Rural economic development on two wheels
by StarEditorBobDavis
 Behind the Star
Sep 01, 2011 | 6462 views |  0 comments | 14 14 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

A friend recently shared this link with me. In it Jerry Norquist, the executive director of Cycle Oregon, discusses how cycling events can bring prosperity to small towns. He gave an example of how one coffee shop owner in the small community where he lives reaped large financial rewards when a bike tour came through town.

Norquist says, "Most rural communities already have the assets that they need to promote cycling tourism. They just don’t know how to harness those assets." 

He says one community on its own may have a difficult time reaching the wider cycling audience, but a statewide effort can spread the word. 

With events like this, this and this, a trail like this and a mountain biking venue in the near future, lots of bike riders are familar with our region. The question is: What are the next steps to spread that reputation as a must-ride place? Please share your ideas. 

 

As its closing nears, Partlow looks for families who donated Bibles to facility
by StarEditorBobDavis
 Behind the Star
Aug 19, 2011 | 2742 views |  0 comments | 12 12 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Regina Poole, the director of Community Relations and Volunteers Services at Tuscaloosa’s W. D. Partlow Developmental Center, sends along an interesting request.

The facility, which describes itself as the “remaining state institution for people with intellectual disabilities,” is scheduled to close its doors at the end of September. Before it does, Partlow officials are looking for family members of people who long-ago donated items to the center.

 Poole writes that the center is: “[L]ooking for family members of Mrs. Lewis W. Jackson and Mrs. John R. Sickels. Each has a large, leather bound Bible donated to Partlow for use in the Lurleen Wallace Memorial Chapel in memory of their loved one. We would like to return these Bibles to the family. We are also looking for family members of Miss Minnie Lee Ford, Assistant Director of Nursing (1929-1968) to return a portrait of Miss Fields. Interested family members should call 205-554-4111.”

I asked Poole if she had reason to believe these families might be in The Star’s coverage area. No, she said, “I’m just trying to cover the state to make sure someone in the family (if any, or if any are still in Alabama) know about the Bibles and would like to have them back.” The Bibles were found in Partlow's chapel not long before it was knocked down.

If these family names sound familiar, give Partlow a call. And let the Star know, as well; this sounds like heck of a story.

A defense of Star's reporting on allegations made by councilman
by StarEditorBobDavis
 Behind the Star
Aug 08, 2011 | 2228 views |  0 comments | 15 15 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

Consider this a defense of Anniston Star reporter Laura Camper. In his most recent column, Anniston Star Media Critic Paul Rilling criticized Camper’s July 6 article, “Little: Plans for judicial complex are troubling.”

Rilling, a former editor with The Star, is an experienced journalist. His monthly column is a useful exercise; it allows an independent voice to weigh on the work of the newspaper.

That said, I must respectfully disagree with his findings regarding Camper’s July 6 article.

Rilling wrote:

l

A basic rule of news writing is that a news story should “show, not tell.” This means the reporter tells readers what has happened, not the reporter’s or editor’s opinions about it. You don’t write that it was hot yesterday; you write about the temperature, the humidity, comparisons with other years, how people are dealing with it. You show that it was hot.

A July story in The Star, headlined, “Little: Plans for judicial complex are troubling,” told the reader what The Star thinks about Councilman Ben Little’s opposition to the judicial complex (July 6, Page 1A)

In the lead paragraph, it said, “Councilman Ben Little has made a point of questioning the way the proposed judicial complex has moved forward at council meetings and ward meetings, but has made no specific allegations nor offered any proof to back up his claims.”

The article, by Laura Camper, told readers what to think, then went on to support that viewpoint. The story is presented as a front-page news story but no new developments were reported. It made a good case for its point of view, but it belonged in the commentary pages.

l

In light of this critique, I revisited the article in question. By my count, it contains 29 statements of fact; most of them center on Little’s frequent allegations of wrongdoing on the part of those working on the city’s proposed judicial complex. To date, none of the officials mentioned in the article have challenged any of its facts.

 

The purpose of the article was to examine Little’s accusations and his failure thus far to provide any evidence for them. Little, an elected official, has repeatedly alleged corruption on the part of the entity charged with overseeing the construction of the judicial center, the Public Building Authority. Little’s allegations have taken place and continue to take place during public sessions of the City Council.

