Home arrow News arrow Business arrow Grant to journalism school to help N.C. rural newspapers create new business models
Grant to journalism school to help N.C. rural newspapers create new business models E-mail
Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Rural newspapers can develop sustainable business models around hyper-local news, thanks to a $275,000 grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Assistant professor Ryan Thornburg leads the project, which will help local newspapers develop new online revenue by using public information and open source software.

Thornburg is aggregating data from state, county and municipal governments in North Carolina – making it useful to rural newspapers and their readers – through customization of the OpenBlock Web application that can display news and data onto local maps. Popular applications of the technology include crime maps, real estate transactions, birth and death notices and restaurant inspection scores.

The UNC project was one of 16 winners of the 2011 Knight News Challenge, an international contest to fund innovative ideas that develop platforms, tools and services to inform and transform community news, conversations and information distribution.

The staffs of rural news organizations are often small, with limited time and resources to experiment with technology and develop new digital strategies, Thornburg said. “It’s a privilege to work with our state’s great community papers and their hard-working journalists moving into the digital age,” he said. “We believe this project will help open the door to important information for our citizens and significant new revenues for our rural newspapers. We've got a lot to learn about whether and how digital news platforms that can work in big cities might work in communities that knew hyper-local before it was cool.”

The project involves digitizing public documents for access through OpenBlock database software developed by OpenPlans with funding from Knight Foundation. The goal is to use digital public records to lower the cost of reporting and create a new editorial product that is popular with rural audiences and valuable to local advertisers.

“We’re excited about the potential of applying new approaches to accessing and sharing public data in rural communities,” said John Bracken, director of digital media for Knight Foundation.

Recent research and partnerships led by Penny Abernathy, the UNC journalism school’s Knight Chair in Journalism and Digital Media Economics, and funded by the McCormick Foundation shows that citizens in the state’s rural communities want the kind of content the new project will help produce.

“This kind of information draws new and younger audiences who will return to their community newspaper websites repeatedly and increase the time they spend on the site searching for and sorting the public information they want,” Abernathy said. “The increased traffic creates opportunities for the newspapers to attract sponsorships and provide new revenue streams needed to support quality community journalism.”

Rick Thames, editor of The Charlotte Observer, said the project would fill a need in North Carolina. “Small papers can’t do this sort of work on their own, so it just isn’t getting done,” he said. “What a gift this is for those communities.”

Beth Grace, director of the N.C. Press Association, said the state’s newspapers would welcome the help. “At a time when papers have lost staff and have had to postpone in-depth investigative and trend reporting, this could bring some of that information back to papers and their readers,” she said.

Les High, editor and publisher of The Whiteville News-Reporter, has worked with Abernathy and Thornburg.  “As is the case in most rural communities in this state, the public information we want to report is not readily available,” he said. “This project brings the benefits of the digital highway to even the most remote areas, and it could be an important source of new revenue for community newspapers everywhere.”

Thornburg said he hoped the project would create a model for gathering and reporting public information in rural America and eventually shed light on larger trends that would otherwise go unreported.

The Knight Foundation supports transformational ideas that promote quality journalism, advance media innovation, engage communities and foster the arts. They believe that democracy thrives when people and communities are informed and engaged.

Ryan Thornburg video URL:
http://go.unc.edu/Wn8g3

Ryan Thornburg photo URLs:
http://www.ryanthornburg.com/images/thornburg-mug.jpg
http://www.jomc.unc.edu/images/thornburgdigital.jpg

Knight Foundation contact: Marc Fest, vice president/communications, (305) 908-2677, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

School of Journalism and Mass Communication contact: Kyle York, (919) 966-3323, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it ,

News Services contact: Susan Houston, (919) 962-8415, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it