHITE) WEEKLY CLASS 2
First Place: The Ellsworth American
LOCAL ADVERTISEMENT (COLOR) WEEKLY CLASS 1
Third Place: Mount Desert Islander
THEMED, BANNER OR SPONSORED AD PAGE WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: The Ellsworth American
AUTOMOTIVE DISPLAY AD DAILY CLASS 2
Second Place: Bangor Daily News
AUTOMOTIVE DISPLAY AD WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Mount Desert Islander
AUTOMOTIVE DISPLAY AD WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: The Ellsworth American
BEST IDEA FOR GENERATING AD REVENUE WEEKLY CLASS
Second Place: The Ellsworth American
EVENTS WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: Boothbay Register
NICHE PUBLICATION WEEKLY CLASS 1
Second Place: Boothbay Register
PRINTED AD SUPPLEMENT/SPECIAL SECTION WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Mount Desert Islander
Second Place: Boothbay Register
AD RATE CARD/RATING STRATEGY WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: The Ellsworth American
ADVERTISING SALES MEDIA KIT DAILY CLASS 2
First Place: Bangor Daily News
ADVERTISING SALES MEDIA KIT WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: The Ellsworth American
AUDIENCE BUILDING PROMOTION DAILY CLASS 2
First Place: Bangor Daily News
Second Place: Bangor Daily News
AUDIENCE BUILDING PROMOTION WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Boothbay Register
AUDIENCE BUILDING PROMOTION WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: The Ellsworth American
CLASSIFIED PROMOTION WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: The Ellsworth American
DIGITAL PRODUCT PROMOTION WEEKLY CLASS
First Place: The Ellsworth American
SUBSCRIPTION SALES PROMOTION DAILY CLASS 2
Third Place: Bangor Daily News
SUBSCRIPTION SALES PROMOTION WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Mount Desert Islander
SUBSCRIPTION SALES PROMOTION WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: The Ellsworth American
GENERAL NEWS PHOTO WEEKLY CLASS 2
Second Place: Stephen Rappaport, The Ellsworth American
SPOT NEWS PHOTO WEEKLY CLASS 2
First Place: Dean Kotula, The Ellsworth American
ADVERTISING GENERAL EXCELLENCE WEEKLY CLASS 1
First Place: Mount Desert Islander
ADVERTISING GENERAL EXCELLENCE WEEKLY CLASS 2
First Place: The Ellsworth American
GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD DAILY CLASS 1
Second Place: Sun Journal
GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD WEEKLY CLASS 1
Second Place: Mount Desert Islander
GENERAL EXCELLENCE AWARD WEEKLY CLASS 2
Third Place: Ellsworth American
Woodard wins Polk award for report in Telegram
Colin Woodard, state and national affairs reporter for the Portland Press Herald/Maine Sunday Telegram, has won a prestigious national award for his report on the influence of for-profit online education companies on the Maine Department of Education.
Woodard is the winner of the 2012 George Polk Award for Education Reporting for “The profit motive behind virtual schools in Maine,” a two-part report published in the Telegram on Sept. 2. His stories revealed how two out-of-state companies were shaping the state’s policies on digital education as it moved to establish its first charter schools. His work also showed how the companies’ schools in other states have fared poorly in studies of students’ achievement.
It is the second Polk award in as many years for a Maine Press Association member. The Advertiser Democrat of Norway won for its report in October 2011 on poor living conditions in low-income housing in western Maine. The three-month investigation by Editor A.M. Sheehan and Assistant Editor Matt Hongoltz-Hetling exposed dismal living conditions for some residents who got Section 8 assistance in Norway and neighboring Paris.
Polk awards are among journalism’s top honors. Besides Woodard, others to be recognized for work completed in 2012 include David Corn, Washington bureau chief for the Mother Jones news organization; reporters for The New York Times and Bloomberg News who uncovered high-level corruption in China; journalists for McClatchy Newspapers and GlobalPost who covered the civil war in Syria; and staffers with CBS News, The New Yorker, The Washington Post and PBS’ “Frontline.”
The awards will be presented April 11 at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York City. CNN’s Christiane Amanpour and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Carl Bernstein will be the citation readers. Read the story in the Press Herald.
Newspaper’s challenge opens court proceedings
Responding to a challenge from the Portland Press Herald, the Maine Supreme Judicial Court issued a ruling Jan. 24 that ended secret jury selection for the trial of Mark Strong Sr. in the Kennebunk prostitution case.
The Press Herald filed a motion with the Supreme Court challenging the constitutionality of Justice Nancy Mills’ decision to close the proceedings to the public. Mills had said she feared that prospective jurors would not be candid if they were questioned publicly in York County Superior Court.
On Jan. 24, the Supreme Court ordered Mills to stop the closed-door jury selection, open the rest of the process to the public and release transcripts of the sessions that began Jan. 22.
The ruling “may change the way jury selection is done” to ensure that it is transparent, said the Press Herald’s lawyer, Sigmund Schutz of Preti Flaherty.
“This is a precedent-setting decision,” he said. “I’m not sure it’s a practice that’s ever been challenged before.”
Read the story in the Press Herald.