 

While reporting the article, Camper offered Councilman Little an opportunity to spell out the details of his allegations and produce evidence of them. Little declined, saying, “The PBA board knows what has been done and how things have unfolded.”

 

Several items are important to keep in mind:

 

l Little is accusing members of a municipal authority of wrongdoing, the sort that could be a violation of criminal law.

 

Little’s allegations are made in a public forum, which is aired live on The Star’s website.

 

Journalists are not stenographers. In its code of ethics, the Society of Professional Journalists writes that reporters should, “Test the accuracy of information from all sources and exercise care to avoid inadvertent error.”

 

That is what Camper and The Star did in the July 6 article. Quite simply, we asked a public official for evidence of frequently asserted claims. He declined, and we reported that he declined and put his opposition to the project in context. Reporters’ and editors’ personal opinions on Little and his opposition to the judicial complex project were (a.) not voiced and (b.) wholly irrelevant to the article in question.

 

Despite a diligent search of the story, I can find no support for the claim that The Star told “the reader what The Star thinks about Councilman Ben Little’s opposition to the judicial complex.”

 

Congressman attributes editorial board’s “world view” as reason for not visiting
by StarEditorBobDavis
 Behind the Star
Jul 31, 2011 | 2204 views |  0 comments | 13 13 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

(Cross-posted from National Conference of Editorial Writers blog.)

The editorial board of The Anniston Star regularly meets with politicians from local, state and federal offices. During his two terms as Alabama governor, Bob Riley was a frequent visitor to the newspaper. We regularly sit down with Alabama’s two U.S. senators, Richard Shelby and Jeff Sessions, as well as other politicians from across the state.

The walls of The Star’s offices are full of snapshots of governors, including George C. Wallace, who when in town would visit with the newspaper’s editorial board. (By the way, Wallace preferred to refer to the newspaper by the derisive nickname “Red Star.”)

During campaign season, the pace quickens as scores of hopefuls come through our doors seeking endorsement.

The meetings can be lively and enlightening, as politicians explain their positions, field tough questions and lay out their visions for the future.

However, one local politician, five-term U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Anniston, has been an infrequent visitor to the newspaper. He’s not visited since fall 2008, though he makes regular visits to other newspaper boards in his district. Before that, his appearances before the Anniston Star board were spotty.

The reason, says his press secretary Shea Snider, is that The Anniston Star editorial board and the congressman have "different world views."

"Every time [Rogers] goes in, it’s a hostile environment," Snider said. "There’s no value to those meetings."

She emphasized that the congressman and his office are always happy to respond to The Star’s reporting staff, as well as to questions from this writer; it’s the editorial board the congressman has a problem with.

It is accurate that the Star's editorial board subjects politicians to tough questions. For its part, the newspaper believes holding the people's representatives to account is part of its First Amendment responsibilities. That standard is applied to politicians across the ideological spectrum.

An informal survey of National Conference of Editorial Writers members via listserve showed that Rogers’ refusal to meet with The Star is out of step with most Washington politicians. Most will meet with local editorial boards.

"Our senators drop in for a visit about once a year," wrote Jackman Wilson, editorial page editor of The Register-Guard in Eugene, Ore. "Our local congressman stops by more often for useful backgrounders on issues of interest to him and to us (and for gossip that is even more useful)."

Editors mentioned that there are exceptions, a few senators and congressmen who for one reason or another refused to darken their doors. It usually has something to do with something written by the newspaper that the officeholder didn't like.

At the NCEW’s 2010 convention in Dallas. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who is now said to be considering a run for president, spoke to members of the NCEW, but refused to take part in the traditional Q&A session following his remarks. Perry’s reason for skipping out on question time was that he had a tight schedule. However, after leaving the stage the governor spent a lengthy session chatting with friends in the meeting room and then carrying on an extended TV interview just outside its doors.

Then-NCEW president Tom Waseleski wrote Perry afterwards, calling the snub "an affront to any notion of civil discourse, such as the kind you have called for on other occasions."

Tom Moran, editorial page editor of New Jersey’s Star-Ledger, described the refusal to meet with editorial boards as folly on the part of politicians. “When these guys choose not to defend their positions, it hardly advances their cause,” he wrote.

Mark C. Mahoney, editorial page editor at The Post-Star in Glens Falls, N.Y., boiled down the reasons a politician might or might not visit with an editorial board. "It all depends on the degree with which you have criticized the individual and that individual's personal degree of tolerance for criticism," Mahoney wrote. "Some can take a little criticism. Some can take a lot. Some can't take any. Those that can't take any criticism have tended not to meet with us."

