FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
TUESDAY, FEB. 19, 2008
NORCAL CHAPTER ANNOUNCES FIRST AMENDMENT AWARD WINNERS
The following is a complete list of award recipients:
NORWIN S. YOFFIE CAREER ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Dan Noyes has spent his life committed to investigative reporting for the public good. In 1977, Noyes, Lowell Bergman, and David Weir, recognizing that in-depth reporting was slipping through the cracks at many major news outlets, founded the Berkeley-based Center for Investigative Reporting. Over thirty years later, the increased ebb of news resources makes the non-profit CIR even more important. Noyes’ work expanding the Center’s reach into different media outlets and his tutoring of fledgling journalists deserves great honor.
BEVERLY KEES EDUCATOR AWARD
Cliff Mayotte, who heads the performing arts department at San Francisco’s Lick-Wilmerding High School, gave his advanced acting students an assignment last year that was designed to raise free-expression awareness among the entire student body. Students participating in the “Censorship Project” performed extensive research, interviewing experts across the country and persons who had been involved in censorship incidents. The production was so well received that the cast and crew gave encore performances.
PROFESSIONAL JOURNALIST (3 Awards)
Will DeBoard, sports columnist for the Modesto Bee, uncovered details of a state investigation into recruiting violations by Franklin High School in Stockton, CA. Using the California Public Records Act, and despite great resistance from the agency governing high school sports in the Central Valley, DeBoard obtained the 205-page report and reported extensively on its findings.
For his various efforts championing freedom of information, investigative reporter Thomas Peele of the Contra Costa Times will be awarded in the professional journalist category. Peele’s search for Oakland mayor Jerry Brown’s records, which disappeared when he left office, resulted in the city’s recovery of thousands of the former mayor’s emails that otherwise would have been lost. Peele also played a key role, writing stories and training nearly a dozen other reporters, in Californians Aware’s audit of Public Records Act compliance by law enforcement agencies.
Roland De Wolk, a producer with KTVU-TV, the Bay Area’s Fox-TV affiliate, led the investigative team of photographer Tony Hedrick and video editor Ron Acker, that uncovered the Metropolitan Transportation Commission’s shoddy work collecting tolls from drivers who illegally used FasTrak lanes on Bay Area bridges. Overcoming great resistance from the MTC to disclose its public records, the team discovered millions of dollars in unpaid tolls and very little effort being made to collect them. The KTVU team continues their fight to access more MTC information on these toll scofflaws, including attempting to identify whether any of them are public officials.
BROADCAST NEWS OUTLET
KGO-TV, the Bay Area’s ABC-owned station, was sued by the Union representing San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency drivers after reporter Dan Noyes [different from Dan Noyes awarded above] and producer Steve Fyffe, tried to obtain information from the city regarding complaints about Muni drivers. The lawsuit attempted to stop the city from providing KGO with the public documents, as well as enjoin the station from broadcasting any information it did obtain. KGO prevailed and ultimately obtained over 1,200 pages of complaints about 25 drivers, then filed two other lawsuits against Muni to obtain the identities of these drivers and videotapes of the incidents.
PRINT NEWS OUTLET
The Sacramento Bee is being honored for its institutional support of reporters and their use of public records for numerous stories. In 2007, Bee reporter Andy Furillo made extensive use of public records while reporting on the costs of defending legal cases challenging inmate care. Reporter Andrew McIntosh also employed public information to investigate the lack of oversight of the state’s paramedics and emergency medical technicians. Reporters John Hill and Kevin Yamamura reported on the misconduct by the state Board of Chiropractic Examiners, including its violation of open meetings laws.
COMMUNITY MEDIA
The Berkeley Daily Planet won a victory at the California Court of Appeals to unseal 15,000 pages of court records from a class-action suit charging Wal-Mart with unfair labor practices.
SPECIAL CITATION
The Chauncey Bailey Project, a team of reporters and editors from numerous Bay Area news outlets and journalism schools, is being cited for continuing the work of Oakland Post editor Chauncey Bailey, who was murdered while investigating the inner workings of the Your Black Muslim Bakery organization.
CITIZEN
SuperBOLD (Berkeleyans Organized for Library Defense) fought long, hard, and successfully, to get the Berkeley City Council to lift onerous and unfair restrictions on public comment at council meetings.
PUBLIC OFFICIAL
State Assemblymember Mark Leno is being noted for his dogged efforts to amend the California Public Records Act and improve the public’s access to governmental information. Leno introduced and carried legislation that would have created penalties for violations of the Public Records Act, and required agencies to keep more records on the Internet. The legislation was passed by the legislature but vetoed by Governor Schwarzenegger – twice.
LIBRARY
The Bancroft Library at the University of California, Berkeley has compiled a massive collection of text, photographs, and audio clips documenting the loyalty oath controversy that roiled the entire UC system during the Communist witch-hunts by Sen. Joseph McCarthy.
LEGAL COUNSEL
Rachel Matteo-Boehm, of the law firm Holme, Roberts & Owen, has provided outstanding counsel on numerous matters in 2007. Matteo-Boehm has had a busy year, litigating successfully in the California First Amendment Coalition’s suit against the County of Santa Clara to obtain a copy of their GIS basemap, which the county had hoped to sell instead to interested users. She also successfully defeated efforts by a plaintiff in a copyright action to obtain journalistic source material from her client, the Center for the Study of Popular Culture. The lawyer is currently representing Vallejo Times Herald and Santa Cruz Sentinel reporter J.M. Brown who has been issued numerous subpoenas for his unpublished information.
WHISTLE-BLOWER
Dan Cooke, a National Parks Conservancy employee who witnessed and logged a sewage spill stemming from a ferry crew’s mishandling of pumping tanks on Alcatraz Island in fall 2006, was later fired after discussing the incident on record with the San Francisco Bay Guardian. He had to file suit to get his job back and was rehired before the case went to court.
ELECTRONIC ACCESS
Carl Malamud, the founder of public.resource.org, a web site that is making public information, including federal court decisions, easily available and free on the Internet, has made great inroads to documents often costly or cumbersome to access.
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