Bob Davis, editor of The Anniston Star and a member of its editorial board, is secretary/treasurer of the National Conference of Editorial Writers.

Help us police online comments
by StarEditorBobDavis
 Behind the Star
Jul 06, 2011 | 3368 views |  0 comments | 8 8 recommendations | email to a friend | print | permalink

We continue to work out some kinks with our new Facebook commenting system at AnnistonStar.com.

One way readers can help is by reporting inappropriate language in our comments by selecting the “REPORT” button to the right of each comment.

Here's how: Move your mouse to the right-side of the comment  and an “X” appears. Clicking it gives a user the option to “Mark as Spam” or “Report as Abuse” comments that violate our terms of use – no name-calling, no abusive or profane language and no personal attacks.

Doing this will help us better police comments, and that is something that creates a more civil exchange.

 - Bob Davis, Editor 

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Editorial: Democracies, free or not — Germany’s Merkel latest to question NSA’s surveillance program
by The Anniston Star Editorial Board
Jun 19, 2013 | 71 views |  0 comments | 2 2 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Whether in Berlin or on Capitol Hill, President Barack Obama can’t avoid the lingering global trauma caused by his administration’s surveillance methods. Wednesday provided proof. In Washington, FBI director Robert Mueller warned the Senate Judiciary Committee that curtailing the National Security Agency’s system of tracking phone calls would damage the nation’s ability to thwart terrorist attacks. Judging by the depth of the committee’s questions, it’s doubtful that the program’s harshest critics were convinced. In Berlin, Obama heard from German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who pressed the president about what some see as the program’s intrusions on the privacy, particularly the privacy of Germans whose phone records may be tracked by the NSA. At one point, Merkel said, “Although we do see the need,” such activities must be balanced by “due diligence” to guard against unwarranted invasions of privacy. “Free democracies live off people having a feeling of security,” she added, according to The New York Times. Merkel’s words are spot-on correct. Free democracies in which governments keep tabs — be they phone records, not phone conversations — on their citizens lose a little of that freedom. It’s unfortunate that that is the world in which we live in. Our opinion hasn’t changed: the Obama administration, despite its criticisms of its predecessor’s warrantless wiretapping, isn’t going to tone down its efforts without a fight. The government, under the umbrella of uncovering terrorist plots before they occur, shows no sign of willingly turning back the clock. Reality and perspective are key. Governments have spied on friends and foes since the beginning of modern civilizations. The NSA program falls into that category. That said, it’s interesting that the Times reported on Gen. Keith B. Alexander, the director of the NSA, who is preparing a report for Congress on the “advantages and disadvantages” of altering the program. Nevertheless, it’s foolish to expect either the White House, the FBI or the NSA to succumb to public pressure and soften their approach. We wish this weren’t the case. What must occur — without deviation — is a continued watchdog approach over the government’s use of its surveillance powers. Congress is right to pepper Mueller with questions and demand accountability. Merkel is to be commended for questioning the president about the program and its effect on her nation, both good and bad. And Americans should feel no shame in wondering how far the government should go to keep this nation safe. There are limits, of course. As the German chancellor said, free democracies exist within a sense of safety. As always, balancing those competing interests is proving extremely difficult.
Editorial: The pitfalls of merit pay — After years with no raises, state employees deserve more
by The Anniston Star Editorial Board
Jun 19, 2013 | 26 views |  0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
State employees have historically earned raises to (a.) compensate for the rising cost of living and (b.) to reward them for meritorious performance. Since 2008, when state revenue took a hit from the Great Recession, state workers have received neither, even though inflation has continued to eat away at their buying power and many, if not most, have continued to perform their jobs in a meritorious fashion. While the state’s budget hawks complain about the cost of government, they consistently fail to acknowledge that when it comes to providing services to its residents, our state gets more for its money than most states and many businesses. That is why this page is pleased that Gov. Robert Bentley has announced plans to reinstate merit raises starting Jan. 1. However, the plan has pitfalls. Pay for meritorious service depends on the administrator who evaluates the service and judges it worthy of a reward. It is not a cost-of-living increase, granted across the board, with little regard for the quality of the work. This requires clear criteria for judging the employee’s performance and an equally clear understanding on the part of the supervisor and the employee of what goes beyond what is normally expected. As a consequence, a worker who does an adequate job, who shows up and does what is expected, may find himself or herself without a raise or with a raise smaller than he or she feels is deserved. Let’s face it, it is not uncommon for an employee to feel he or she are equal to or better than their co-workers. In jobs where the results are not immediately evident, or there is not a common understanding of what is meritorious, merit raises can cause dissention in the workplace. The best way to fairly increase salaries is a combination of cost-of-living and merit, a base figure for all and merit raises on top of that. Lacking the money to go that route, and saddled with a state Legislature that has categorically refused to consider reasonable methods of raising new revenue for the state, the governor is doing what may be the only option he has — reinstating merit pay raises. It now falls the task of the supervisors to grant the raises fairly.
Speak Out: The wrath of God
by our readers
Jun 19, 2013 | 30 views |  0 comments | 3 3 recommendations | email to a friend | print
God is pouring his wrath on America — floods, storms, tornadoes and fires. With what people have put in our White House, it’s no wonder that when our America turns into Sodom and Gomorrah, when this person stands for such sin. A very sad day. Virty Walker
Heflin
Harvey H. Jackson: Alabama, No. 1 in more than football
Jun 19, 2013 | 22 views |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was one of those headlines that simply dared me to write a column. “Alabama cities lead list of porn-loving religious places, poll says” My first reaction was not to take the dare. As we say down in south Alabama, “some swamps don’t need draining,” even if the swamp is AL.com, the face of new journalism in our fair state. But something just didn’t seem right. What sorta poll would have pollsters calling up folks around the country asking them (1.) “are you religious,” and if they answered yes, following up with (2.) “do you love porn?” So I checked it out, and guess who did the polling? No one. There was no poll revealing that Alabama cities were high among the “porn-loving religious places.” The article beneath the headline was based on another article that was based on research undertaken by researchers working for PornHub.com, a pornography website, and published online by BuzzFeed.com. PornHub.com bills itself as the world’s biggest porn distributor, which I doubt because there is no Wikipedia entry for it, and we all know that if it isn’t on Wikipedia . . . . As for BuzzFeed.com, according to Wikipedia, it is “a website that combines a technology platform for detecting viral content with an editorial selection process to provide a snapshot of ‘the viral web in realtime.’” Huh? Well, the “viral content” Buzzfeed detected was a report compiled by researchers at PornHub.com. (Dear readers, do not go to PornHub.com to see what it is all about. You might be scarred for life or, worse yet, find yourself a statistic in a research report like the one that was the subject of the BuzzFeed article. You have been warned.) Now, I am not exactly sure how or why the folks at PornHub.com came up with the research project that led to the BuzzFeed.com article, but the decision might have been the result of a conversation among researchers employed by the porn site that went something like this: Porn researcher No. 1 to porn researcher No. 2: “You know what I did over the weekend?” (Look, surely porn researchers have lives outside the realm of porn research. So I imagine this sort of conversation was pretty common around the PornHub.com office.) Porn researcher No. 2 replies: “No, what?” (A reasonable response, given the options available to porn researchers.) Porn researcher No. 1: “I took a look at that recent Gallup poll, you know, the one that ranked cities by how religious their residents were.” Porn researcher No. 2: “So?” Porn researcher No. 1: “People in those religious cities are into porn.” Porn researcher No. 2 gets really interested and asks: “How do you know that?” Porn researcher No. 1: “Because they visit our site.” And with that revelation, the research that led to the article that led to the headline was set in motion. I am not sure whether their inquiry was an effort to search out and expand a market niche, or if it was a way for porn people to fire a zinger at anti-porn people who seem to cluster under the Gallup poll category “very religious.” Whatever the motive, this is what they discovered. Eight of the top 10 “very religious” cities where folks watch a lot of online porn are in the South. Yessir. The Bible Belt. Of the remaining two, one was in Michigan and the other was Provo, Utah, in the heart of Mormon country. Go figure. This raises a number of questions, not the least being whether cities that aren’t “very religious” watch even more online porn than cities with significant “very religious” populations. The porn researchers didn’t say. What they did say was this: Of all the “very religious” cities that watch a lot of porn, the one that leads the list is Huntsville-by-gum-Alabama. This set my mind reeling back to 2010, when the owner of a Huntsville adult-items store, “Pleasures” (“your one-stop romance shop”), challenged Alabama’s ban on sex toys, a ban passed by a Legislature that conveniently did not ban owning the items, just selling them. That allowed Alabamians, including legislators, one supposes, to go online and order — or just watch. Which folks down in Montgomery are doing, for according to PornHub and Buzzfeed, Montgomery came in second in the race to the top of the “very religious” cities where citizens visit the PornHub website. That leaves me with just one question: Do these Montgomery visits to the PornHub website coincide with the times when the Legislature is in session? Now that would be really interesting to know. Meanwhile, “Pleasures,” well aware of the needs and desires of Huntsville’s porn-watching citizenry, has expanded to five locations so it can better serve its customers. The free market marches on. Harvey H. (“Hardy”) Jackson is Eminent Scholar in History at Jacksonville State University and a columnist and editorial writer for The Star. Email: hjackson@jsu.edu.
Larry Lee: Seeking the ‘bold steps’ for Alabama schools
by Larry Lee
Special to The Star
Jun 19, 2013 | 38 views |  0 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
It was exciting to read recently that one of the Republican leaders of the Alabama House of Representatives said, “It is time to take bold new steps and leave the broken status quo behind.” I could not agree more. Obviously, Dr. Tommy Bice, state superintendent of education, feels the same way. In fact, the statement of the legislator echoes what Bice said last winter when speaking to the legislative education budget committees. “We have bold plans and high expectations of everyone involved in public education,” Bice told committee members. So when are we going to start with these “bold steps”? This last legislative session would have been a great time, especially considering that Bice, along with lots of help from many people, has put together an excellent outline of what our public education needs are in his Plan 2020. What sets this plan apart from so many others is that it truly takes a comprehensive look at education by focusing on all the areas that must be addressed if we’re to have quality education in quality schools being led by quality educators. It details priorities and objectives in four areas: (1.) students; (2.) support systems; (3.) education personnel; and (4.) schools and systems. Of these, the recognition that attention must be paid to factors that impact students outside the classroom is especially significant. Each day during the school year, 150,000 Alabama students attend a school where there is at least an 80 percent poverty rate. These are the schools most prone to fail and these are the students who are most likely to need health care, vision screening, hearing screening, mental health counseling, etc. Some systems are already addressing such needs. The Florence City System has a partnership with a local mental health agency that provides counselors to schools; in Gadsden there is a health clinic at Adams Elementary manned by a local health provider. In many systems there are churches and nonprofits that provide food for needy children for the weekend. But filling these, and other Plan 2020 needs, takes resources. This is why Bice’s budget proposal re-directed funding in a number of cases. He was not asking for new money, but rather, asking to take the “bold step” of setting new priorities. Unfortunately, no one paid much attention. For instance, since the Alabama Reading Initiative devotes considerable resources to professional development, the Alabama State Department of Education asked that $10 million be shifted from ARI to a more inclusive professional development program for teachers and principals. This was not funded, but ARI was still cut by $10 million. Is that a “bold new step”? They asked for $5 million to work with family resource centers to provide more of the critical support system needs of high poverty students. Again, they got zerp. Another “bold new step”? They asked for $19.1 million to cut class sizes and restore lost teacher units. Zero again. Again, a missed opportunity for a “bold new step.” They asked to restore funding for textbooks to $75 per student, as it was in 2008. Instead, this was level funded at last year’s rate of $31.50. How in the world do you under-fund textbooks and claim you are taking “bold new steps”? About 360,000 kids ride buses each school day. The actual cost of providing transportation is $323 million. But the state only funded $304, leaving a hole of $19 million. So, evidently, leaving rural school systems to pay for things the state is supposed to pay for is considered a “bold new step.” The same can be said for setting aside funding for controversial new programs professional educators did not support, while not increasing support for proven programs such as the Alabama Math and Science Technology Initiative and the distance-learning program. Yes, we need “bold new steps.” But we need to do more than talk about doing so. You can’t run a bus on political “spin” or reduce class sizes or buy textbooks. Bice and the State Board of Education have the plan in place to move our schools forward. They just need help from the folks controlling the purse strings — help that was woefully lacking this year. Larry Lee led the study, Lessons Learned from Rural Schools, and is a long-time advocate for public education and frequently writes about education issues. Email: larrylee33@knology.net.
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